Inside Out 2 Christian Review: Navigating the Complexities of the Soul
- Layne McDonald
- Feb 4
- 4 min read
Christian Safety Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐½ (4.5/5 Stars)
Red Flags:
Curse words: 0
Sexual content: 0
Gore/violence: 0
Scary moments: 2-3 mild anxiety sequences
Thematic concerns: Self-help messaging over Christ-centered solutions
Recommended Age: 7 and up
Pixar's Inside Out 2 takes us back inside Riley's mind, but this time she's thirteen and navigating the turbulent waters of adolescence. New emotions like Anxiety, Envy, Embarrassment, and Ennui crash the party alongside Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger, and Disgust. The result? A visually stunning, emotionally intelligent film that gives Christian families plenty to appreciate, and even more to discuss around the dinner table.
What Parents Will Appreciate
Let's start with the good news: Inside Out 2 is remarkably clean. There's no language to worry about, zero sexual content, and nothing that would make you dive for the remote. The film earns its family-friendly reputation honestly, making it one of the safest theatrical experiences you'll find for elementary and middle school kids.

Beyond content safety, the movie actually mirrors several biblical principles in Riley's journey. When Joy guides Riley toward compassion, selflessness, and keeping her promises, we're seeing Proverbs 12:22 in action: "The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy." When Riley breaks promises to her friends or considers stealing to fit in with older hockey players, the film doesn't celebrate these choices, it shows the relational damage they cause.
The concept of personifying internal struggles isn't un-Christian either. In fact, it has deep roots in Christian theology. From St. Thomas Aquinas to seventh-century ascetic St. Maximus the Confessor, Christian thinkers have long understood the human person as composed of distinct parts, desires, intellect, and will, that must work together in harmony. St. Maximus's "discernment of spirits" parallels what Riley learns in the film: recognizing our emotions while learning to direct them appropriately rather than being controlled by them.
Where the Gospel Goes Missing
Here's where we need to pump the brakes and engage our own discernment.
The film's central message revolves around Riley discovering her "sense of self" through introspection and understanding her emotional patterns. On the surface, self-awareness sounds great. But the movie presents a fundamentally humanistic solution to Riley's identity crisis: look within yourself, understand your emotions, and you'll find healing.

Christianity teaches something radically different. We don't find our true identity by looking inward, we find it by looking upward to Christ. Jeremiah 17:9 warns us that "the heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?" Self-examination alone can't address the deeper spiritual reality of our sinful nature. We need transformation that comes from outside ourselves, through the Holy Spirit.
The most problematic moment comes when the film's emotional characters conclude that Riley is fundamentally "a good person." This directly contradicts Romans 3:23: "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." It's a feel-good message that bypasses the gospel entirely. No one is inherently morally good except God, and our hope doesn't rest in affirming our goodness, it rests in Christ's righteousness covering our sin.
There's also a subtle but important missing piece in the film's metaphor. We see emotions at a command console controlling Riley's actions, but there's no representation of her intellect or will, the distinctly human capacities that can govern our desires. The visual suggests we're slaves to our emotions rather than beings created in God's image with reason and choice. Scripture calls us to take "every thought captive to obey Christ" (2 Corinthians 10:5), which requires a will that can direct emotions rather than merely react to them.
Using This as a Teaching Moment
So should Christian families skip Inside Out 2? Not necessarily. This film is actually a fantastic conversation starter when approached with discernment.

Before the movie, prep your kids: "We're going to watch a really creative movie about emotions. Let's see what it gets right and what we might think about differently as Christians."
After the movie, ask questions like:
"What did Riley learn about her emotions? Is that helpful?"
"The movie says Riley is 'a good person.' What does the Bible say about all people?"
"Riley tried to fix her problems by understanding herself better. What does God say about where real healing comes from?"
"When you're anxious or sad, where should you look for help?"
These conversations turn a theater trip into discipleship. Your kids learn to engage culture critically, recognize worldview differences, and apply biblical truth to popular media. That's a skill that will serve them far beyond this one movie.
The Anxiety Conversation
One genuinely valuable aspect of Inside Out 2 is its portrayal of anxiety. The character Anxiety isn't villainized, she's presented as trying (unsuccessfully) to protect Riley by catastrophizing every possible future scenario. For kids struggling with worry, seeing this emotion personified can help them externalize and understand what's happening in their minds.
Christian parents can build on this. Yes, anxiety is a real emotion we all experience. But the film stops short of offering a transcendent solution. This is where you can introduce Philippians 4:6-7: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."
Understanding anxiety is step one. Taking it to the cross is step two: and that's the step the movie can't take for you.
Final Verdict: Worth Watching with Eyes Wide Open
Inside Out 2 is safe, entertaining, and emotionally intelligent. It's also fundamentally humanistic in its worldview. That doesn't make it evil or worthless: it makes it exactly what you'd expect from a secular studio trying to help kids navigate adolescence without reference to their Creator.
For Christian families, that means watching with discernment and following up with discipleship. Use Riley's journey to point your kids toward the One who truly knows their hearts, transforms their nature, and offers identity not based on performance or self-perception, but on being beloved children of God.
The movie invites Riley: and by extension, our kids: to look inward for answers. The gospel invites us to look to Jesus. Both can't be true. Make sure your kids know which direction actually leads to life.
Want more faith-driven movie reviews that help you navigate entertainment with biblical discernment? Follow our blog for weekly reviews, parent guides, and conversations about engaging culture as Christians. Subscribe and never miss an update that equips your family to watch wisely!

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