While David and Andrea fight for their place in the Church, other characters descend further into darkness.
: To save Sister Andrea from forced retirement, David uses the Church's own political sensibilities against them. He claims to see the same "blasphemous" demons as she does, forcing the tribunal into a corner: if they fire her, they must also fire one of their few newly ordained Black priests. Evil S03E05 FRENCH HDTV
: The Monsignor expresses visible discomfort and a desire to "move on" from the case once race is involved, highlighting a "poison" or deep-seated bias within the Church leadership. While David and Andrea fight for their place
The episode (Season 3, Episode 5) of the supernatural drama Evil serves as a critical examination of institutional bias, religious iconography, and the shifting moral landscape of the show's characters. The narrative centers on an investigation into an alleged angelic visitation following a catastrophic building collapse, while simultaneously following the ecclesiastical tribunal of Sister Andrea. The Subversion of Iconography and Racial Bias : The Monsignor expresses visible discomfort and a
: Father David Acosta grapples with the realization that his own visions might be hallucinations informed by traditional Renaissance art, where angels are depicted as white and demons as dark-skinned. The Trial of Sister Andrea
A core theme of the episode is the "whitewashing" of religious imagery and the resulting institutional discomfort when that imagery is challenged.