From its beginnings science fiction has had a political quality. Jules Verne's Captain Nemo opposed war and used his superior technology to discourage the sword if not always with a scalpel. The war against the aliens in H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds was not won by brute force, but by a scientific surprise.
When later stories made contact with alien civilizations across the vast expanse of space the political complexities and intrigues were as much a part as the fantastic new technology. With its burden of examining the frontiers and limits of human knowledge and understanding, science fiction has also considered religious ideas. Gods in science fiction can be disappointingly anthropomorphic. The political acumen of space adventurers can be less remarkable than their dependence on the "diplomacy" of their technology. Science fiction is after all usually an exercise in science, which by itself fails to address religion and politics with the same certainty as trigonometric equations.
Yet Another Superhero is an attempt to give the math and science crowd yet another turn at the wheels of religion and politics.