What Wicked Gets Wrong about Transformation
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The phrase “changed for good” has become a cultural shorthand for growth, healing, and moral clarity. In this short-form Underground Sessions commentary, we examine how that idea is presented in Wicked: For Good, and why the story it tells about goodness, intention, and transformation resonates so deeply in a culture uneasy with moral judgment. Recent reporting surrounding the film’s press tour—particularly involving Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, and Ethan Slater—provides an unexpected window into the moral logic beneath the narrative.
This episode contrasts that logic with the Christian understanding of transformation. Rather than treating evil as misunderstanding or harm as sincerity, Scripture offers a more searching diagnosis of the human heart—one that insists on repentance before renewal and truth before healing. Drawing from biblical teaching and classical Christian thought, the commentary asks whether a culture that struggles to name what is wrong can ever produce real change, and why the gospel’s promise is not that we were always good, but that we can be made new.
Thumbnail image: Cynthia Erivo (left) and Ariana Grande at the “Wicked” premiere. Licensed under CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Image modified (subjects isolated from background).
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