The Chosen Season 1 features a diverse cast with actors of various ethnic backgrounds, including Indian-descent performers like Paras Patel as Matthew and Erick Avari as Nicodemus, justified by the production's claim of historical accuracy for Galilee as a multicultural region rather than forced DEI representation. There are no race-swaps, gender-swaps, or sexuality changes to major biblical figures; Jesus is portrayed by Jonathan Roumie, of Lebanese-American heritage fitting the Middle Eastern setting, and core apostles like Simon Peter (Shahar Isaac, Israeli) align with the source material. Storytelling focuses on biblical events and added humanizing backstories for disciples, emphasizing Jesus' ministry, redemption, and personal struggles without inserting contemporary social justice themes, critiques of systemic patriarchy, capitalism, or identity politics. No lecture moments or overt progressive messaging dominate; female characters like Mary Magdalene have strong arcs rooted in scripture. Creator Dallas Jenkins, an evangelical filmmaker, expresses intent to draw viewers closer to the Bible, explicitly contrasting the show with 'woke' projects that prioritize messaging over story. Reception is overwhelmingly positive among Christian audiences, with controversies centering on biblical inaccuracies, fictional additions, and tangential Mormon production ties or a minor crew member's rainbow flag—not progressive ideology. No significant backlash labels it 'woke'; articles praise it as succeeding where woke stories fail due to authentic, Bible-grounded narrative.