Board Thread:Tales from the Tardis/@comment-31940900-20140318052733

Now bare with me now, cause this is going to be a lot to process.

Now for all you new fans who don't know who Omega is, let me give you a brief history lesson. Omega first appeared in the Doctor Who classic "the Three Doctors" and also appeared in the Peter Davidson episode "the Arc of Infinity". Omega was one of the key figures of Time Lord society, alongside Rassilon and the Other, they were considered to be Gods. Omega was the architect for time travel on Gallifrey, using the artifact "the Hand of Omega" he condensed a star into a singularity, which would be known as the Eye of Harmony, the power source of all TARDIes.

Now on the theory at hand.

After re watching several hints to this possible theory.

1. Amy's pregnancy test. In one of the episodes, the Doctor uses the TARDIS to determine if Amy was pregnant or not, the results came out as both positive and negative. Now this could be that Amy was a flesh avatar at the time, but if you remember in the classic series, Omega was both a being of matter and anti-matter, something that did exist, and something that didn't.

2. The Clerics. In the Eleventh Doctor's first episodes and in "A Good Man goes to War", we're introduced to the Clerics. Now were never quite sure what God the clerics actually worship, but on their uniforms you can see an Omega symbol on their shoulders, and Omega was a god among Time Lords. So who's to say he isn't to humans, in " the Impossible Astronaut" River Song says that a tribe on Easter Island worshipped the Doctor as a God.

3. Melody's pod. One rule about Steven Moffat is that he leaves threads unresolved. In "a Good Man goes to War" if you look close enough at Melody's pod, you can see an Omega symbol underneath the letter M. Now this might just be a coincidence, but Steven Moffat never leaves anything unresolved.

So did the Doctor really marry one of the founders of Time Lord society?  