After losing nearly a billion dollars on four 2023 movie flops, Disney’s fortunes may be about to change. The trailer for its movie Wish has reached well over 70 million views across different platforms as of the end of September. That makes it Disney’s most-viewed trailer since 2019’s Frozen II.
To put this in perspective, Frozen II’s box office take to date is about a billion and a half dollars. As of September 30th, the Barbie Movie’s global box office total is now more than that. Based on the views of the Wish trailer, the film could potentially equal or even exceed those numbers.
The hyper-woke executives at Disney must be giddy with delight in anticipation of the movie’s upcoming November 22nd release date.
Disney is no longer about the original Snow White, Mickey Mouse, or Cinderella. Disney is now seeking to normalize paganism, the occult, and the radical woke agenda in the hearts and minds of children, especially young girls.
The Wish movie tells the story of a teenage girl named Asha who makes a wish to help her save her kingdom from its corrupt ruler. The name Asha has been borrowed from the Zoroastrian pagan concept of truth and universal order. Zoroastrians believe they can hold off chaos and destruction through active goodness.
In the film, the kingdom is ruled by King Magnifico. Asha discovers that the godlike King can grant people’s wishes but chooses not to grant everybody’s wishes all the time. This causes her to question the character of the King.
She takes it upon herself to find some form of magic to overthrow King Magnifico and usher in a perfect world for all. To accomplish this, she asks a wishing star to give her the ability to manipulate magic and enable her to become a very powerful but good witch.
The film’s message is that you can use occultic spirit power for good. This is no different than all the pagan religions in history that have channeled some sort of “force” to help them get what they want by being good and doing good.
Wish is no innocent cartoon. It follows the same basic track as the Barbie Movie: women and girls are trapped in an evil, oppressive system. It promotes the idea that any angry, unyielding male God is terrible, and they must call upon magical forces to escape that oppressive system. It’s all about “women are victims” woke nonsense that’s at the core of what I refer to as toxic feminism. It’s about rebelling against a God they perceive who holds them back from all the sex without consequences, money, and power they deserve.
Wish will draw young women towards the occult, magic, and witchcraft... all, at their core, are demonic.
According to the movie’s promotional copy, “Asha, a sharp-witted idealist, makes a wish so powerful that a cosmic force answers it... a little ball of boundless energy called Star. Together, Asha and Star confront a most formidable foe, the ruler of Rosas, King Magnifico... to save her community and prove that when the will of one courageous human connects with the magic of the stars, wondrous things can happen.”
Let’s unpack this statement...
“Community” is a wokey-woke buzzword. “Energy” is a term non-believers use to describe their fake alternatives to the true God of the Bible. “Connecting with the magic of the stars” is a form of divination. which is the practice of discovering hidden knowledge using occultic methods.
Consider this account found in Chapter 16 of the Book of Acts...
As Luke traveled with Paul and Silas in the city of Philippi, he recorded an encounter with a diviner: “We were met by a slave girl who had a spirit of divination and brought her owners much gain by fortune-telling” (Acts 16:16). The girl’s ability to penetrate mysteries was due to a demon that controlled her. Her masters received “much gain” from their slave. Paul eventually exorcised the demon (verse 18), freeing the girl from her spiritual bondage and angering the slave owners (verse 19).
This is exactly the same kind of demonic spiritual bondage Disney seems intent upon imposing on your daughters.
It is the opposite of freedom. Christians should avoid any practice related to divination, including witchcraft that attempts to connect them with the occult.
“Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, 11 or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead.” (Deuteronomy 18:10–11)
It remains profoundly disappointing that so many Christian churches fail to speak out about these practices... despite scriptural commands to avoid them.
Thank you for sounding the alarm.
You are right on it, but what we failed to realize is that what we thought was innocent with the old cartoons was not, it only opened the door for what is now.