Viral
Going viral isn’t a science, but there are some consistent tricks that stack the odds in your favor. Here's the quick-and-dirty version:
🔥 The "Go Viral" Formula[edit | edit source]
1. Trigger Emotion Fast[edit | edit source]
Make people feel something—the stronger, the better:
- 🤯 Surprise
- 😤 Outrage
- 😭 Sadness
- 😂 Laughter
- 🧠 Insight
🧠 Tip: “Whoa, I never thought of it like that” is golden.
2. Hook in 3 Seconds[edit | edit source]
Whether it's video, a tweet, or a headline—grab attention immediately:
- Ask a shocking question
- Show a weird image
- Drop a bold statement
❌ Bad: “Here’s a story about something interesting I learned...” ✅ Good: “I almost died doing this. Here’s what I learned.”
[edit | edit source]
People share what:
- Makes them look smart or funny
- Aligns with their tribe or beliefs
- Feels too good not to pass on
🧠 Ask: “Why would someone share this? What does it say about them?”
4. Brevity + Clarity[edit | edit source]
Cut the fluff. If someone has to think hard, they scroll on.
🔥 Punchy > Polished Keep it simple. Even genius insights should feel obvious once read.
5. Leverage Trends + Familiar Formats[edit | edit source]
Mimic what’s already viral but twist it:
- Use trending sounds, templates, memes
- Reference current events or pop culture
- But give it your unique take
🧠 "Same but different" wins.
6. Package It for the Platform[edit | edit source]
- TikTok: Raw, short, emotional, or funny
- Twitter: Punchy threads or bold one-liners
- YouTube: Thumbnail + Title must tease curiosity
- Instagram: Visual + Relatable
- LinkedIn: Personal story → insight
Bonus Trick: Make One Point, Loudly[edit | edit source]
Don’t teach a class—preach one idea that slaps.
Instead of: “5 lessons I learned about productivity” Try: “This one productivity trick saved me 5 hours a week.”
If you want, I can tailor this more specifically to your niche or content type. Want to go viral with theology? Humor? Education? Let’s zoom in.
Now that’s a killer question. Let's run the Sensus Plenior (SP) intro through the filter of each major platform. Same deep idea, different coat of paint.
🌐 How to Introduce Sensus Plenior (SP) on Each Platform[edit | edit source]
🎵 TikTok / Reels / Shorts[edit | edit source]
Format: Dramatic voiceover + visual metaphor
📹 Scene: A dusty Bible opens... zooms into a Hebrew word... letters morph into a cross. 🎙️ Voice:
“You thought the Bible was a book of stories.
What if every one of them...
was secretly about Jesus?”
Text on screen:
“What if David was Christ? What if Goliath was your sin?”
🧠 Goal: Hook people with mystery → offer Part 2 explaining it.
🐦 Twitter (X)[edit | edit source]
Format: Bold claim + thread
Tweet 1:
Most people read the Bible like it’s history.
I read it like a riddle.
And in every riddle, I find Christ.
Thread titles:
• Why the Levitical skin diseases are really about Jesus
• Why the flood wasn’t about judgment—but the cross
• Why every man in the OT is Christ, and every woman is His bride
🧠 Goal: Get retweets from curiosity & insight
📘 Facebook[edit | edit source]
Format: Relatable story + theological twist
*“I used to read the Old Testament and think, ‘Why all these strange rules?’
Then someone asked: What if every sacrifice, every law, and every name was telling the story of Christ—before He even showed up?
That’s Sensus Plenior.
It’s not allegory.
It’s the hidden story the Spirit embedded in the language itself.”*
🧠 Goal: Reach older, thoughtful crowd. Personal tone, no jargon.
📸 Instagram[edit | edit source]
Format: Carousel or image quote
📸 Slide 1:
✨ “Every man is Christ. Every woman is the bride.”
📸 Slide 2:
🔍 “In the Hebrew, every word is a door to Jesus.
Even the names in a genealogy.”
📸 Slide 3:
- This isn’t allegory.
It’s the Spirit’s deeper voice—
and it changes everything.”
🧠 Goal: Aesthetic, poetic, intriguing. Use Hebrew letters in visuals.
🎥 YouTube[edit | edit source]
Format: “What is Sensus Plenior?” mini-documentary
🗣️ “Christ said, ‘All Scripture speaks of Me.’
But what if He meant... every letter?
In Hebrew, the word for ‘accepted’ also means ‘lifted up.’
Cain didn’t just get rejected—he rejected the cross.
This isn’t your average Bible study.”
Use animations of Hebrew gates (e.g., אב → Father) and Gospel patterns.
🧠 Goal: Educate + blow minds. Hook them with mystery → prove it with examples.
💼 LinkedIn[edit | edit source]
Format: Professional reflection
“Most people teach the Bible like it’s a textbook.
I teach it like a software framework: embedded code written by the Spirit.
The method is called Sensus Plenior.
And it’s changing the way pastors, theologians, and software engineers read the Word.”
🧠 Goal: Intellectual curiosity + system thinkers.
Want me to draft an actual post for one of these platforms, fully written and styled? Pick one and I’ll go deep.
You're absolutely right—and thank you for that correction. Let’s rewrite the thread strictly using the rules of Sensus Plenior:
- No vague symbolism or generalized moral parallels
- Always grounded in:
- Christ, the Cross, the Bride
- Structure, pattern, word formations, letter meanings
- Prophetic consistency
- Comparison, not contrast
- Every element must reflect Christ’s finished work
🧵 A True SP Intro Thread (Twitter/X)[edit | edit source]
Most people read the Bible as if it became about Jesus in the New Testament.
But the Spirit hid Him in every story, every name, even in the Hebrew letters themselves.
This isn't allegory.
This is Sensus Plenior—the fuller meaning written from the start.👇
Christ said, “All Scripture speaks of Me” (Luke 24:27).
Not just prophecies.
Not just shadows.
Every. Single. Word.
Including genealogies, plagues, and skin diseases.
In Genesis 4:7, the word translated “accepted” is שאת—which also means “lifted up.”
The cross is already there.
Cain wasn’t told to behave better.
He was told to die as an encouragement to Jesus.
Sound like Jesus at Gethsemane?
Every male in Scripture is Christ.
Every female is His bride—flesh or spirit.
Adam & Eve
Abraham & Sarah
Moses & Zipporah
Hosea & Gomer
Christ & the Church
One story, told a thousand ways.
Every OT “death” is a picture of the cross.
Some are false deaths (sacrificed in symbol but not truly dead).
Some are real deaths (where fruit follows).
Joseph buried = Israel becomes fruitful
Moses in the water = Christ laid in the grave
Jonah in the fish = buried for our sins
The letters reveal it too.
אב = Father
ב = He revealed Himself to man
א = He spoke and created
Even the sequence tells the Gospel:
He created (א) → then revealed Himself (ב) → as the Father (אב)
It’s not allegory.
It’s structure.
- Symbol families stay consistent
- Hebrew word formations build patterns
- Stories follow the same arc:
- Christ dies
- The bride appears
- They are fruitful together
The Spirit didn’t write two books: one about history, one about Christ.
He wrote one—and Christ is hidden in every chapter.
That’s Sensus Plenior.
And once you see it…
You can’t unsee it.
Follow for weekly breakdowns:
- The cross in Leviticus
- The bride in Ruth
- The resurrection in Exodus
- Hebrew gates that open the meaning of names
The Gospel wasn’t added.
It was always there.
Would you like this adapted into a visual carousel, a script for TikTok, or an extended Substack article next?