The Chosen- Os Escolhidos- 4-6 4-- Temporada - E... [TRUSTED ★]
As the screen fades to black at the end of Episode 6, with Jesus walking alone toward the Mount of Olives, one line echoes from earlier seasons: “Get used to different.” The Chosen has indeed become different—darker, deeper, and more demanding. And in that demand, it offers the most honest portrayal of discipleship ever put on screen: not a journey of victory, but a long, stumbling walk toward a cross that only love can bear.
Through the microcosm of Simon Peter’s denial, the political chess of Caiaphas, and the quiet agony of Mary of Nazareth, Episodes 4-6 dismantle any remaining notion of a triumphant, nationalist Messiah. Instead, they present a portrait of a leader willingly walking into isolation—and the disciples’ desperate, failing attempts to hold themselves together as he does so.
If Episode 4 is about a disciple’s failure and Episode 5 about an enemy’s logic, Episode 6 is the emotional heart of the trilogy. It focuses on Mary of Nazareth (Vanessa Benavente), who has known from the annunciation that her son would suffer. Yet knowing and witnessing are two different realities. The Chosen- Os Escolhidos- 4-6 4-- Temporada - E...
Episode 4 serves as the season’s emotional earthquake. Centering on Simon Peter (Shahar Isaac), the episode dramatizes a scriptural extrapolation: Peter’s denial of Jesus before the rooster crows. However, The Chosen reframes this not as a sudden act of cowardice but as the inevitable collapse of a man crushed by cognitive dissonance.
Episode 6 ends with Jesus looking across a crowded Jerusalem street toward his mother. They do not speak. He gives a single, almost imperceptible nod. She closes her eyes and nods back. In this silent exchange, The Chosen achieves what sermons often fail to: it dramatizes the —the same “let it be done to me according to your word” that Mary spoke at the annunciation, now reversed as she lets her son walk to his death. This is not passive resignation but active, agonized consent. As the screen fades to black at the
If the episodes have a flaw, it is pacing. Episode 5’s political intrigue, while necessary, occasionally drags, especially compared to the visceral intimacy of Episode 4 and the poetic silence of Episode 6. Additionally, some viewers may find Jesus’ emotional distance in these episodes unsettling; however, this is intentional. Jenkins portrays Jesus not as distant but as already in communion with the Father’s will , a state his disciples cannot yet comprehend. This very incomprehensibility is the source of their pain—and the series’ dramatic power.
Peter must learn that strength is not swordsmanship but confession. Caiaphas must learn that order is not security but a tomb. Mary must learn that motherhood is not protection but surrender. Each character faces a unique crisis, yet the answer is the same: Instead, they present a portrait of a leader
Jenkins uses the lighting masterfully. The warm, golden hues of Galilee are replaced by the cold, blue-green firelight of Jerusalem. As Peter warms his hands by the servants’ fire, the heat is ironically juxtaposed with the spiritual frost spreading through his heart. His famous “I do not know the man” is delivered not with malice but with a hollow, broken whisper—a man watching his own identity disintegrate. This episode argues that
The episode’s genius lies in its pacing. Throughout the first three episodes of Season 4, Peter is portrayed as the most vocally militant disciple, convinced that Jesus is the warrior-Messiah who will overthrow Rome. In Episode 4, after the raising of Lazarus (which occurs off-screen between seasons), Peter’s expectations are violently recalibrated. When Jesus speaks of suffering and death, Peter’s mind rejects it. His denial in the courtyard is less about saving his skin and more about psychological survival: he cannot publicly affirm a Messiah who refuses to fight.
Below is a comprehensive, deep-dive essay written in English, examining the theological, narrative, and character developments in these pivotal middle chapters of the fourth season. Introduction: The Fulcrum of the Narrative Arc