David is a straightforward, faithful animated retelling of the biblical story from the Book of Samuel, focusing on young David's anointing, slaying of Goliath, rise to kingship, and trials under Saul, all driven by themes of unshakable faith, courage, loyalty to God, and divine purpose. The storytelling remains purely traditional and devotional, with no insertions of contemporary social justice messaging, identity politics, systemic critiques, or lectures on modern issues. Casting is organic and fitting: white actors voice David (Phil Wickham as adult, Brandon Engman as young) and key Israelites like Saul (Adam Gold) and Jonathan; Philistine roles like Goliath (Kamran Nikhad) and King Achish (Asim Chaudhry) use actors of Middle Eastern/South Asian descent, aligning naturally with the ancient Near Eastern setting without any race- or gender-swapping. Christian musicians like Wickham and Lauren Daigle (Rebecca) enhance the musical elements without activist overtones. Production intent emphasizes inspiring families with biblical truth, positioning it as wholesome entertainment free from Hollywood's ideological intrusions. Reception is overwhelmingly positive among audiences and Christian reviewers, with box office success boosted by conservative promotion as an anti-Disney alternative, and zero notable backlash over 'woke' elements—critiques are limited to production disputes or outlier negativity unrelated to progressivism. This pure focus on entertainment and spiritual upliftment exemplifies cinema unburdened by progressive ideology.