Why The Chosen and Easter now feel inseparable as the global faith drama turns Holy Week into a screen event

What began as a crowd-funded series about the life of Jesus has grown into something much bigger: a modern screen tradition that now feels deeply tied to Easter itself. That connection became especially clear with Season 5, “The Chosen: Last Supper,” which follows the story through the events of Holy Week, from the triumphal entry into Jerusalem to the final Passover meal. The official series site frames the season around those defining days, while the studio positioned its theatrical rollout in the weeks leading directly into Easter, making the release feel less like ordinary scheduling and more like a deliberate seasonal event.

That strategy matters because Easter is not just another date on the calendar for this franchise — it is where the emotional and spiritual centre of the story lives. The official viewing platform now highlights “Holy Week with The Chosen,” and the project has previously organised Easter-adjacent viewing plans built around Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. In other words, The Chosen is increasingly being experienced not just as a series, but as part of how many viewers prepare for or reflect on Easter.

And the bond is only getting stronger. The studio has already said the final seasons will move into the events of the crucifixion and resurrection, with Season 6 arriving in late 2026 and a theatrical finale to follow in spring 2027. That means the franchise is heading toward the very heart of the Easter story — not as background context, but as its main dramatic destination.

If Easter is the season when Christians revisit the final days, death, and resurrection of Christ, then The Chosen has found a powerful place within that moment. It is no longer just a hit faith series. Around Easter, it has started to feel like an event.

