Disney Gospels

If there’s one language our kids know,
it’s the language of princesses & pirates.

Disney’s writers, producers, and artists are often heralded as the greatest storytellers of modern times. It’s no wonder: the Walt Disney Company is currently worth anywhere between $100-150 billion. Kids all over America (and some places around the world) are absorbed in Disney culture. It’s not hard to imagine a child wrapping up in her favorite blanket (the one with a few well-known princesses on it) before listening to her most cherished Disney-themed bedtime book.

Likewise, you might expect to find at least one set of big black ears peeking out from a child’s toybox upon walking into their playroom. Young ones and their caregivers who have been to a Disney theme park consider it one of their most memorable vacations. Even for those who haven’t yet made the trip, Disney is on their toothbrushes, backpacks, and even the snacks their parents bring home from the grocery store.

Every time a child sees their favorite Disney character, they are reminded of the storyline and adventure that character journeyed through. But what they don’t always realize (for the young and old alike) is why these stories speak so strongly to their hearts. The truth is, we were made for these stories—ones that transcend mere fairy tale and teach us something about redemption.

In the last two decades specifically, Disney has progressed toward more complex characters and storylines. Take Queen Elsa from Frozen, for example. One could argue whether she is the movie’s protagonist or antagonist. Isn’t this the story of the human experience? She represents the struggle of divine proportions that is going on between our flesh and our spirit.

While the Bible acutely depicts this fallen nature of every human life, it also portrays the loving nature of our creator God and the unfolding of his big, redemptive plan through his Son, Jesus Christ. Jesus of Nazareth comes in the most unexpected way, though he was spoken of in the very beginning. It’s the greatest story ever told. And at the pinnacle of this most epic story is the gospel: the greatest love story to ever exist.

Using the Bible as our model, we find that Jesus taught His disciples most often through parables. He used illustrations that the people He was talking to were already familiar with: stories about farmers and gardeners and keeping lamps burning. He paralleled his Father’s love with the great love of an earthly father to a prodigal son. The list goes on. God knew that the people were more likely to understand the concepts of God and the workings of God through their everyday context.

So, why not utilize the greatest icon in storytelling—Walt Disney’s team of animators and storytellers—to communicate these deep Biblical truths? These stories have been pointing toward the gospel in powerful ways for decades. When we watch a tale of a character getting lost on the journey and found into a much grander plan than they could have dreamt up in their own finite wit, we see ourselves in it. In the last two decades, gospel-lending messages are increasingly portrayed through Disney’s colorful stories of struggle and mighty tales of redemption. Modern-day parables, if you will.

Finding Nemo is one of my personal favs. Not only is it a menagerie of God’s creation set off the coast of Oceana and a beautifully animated tale about a school of fish riding a magic school bus (insert an enthusiastic stingray in place of the red-headed, eccentrically dressed nut), but it’s a larger-than-life adventure of a clownfish in search of his lost son. Beneath the cuteness of the story is a tale of a kind of love so powerful and so true that its original source can only be traced back to our heavenly Father. Specifically, the story of Nemo and his dad Marlin mirrors the experience of the prodigal son and his father’s unabashed love for him found in Luke 15.

“Filmmaking communicates deep truths, whether or not the events really took place”

-Nate Scoggins, actor

Cinema is one of the most influential and strategic tools to share the gospel in our culture. The ultimate goal of Disney Gospels is that extracting parables from Disney movies would serve as a useful training tool in helping people, big and small, learn to find the God-truths in everything they view and encounter throughout life. I am passionate about sharing this powerful lens through which the gospel can be seen and experienced in a new way.

Think about this: Seeing the truth of God when the world around you is seemingly telling you a much different story is not easy. It can be difficult to rectify the disparity between what we see and hear in the news or our everyday life and what God says is true—a reality not yet fully realized. But having the scales removed from our eyes and seeing everything through the lens of God’s great story of love and grace is, most importantly, life-giving. Click HERE to go on this truth-revealing, sight-restoring journey with me.

Note: The content of this website is not affiliated with, nor is it authorized or endorsed by The Walt Disney Company.

Disney Gospels Posts

Inside Out 2 Big Screen

Inside Out 2 and Our Identity in Christ

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R2-D2 is My Superhero

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Top 20 Gospel-Paralleling Disney Movie Quotes

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Alice Background

Disney’s Alice and…Her Ebenezers

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Encanto and our Stairway to Heaven

Disney's Encanto is a movie for all the performers. All the achievers. All the perfectionists. And in this weary-worn world full of anxiety to perform, achieve, and perfect, we all need a message. A message about rest and about where our identity…
Watching Elf
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Jesus? I know him!

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Who’s the Baddest of Them All?

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Coco and Chesterton quote

Disney’s Coco: A Parable

  Disney’s Coco offers us a parable for Jesus’s most challenging words in all the Bible. Set in the vibrant town of Santa Cecilia, Mexico during its annual Day of the Dead rituals, a young Miguel wrestles with his family heritage…
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