'Revenge' season 4 spoilers: Emily to avenge Aiden's death next season

Revenge season 4 Facebook/RevengeABC

Fans have seen Emily Thorne seeking revenge for her father's death all this time, but viewers will see a different kind of Emily's wrath and will now avenge Aiden's untimely death.

Emily has spent her whole life seeking her terms of justice for the tragedies that happened to her in the past. However, spoilers hinted that Emily will embark in a new type of vendetta in the fourth season of "Revenge". First off, Aiden Mathis (Barry Sloane) is a goner after he was poisoned and suffocated by the malicious Victoria Grayson (Madeleine Stowe). His death will further fuel the anger in Emily and will intensify her desire for revenge against Victoria.

"Revenge" executive producer Sunil Nayar told E! "We thought the best thing to do is make [Emily] understand what revenge is in a very different way. It's one thing when you are a young girl and you lose your father and you have this idealistic sense of who he was and therefore you might idealize the sense of what you have to do to get him justice, but when you lose the man that you love, the love of your life with whom you plan on spending your life at the hand of the woman you hate more than anybody, it's a much more mature kind of anger that I think will inform how Emily will go about doing what she does in season four differently."

To add to her burden, David Clarke (James Tupper) will make a comeback next season, which means that he is alive and Aiden is not. Emily will have to take a step back and think over her plans.

Meanwhile, Hollywood Hills reported that Victoria's character will go darker. This is brought about by her confinement in a mental hospital against her will.

"Revenge" season 4 will be returning to ABC this fall.

News
Wildwood Kin’s Meg Loney on how a 24/7 prayer meeting brought her back from the brink 
Wildwood Kin’s Meg Loney on how a 24/7 prayer meeting brought her back from the brink 

Meg Loney went from the depths of drug addiction to being a follower of Christ bringing hope and healing to others with her music.

How going to prison for a crime I didn’t commit changed my life – for the better
How going to prison for a crime I didn’t commit changed my life – for the better

In 2008, Wilson Femayi was wrongly convicted and sent to prison for a crime he didn’t commit. He had just graduated from Bible college. His arrest — the result of a personal vendetta — was a devastating moment. But even in that dark place, God was at work. Today, Wilson is the Executive Director of Prison Fellowship Zimbabwe, leading programmes that are restoring prisoners and reuniting families across the country.

Christians in Africa face worsening violence, report finds
Christians in Africa face worsening violence, report finds

A new report from International Christian Concern (ICC) has revealed a disturbing rise in violence against Christians across parts of Africa, with Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and Kenya experiencing a surge in attacks, abductions, massacres and forced displacements.

Nicaragua crackdown on Christianity deepens amid political power grab
Nicaragua crackdown on Christianity deepens amid political power grab

A new policy brief released by Open Doors has exposed as a systematic campaign of repression against Christian communities in Nicaragua.