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War Room (2015)
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Content Rating Guide
War Room (2015)
- The war room metaphor and prayer as spiritual discipline: The film’s title image — a closet stripped bare and covered with handwritten prayers — draws directly on Christ’s instruction about private, earnest prayer. Miss Clara’s war room is not merely a decorating concept; it functions as the film’s central theological argument: that deliberate, strategic prayer is the believer’s primary weapon. The walls carry scripture, photographs of loved ones, and pleas written in marker — a visual catechism of intercession that makes the invisible work of prayer oddly tangible. See Matthew 6:6 — where Christ instructs his followers to enter their private room, shut the door, and pray to the Father in secret.
- Spiritual warfare: The film builds its framework on the New Testament’s vision of the believer’s true adversary (see Ephesians 6:10-12). Miss Clara frames the Jordans’ crisis in these terms explicitly:“The real enemy is Satan. He comes to steal, kill and destroy — stealing your joy, killing your faith and trying to destroy your family. It’s time for you to fight, Elizabeth.” This is not the film reaching for a villain. It is the film making an argument: that marital dysfunction and moral compromise are, at their root, spiritual problems requiring spiritual solutions.
- The gospel presented: Miss Clara lays out the core of the gospel to Elizabeth in an extended conversation — covering sin’s nature, Christ’s substitutionary death and resurrection, and the need for personal faith and repentance. The presentation is clear if not exhaustive. Critics from more confessional traditions have noted that terms like ‘repent’ are used without being carefully defined, and that the emphasis on behavioral change can risk drifting toward moralism. Even so, the essential elements are present, and Tony’s later arc mirrors the same pattern: conviction, genuine brokenness, and a change of direction.
- Grace in marriage: The film’s most theologically resonant scene comes after Tony — diverted from an affair by a well-timed bout of food poisoning — arrives home to find a meal Elizabeth has already prepared. She begins praying for him instead of against him while he is still in the middle of his failure. Her later declaration to Tony crystallizes the film’s emotional climax: “I’m not done with us. I will fight for our marriage. I’ve learned that my contentment can’t come from you. I’m His before I’m yours. And because I love Jesus, I’m staying right here.” Contentment grounded in Christ rather than a spouse is a conviction that carries real theological weight. It gives Elizabeth’s forgiveness a foundation that is not merely romantic sentiment — and it is the film’s most honest moment.
- Intercessory prayer: As Elizabeth matures spiritually, her prayer shifts from crying out about Tony to crying out for Tony. This movement — from self-centered petition to other-centered intercession — is one of the marks of genuine spiritual growth. James 5:16 connects this kind of fervent, righteous prayer to real results — and the film depicts the transformation not abstractly but through a montage of Elizabeth’s filling prayer wall and the slow thaw in her household.
- War Room operates entirely within a Christian moral framework. No competing worldview is presented or endorsed. Characters who behave badly — Tony’s dishonesty, self-absorption, and flirtation with adultery — are never excused or normalized. The film consistently frames these as sin requiring repentance, not problems requiring self-improvement or therapy.
- The film’s approach is explicitly evangelical and Protestant. It presents a personal, conversational relationship with God through prayer; affirms the reality of Satan as a personal adversary; and connects genuine repentance to behavioral transformation. There is no syncretism, moral relativism, or ambiguity about absolute truth.
- Implied affair: During a business dinner, a female coworker invites Tony back to her apartment for wine. The invitation is clearly sexual in intent. Tony does not follow through — his sudden illness cuts the evening short. The moment is handled without titillation or visual content.
- No nudity, no sex scenes, no suggestive clothing. The film is a PG drama with a largely family-friendly presentation. The only adult content of note is the affair subplot, which exists to drive the story and is never romanticized.
Completely clean. Adults who typically filter for language will have nothing to filter here.
- One brief street robbery: A man brandishes a knife and a physical confrontation takes place. The scene resolves without serious injury and functions as a moment of character development — not an action sequence. No blood, no lingering.
- Marital conflict: Tony’s arguments with Elizabeth are heated, and one scene includes Tony physically intimidating Elizabeth with a shove. The film does not normalize this behavior; it presents it as part of Tony’s moral failure that eventually leads to his reckoning.
- Brief social drinking: A dinner scene includes wine. No intoxication is depicted, and the scene serves a narrative purpose.
- Tony’s pharmaceutical theft: Tony skims drug samples from his employer’s inventory and resells them for personal profit — the illegal behavior that eventually costs him his job and triggers his downward spiral. The film presents this as clear-cut moral failure with direct consequences. No drug use is depicted.
Cast & Crew
Alex Kendrick
Director
Stephen Kendrick
Producer
Karen Abercrombie
Miss Clara
Priscilla C. Shirer
Elizabeth Jordan
T.C. Stallings
Tony Jordan
Tenae Downing
Veronica Drake
Videos
War Room (2015)
War Room (2015): Video 1
Photos
War Room (2015)
Critics Reviews
Audience Reviews
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C
16 hours ago
Some have criticized this movie for it's mechanical link between prayer and desired outcomes. Thoughts? 🤔

Some have criticized this movie for it’s mechanical link between prayer and desired outcomes. Thoughts? 🤔