Brazil’s Supreme Court has overturned a ruling that TV streaming service Netflix must remove a film depicting Jesus as gay.
The film, The First Temptation of Christ, infuriated fervent Christians in the country.
Two million people signed a petition calling for it to be axed, and the production company was attacked with Molotov cocktails last month.
A judge temporarily banned the film on Wednesday to appease its critics.
But Supreme Court president Dias Toffoli said on Thursday that Netflix should be allowed to continue streaming the show, stating that freedom of speech was fundamental in a democracy.
“One cannot suppose that a humorous satire has the ability to weaken the values of the Christian faith, whose existence is traced back more than two thousand years, and which is the belief of the majority of Brazilian citizens,” the judge said.
Why has the film caused uproar?
The parody film, which was run as a Christmas special, was created by Brazilian YouTube comedy group Porta dos Fundos.
One man suspected of having been part of the attack has fled to Russia, and Interpol are working to arrest him.
Why was it banned in the first place?
A judge in Rio de Janeiro ordered Netflix to take the film down on Wednesday.
Judge Benedicto Abicair said his temporary decision would appease angry Christians until a final decision was made by a higher court.
“Exhibiting the ‘artistic production’… may cause graver and more irreparable damage than its suspension,” the judge said.
Porta dos Fundos said in a statement that it “opposed any act of censorship, violence, illegality, authoritarianism” and would continue to air its work.
Brazil’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro once said he would rather have a dead son than a gay son.
His son, Eduardo Bolsonaro, called the Netflix show “garbage” on Twitter, adding that Porta dos Fundos “do not represent Brazilian society”.