Yes—here is the article updated to use visuals that are suitable for transparent backgrounds (SVG / transparent PNG), placed where they reinforce the narrative rather than decorate it.
A Pen by Bálint Ferenczy on CodePen.
DISCLAIMER : :
All opinions expressed here and or in other gists are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the church as individuals or the church as an organization or institution.
At the root of this discussion is a deeper question than staging, sensitivity, or audience response:
Do we trust God to communicate His own message?
Altering the message out of fear that it may offend—whether emotionally, culturally, or personally—is not ultimately an act of care. It is an act of distrust. It assumes that God’s truth requires our protection, refinement, or softening in order to be effective.
DISCLAIMER : :
All opinions expressed here and or in other gists are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the church as individuals or the church as an organization or institution.
“What about the special needs kids?”
This concern is sincere and should not be mocked or minimized. However, sincerity alone does not determine whether an argument is decisive, binding, or properly applied.
The question is not whether some individuals may be affected differently by intense imagery. The question is whether the presence of a smaller, sensitive subset justifies altering or diluting the core message for everyone.
DISCLAIMER : :
All opinions expressed here and or in other gists are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the church as individuals or the church as an organization or institution.
“The actor is not Jesus. This is just a play.”
That statement is factually true—but it does not resolve the issue. It misunderstands the nature and purpose of biblical representation.
No one involved believes the actor is Jesus. No one is proposing a literal crucifixion or the use of real blood. The question is not whether the portrayal is literal, but whether it is faithful.
DISCLAIMER : :
All opinions expressed here and or in other gists are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the church as individuals or the church as an organization or institution.
Specific Focus: The Depiction of Christ’s Blood in the Easter Pageant
What follows is my understanding of the discussion as you conveyed it to me. Please forgive any details I may have misunderstood, omitted, or recalled incorrectly.
A secondary discussion occurred later, but for the sake of clarity, this account is limited strictly to the question of whether—and to what extent—the blood of Jesus should be portrayed during the crucifixion scene.
DISCLAIMER : :
All opinions expressed here and or in other gists are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect the church as individuals or the church as an organization or institution.
Key Scriptural Principle:
Hebrews teaches that “without the shedding of blood there is no remission (forgiveness) of sins.” This connects Old and New Testament theology: the Levitical sacrificial system prefigured Christ’s sacrifice, and the New Covenant is established in His blood.




