Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Wandavision’ and the abundance of the heart
‘Wandavision’ and the abundance of the heart
Jan 11, 2026 4:31 PM

In its first show for the Disney+ streaming ic giant Marvel explores in the hit series Wandavision a depth of storytelling that reaches beyond the stereotypical good-versus-evil battle of so many superhero tales. It explores the inseparability of human creativity and the condition of our hearts.

The final episode was released on March 5. This post contains spoilers.

Wandavision features the Scarlet Witch, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), and the Vision (Paul Bettany), two secondary (though not anymore, I hope) heroes from the Marvel cinematic universe, previously seen in the blockbuster films Avengers: Age of Ultron, Captain America: Civil War, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame.

Instead of fighting crime, however, the series begins with the superpowered duo starring in a 1950s , reminiscent of classics of the era like I Love Lucy. Then, it shifts in the next episode to the 1960s, continuing a decidedly Bewitched dynamic between the Scarlet Witch and her android husband, and so on through the decades. Along the way, the question of how they got there and who’s beyond it creeps closer and closer into view. A stream of phildickean/Truman Show-esque glitches – a voice from the radio asking if Wanda is all right, a macabre beekeeper emerging from the sewer (only to be magically rewound by Wanda, as if someone pressed rewind on a VHS video recorder) – suggest something insidious may be afoot. But what?

It turns out there is a villain, Agatha Harkness (Kathryn Hahn), but she didn’t create the faux TV-Land reality of Westview, the small-town suburb in which Wanda and the Vision have covertly made their home. Rather, as Agatha later reveals, it was the world of Wandavision that attracted her to Westview. She came to find the source of its magic.

Meanwhile, es to light that many seemingly suspicious happenings are just the good guys on the outside trying to reach Wanda: The voice on the radio is FBI Agent Jimmy Woo (Randall Park) trying to help. The beekeeper is a S.W.O.R.D. agent in full hazmat gear who, upon entering Westview, transformed to fit the aesthetic of that episode’s era. When S.W.O.R.D. Agent Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) successfully infiltrates the show only to be dramatically “written out” after confronting Maximoff about the death of her brother, Pietro, she unveils the mystery at the heart of the show: “It’s all Wanda,” she says.

Not only had Wanda lost her brother, but she later lost the person who proved the fort throughout her grief: the Vision himself. When pressed to relive her repressed memories by Agatha, we learn that s served as a recurring solace throughout Wanda’s traumatic life. Then Wanda steps into a moment where Vision offered her words fort foundational for understanding the drama of the show: “What is grief but love persevering?”

Unable to even claim the Vision’s body for a proper burial after his death (as an android, S.W.O.R.D. regarded him as government property and a superweapon for their study/use), Wanda wanders to a plot of land in Westview that Vision obtained for them. Finding only an abandoned foundation of a house sitting among the shrubbery, she collapses to her knees. Her grief and her bine, spilling out of her to create a false posed for her consolation – a magic that unintentionally takes control of the town’s inhabitants and forces them against their wills into roles in Wanda’s fantasy.

A quote attributed to the Russian Orthodox saint Seraphim of Sarov can help Christians see Wandavision through the light of faith: “Acquire the Spirit of peace, and thousands around you will be saved.” Marvel’s new show explores a negative corollary: without the Spirit of peace, thousands around you may be damned. As Christ warned the religious authorities of his day: “For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good things, and an evil man out of the evil treasure brings forth evil things” (St. Matthew 12:34-35). So also, out of broken hearts we tend to spread brokenness in our world.

None of us (to my knowledge) have superpowers like Wanda or the Vision, but we can see in our lives how our pain and brokenness feed into our creative work, whether in our jobs, families, hobbies, or other vocations. There is something to the thought of the Social Gospel figure Washington Gladden that mand to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18) implies and requires a certain level of self-care.

God created us to “have dominion” (Genesis 1:26) over the earth and its resources, to “till the ground” (2:5) and be “a helper” (2:18) to one another, as icons of God in the world He created. Yet, as I wrote in my book:

We have inherited a world of heartbreak. Time has been transformed from a process of growth to one of decay. Not only do we die, but our hopes, dreams, friends, munities, concepts, ideas, experiences, and feelings are all mortal too. As we pass from one moment to the next, we are, in a sense, continually dying.

And death is a problem that even Wanda admits her magic cannot e. Indeed, it is easy to get caught up on all the measurable data that go into our public policies – data that, while useful, can overshadow far more important, intangible, and non-quantifiable realities that mere human effort (super or otherwise) continually proves insufficient to handle.

From a Christian point of view, Wandavision should be a reminder to “seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness” (St. Matthew 6:33), a life characterized by each day reorienting one’s vision to the resurrection of Jesus Christ, acquiring the Spirit of peace anew, and rising up to walk the way of life, not only for the kingdom of God but also, albeit secondarily, for mon good.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Christ, Culture, and the City
From the vision of the New Jerusalem in Revelation 21 to Augustine’s City of God, the civitas is an enormously pervasive and rich biblical and theological theme. On the contemporary scene there area number of indications that evangelicals are looking more deeply and critically at engagement with the “city” as a social, political, ethical, and theological reality. This is part of the explicit vision of The King’s College in New York City, for instance, where Acton research fellow Anthony Bradley...
Journal of Markets & Morality, Spring 2009
We’re happy to announce that the latest print issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality is available online. The Spring 2009 issue includes a noteworthy study by Alan T. Y. Chan and Shu-kam Lee. In “Christ and Business Culture: Another Classification of Christians in Workplaces According to an Empirical Study in Hong Kong,” Chan and Lee outline four types of Christians at work: Christian soldiers, panic followers, strugglers, and Sunday Christians. Following the classification, Chan and Lee “develop a...
Religion & Liberty Interviews Amity Shlaes
The new issue of Religion & Liberty features an interview titled “Debating the Depression” with noted columnist and author Amity Shlaes. Shlaes does a superb job at reminding us about some of the consequences associated with massive government spending and regulation. First and foremost among these consequences is the burden of debt and taxes we are heaping upon future generations. This kind of expansion, without the means to pay for it, will sadly have a negative impact upon the quality...
Impossible Promises on Health Care
I still haven’t quite gotten to a thorough fisking of “Exhibit B,” yet, and will have to be satisfied with arguing the following thesis in the meantime: It is impossible to increase insurance coverage in America without increasing medical spending. We cannot save enough on bureaucratic reform and government-induced petition” to offset the new costs associated with an influx of 40+ million new participants. Certainly the newly mandated premiums, paid by those who have determined for themselves that it is...
The Inevitability of Finance And The Call of the Entrepreneur
“The Deal Professor,” Steven M. Davidoff, has a good piece at The New York Times website about the indispensability of finance to our economy. It briefly rebuts the view popularized in the Oliver Stone movie Wall Street, in which financiers are portrayed as greedy parasites. I left ment at the web page, noting that our documentary The Call of the Entrepreneur makes a similar case. I include ment below, since it may not pass muster with the ment moderator: A...
The Dog Days of European Socialized Medicine
In August, the Wall Street Journal Europe published an article exploring the difference in health care received by domesticated animals and humans. (see “Man Vs. Mutt: Who Gets the Better Treatment?” in WSJ Europe, August 8, 2009) The editorialist, Theodore Dalrymple (pen name for outspoken British physician and NHS critic, Dr. Anthony Daniels) argued that dogs and other human pets in his country receive much better routine and critical healthcare than humans: their treatment is “much more pleasant than British...
Philanthropy Cannot Serve Two Masters
This week’s mentary looks at the trend by many in the charitable sector to e increasingly reliant on government support. Sign up for the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary newsletter in the form here (right hand sidebar). —– The independence of American charities has steadily eroded in recent years as more philanthropic institutions e to see their mission as one of partnership or collaboration with the government. That’s a nice way of saying, “seeking government dough.” Now, in the...
Less Religion Means More Government
My article from this week’s Acton News & Commentary: munism adopted Karl Marx’s teaching that religion was the “opiate of the masses” and launched a campaign of bloody religious persecution. Marx was misguided about the role of religion but years later munists became aware that turning people away from religious life increases dependence on government to address life’s problems. The history of government coercion es from turning from religion to government makes a new study suggesting a national decline in...
Potential and the Peace Prize
In his book Elements of Justice (reviewed in the Journal of Markets & Morality here), University of Arizona philosophy and economics professor David Schmidtz introduces the idea of desert not simply as pensatory notion, but also as including a promissory aspect. That is, what we deserve isn’t always about only what we have done. There might be a real sense in which what we do after an opportunity provides a kind of retroactive justification for having been given a chance....
What hath Vienna to do with Colorado Springs?
Working as we do here at the intersection between economics and theology, the relationship between various kinds of classically liberal, libertarian, Austrian, and other economic modifiers and religion in general and Christianity in particular is in constant view. Sometimes the conversation is friendly, sometimes not so much. Sometimes the differences are less apparent, sometimes more. Once in awhile a piece will appear on the Acton site or from an Acton writer that brings this discussion to the fore. Last mentary...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved