Spoilers for GOTG 3 below:
Okay, so when Rocket was dying and he saw Lylla in the entrance to the afterlife, it got really weird for a second when Lylla referenced “The hands that guide the hands that create us”. Now, the hands that created Rocket and Lylla are the hands of the High Evolutionary, and Lylla is telling Rocket to embrace an identity beyond him. That makes sense. But whose hands guide the Evolutionary’s? God’s?? That seems to be the implication, that somehow an otter is a christian. And I say christian instead of religious, because she is clearly referencing the idea of a grand plan that is not present in polytheistic religions, she’s talking about god’s plan. Or dare I say, she is asking Rocket to be part of “the greatest story ever told”
But it was just one odd sentence, so I let myself doubt this was intentional. Maybe the writers put that in there without thinking of the agenda-ness of it because it was just the terms in which they saw the world. Maybe it was an accident, an oversight.
So anyway, 10 minutes later the High Evolutionary says “I’m an atheist”, and every one of his minions in the room points their guns at him. Animal abuse? No big deal. Eugenics? Been there done that. Destroying a planet full of sentient life? Who cares? You’re an atheist!? HOW DARE YOU
But okay, maybe that’s not what they really meant in the scene. I’m joking with my friends, “Jesus is gonna show up at the end of the movie”, and I don’t mean it, this is probably where it’ll end
So anyway, then Chris Pratt dies in space and “ADAM” Warlock shows up, the camera does an obvious reference to The Creation of Adam, and Warlock saves Cris, allowing him to be raised from the dead. Bruh. Jesus actually showed up at the end of the movie
First off, credit given for writing up an explanation and posting in a public forum, even if I do think this is a crazy take that doesn’t stand up to pretty much any level of scrutiny.
There is a colossal reach from “there is a god with a plan” to specifically Christianity. Judaism and Islam don’t get a chance to audition for the part at all, huh? And that’s just the Abrahamic traditions that directly share the only attributes you listed. There are plenty of other religions that fit, and that includes other monotheistic belief systems (which also begs the question, why is Christianity not categorized as polytheistic and why does that distinction matter at all?).
I’m also just going to assume you mean evangelical Christianity and not other sects, given the general unawareness of the subtleties of religion in general.