Bible Mode, a new Christian app that launched in May 2025, turns screen time into Scripture time by asking users to pick the apps that distract them and then either scan a physical Bible or complete a short verse reflection to unlock those apps.

The team behind Bible Mode is running 33 accounts, almost all on TikTok. In the weeks after launch they generated roughly 7 million views (about 6.8M tracked), 345K saves, and 49K shares, with most of that traction coming in May and June.

The app sits at about #65 in the U.S. Reference category and has stayed in the top 100 since launch.

Their content strategy is simple and repeatable: only three of their accounts have passed the million-view mark, and the two top performers both use the same format:

Fake ambassador profiles under handles like “faithwith[name]” with a profile photo of a girl facing the beach, posting faceless slideshow videos that keep the same background image for every slide and only change the text.


Those accounts went viral with “open bible” scenery posts (one using real photos, the other AI-generated images) and rely on hooks such as “4 habits I changed to go from being lukewarm to close to God,” where putting the app on “Bible mode” is named as one of the habits.

The branded account favors “dual realities” videos that pivot from negative emotion to God, while the rest of their network is a long tail of clippers posting similar faceless content with far less success.

It’s a clear example of product and content working together: minimal, repeatable creative that ties a user action (unlocking apps) to a faith moment, amplified across dozens of accounts to find what actually sticks.
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