Verse Selection
Missional by Design.
Every verse printed on Marked and Sent apparel is selected with a specific purpose: to create moments of curiosity, conversation, and Gospel engagement that point toward Christ.
Not decoration.
A deliberate instrument.
We prayerfully select verses that create opportunities for Gospel conversation.
Every garment enters a room before its wearer speaks. The verse it carries has one opportunity to be seen, considered, and remembered.
- Curiosity — a verse that raises a question, invites a second look, or surfaces a tension that leads to exploration
- Accessible language — approachable without prior biblical knowledge, compelling enough to make someone want to understand it
- Demographic fit — matched to the life stage and daily context of the wearer
The Framework
Six Rules for Verse Selection
Every verse is evaluated against a defined framework before it is placed on a garment. No verse is chosen on aesthetic alone.
The verse must create curiosity before it offers resolution. It should raise a question in the reader’s mind, invite a second look, or surface a tension that leads to exploration of an answer. A verse does not need to contain a literal question to do this. The goal is a garment that functions as a door, not a wall.
A verse must be readable at a glance and land with immediate impact. Verses that are too long tend to become cluttered on a garment and are generally not suitable for display use. As a working guideline, verses around 20 words or fewer tend to work best, though a verse slightly beyond that threshold will not be automatically excluded if it reads cleanly and carries weight.
The verse does not need to be fully understood on first reading. A verse that raises more questions than it answers can be more compelling than one that explains itself. What it must not do is alienate through language so dense or unfamiliar that a reader disengages entirely. The goal is a verse that makes someone want to understand it.
Each verse is matched to the life stage and daily context of the wearer. The same truth lands differently depending on who is carrying it. For adult demographics, verses are evaluated for thematic resonance with identity, worth, courage, love, and purpose. For younger wearers, plain and direct language is the primary filter. A verse that a young person can read, understand, and feel without needing it explained to them.
Every verse must align with four convictions held by Marked and Sent and our partner churches: the authority of Scripture, the centrality of Christ, salvation by grace through faith alone, and the call to live and share the gospel. This rule is included for the benefit of church leaders reviewing our library, not as a barrier to verse selection. Since all verses are drawn directly from Scripture, alignment is assured.
All verses are drawn from the World English Bible (WEB) or the King James Version (KJV), both of which are fully public domain and cleared for use without restriction.
Rule 04 in Practice
One verse does not
fit every wearer.
Each verse is matched to the life stage, boldness tolerance, and daily context of the wearer. The garment must fit the world it is placed into in order to function as intended.
Verses must align with identity, purpose, accountability, and courage. Language is direct and weighty without being confrontational, intended to prompt reflection on strength, identity, or calling.
Verses must align with worth, love, resilience, and renewal. Language is warm and clear without being sentimental, intended to prompt reflection on identity, belonging, or being known.
Verses must align with identity, authenticity, courage, and direction. Language is honest and bold, intended to prompt reflection on whose approval matters and who is shaping them.
Verses must align with identity, worth, authenticity, and being known. Language is honest and personal, intended to prompt reflection on who made them and whether they are truly loved.
Verses must align with courage, protection, belonging, and identity. Language must be immediately accessible, intended to communicate that someone strong is in their corner.
Verses must align with being cherished, safe, loved, and known. Language must be warm and gentle with no theological barriers, intended to communicate that someone sees them and loves them completely.
The Framework in Action
Sample Verses
Each verse is drawn from our curated library in the World English Bible (WEB) and evaluated against all nine rules prior to selection.
“Watch. Stand firm in the faith. Be courageous. Be strong.”
Four commands without context create immediate tension around authority and direction.
“What are you standing firm in?”
“He will rejoice over you with joy. He will calm you in his love.”
The image of God rejoicing over a person creates immediate relational curiosity.
“Who loves you like that?”
“Am I now seeking the favor of men, or of God?”
A direct question forces reflection on external approval and whose voice is actually being followed.
“Who are you actually living for?”
“For you formed my inmost being. You knit me together in my mother’s womb.”
Someone formed the inmost being — not just the appearance, but the deepest part of who she is.
“What if who you are wasn’t an accident?”
“The wicked flee when no one pursues, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.”
A lion is mentioned — but it describes a person. What kind of person is bold like that?
“What would it look like to be brave like a lion?”
“Keep me as the apple of your eye. Hide me under the shadow of your wings.”
Apple of your eye, hidden under wings — someone keeps her close and shelters her on purpose.
“What does it feel like when someone keeps you safe?”
Church Partnership
Every garment we place in your lobby has earned its place.
It reflects a standard your congregation will carry. We hold ourselves to it so you don’t have to.