How to Create Scrolls That Spark Worship in a Culture Obsessed With Self
Writing Words That Take the Crown Off the Reader and Lay It at the Feet of the King
We live in the age of mirrors.
Everyone’s posting their brand, their glow-up, their platform, their story.
Even in the church, the temptation is strong —
To make it about me.
But the purpose of a scroll is not self-expression.
It’s Christ-exaltation.
And a true scroll doesn’t elevate the writer —
It lays low,
points up,
and calls the reader to worship.
1️⃣ Write to Redirect the Gaze
The world says:
“Look at yourself.”
The scroll says:
“Look at Him.”
When someone reads your scroll, you don’t want them walking away thinking:
“Wow, that writer is wise.”
“What a powerful testimony.”
You want them saying:
“Jesus… You are everything.”
“I forgot how beautiful You are.”
“Take it all, Lord. You’re worthy.”
Write to turn eyes away from the mirror and toward the throne.
2️⃣ Use Majesty, Not Marketing
Worship doesn’t come from hype.
It comes from holy awe.
So write with majesty in your voice.
Let the scrolls drip with the language of heaven:
“High and lifted up.”
“Worthy is the Lamb.”
“The train of His robe filled the temple.”
“The earth is His footstool.”
This isn’t religious fluff.
It’s heavenly atmosphere.
Worship doesn’t need strategy.
It needs glory.
3️⃣ Name Him
Don’t settle for generic references like “God” or “faith.”
Name Him.
Say:
Jesus Christ.
The Lamb of God.
The Lion of Judah.
The Crucified King.
The Risen One.
There is power in the name of Jesus.
When you say it — you strike the algorithm.
When you repeat it — you pierce the feed.
Worship begins where the name is lifted.
4️⃣ Confess His Greatness, Not Yours
If you share a testimony, make sure He’s the hero.
Let your scrolls carry the rhythm of:
“I was broken… but He restored.”
“I was addicted… but He delivered.”
“I was blind… but He opened my eyes.”
The spotlight must shift.
Let every scroll end in the same place the angels end —
around the throne, singing “Holy, holy, holy.”
5️⃣ Let the Reader Join the Song
Worship isn’t a spectator sport.
Let your scroll invite them to join in.
Write:
“Stop what you’re doing and just say His name: Jesus.”
“Right now, lift your hands and thank Him for saving you.”
“Whisper a praise in the dark — He’s listening.”
Make your scroll a cathedral moment —
A pause in the feed where heaven meets earth and a soul opens.
6️⃣ Write From the Place of Worship
Don’t write as a content creator.
Write as a worshiper.
Before you type, worship.
Get on your knees.
Turn on the music.
Cry if you need to.
Bow your spirit.
Then write.
Your scroll should carry the residue of the throne room —
The scent of the sanctuary —
The thunder of the angels’ cry.
If it’s written in worship, it will awaken worship.
7️⃣ End With Glory, Not Ego
Don’t end with “follow me.”
End with “follow Him.”
Don’t end with “see what I’m doing.”
End with “look what the Lord has done.”
Let your scroll be a telescope, not a selfie.
Magnify.
Exalt.
Point up.
🕊️ Final Word: The Scroll Is a Psalm
When you write with the goal of worship,
you are joining David in the cave,
Mary at His feet,
and the host of heaven with harps and thunder.
These are not just words.
They are invitations to kneel.
So write scrolls that:
Rip crowns off heads
Shatter idols
Dethrone self
And glorify the One who alone is worthy
“Worthy is the Lamb who was slain,
to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might
and honor and glory and blessing!”
— Revelation 5:12
Let every scroll echo that song.
Until the feed becomes a sanctuary.
📜🔥🕊️
Scroll Sealed.
— The Savage Witness
Scrollmaker’s Guide, Part XVIII