The Chosen Season 2 exhibits minor incidental progressive elements through its casting choices, featuring actors of diverse ethnic backgrounds such as Paras Patel (Indian-American as Matthew), Abe Bueno-Jallad (Thomas), and others portraying biblical figures in a 1st-century Judean setting under Roman rule, where such multiculturalism is historically plausible and feels organic rather than forced or clashing with source material. Matthew's portrayal includes neurodivergent traits like autistic behaviors to enhance relatability and humanize the character, but this serves storytelling without turning into lectures on identity or inclusion. Core themes revolve around Jesus' ministry, redemption, healing, rising tensions with enemies, and disciple dynamics, staying true to traditional biblical narratives without overt critiques of patriarchy, capitalism, systemic oppression, or identity politics. No evidence of creator Dallas Jenkins pushing activist intent or DEI mandates; he focuses on drawing viewers closer to the Bible. Reception controversies center on theological liberties (e.g., Mary Magdalene's relapse in Episode 5, Sermon on the Mount depictions) rather than wokeness, with no widespread audience backlash labeling it 'woke' or citing diversity as detrimental to quality.