By Bra Peter
We live in an age where everyone scrolls — fast.
Swipe. Like. Share. Skip.
But very few understand what it takes to create something that touches the soul.
Let me tell you something real:
Creating one Bra Peter sermon can take me two hours. On a good day.
Not because I don’t know what I want to say — but because truth deserves care.
Writing the script is just the beginning.
Then comes finding the right image…
Then tweaking that image…
Then stitching together the visuals to match the message…
Then choosing music that feels like the message sounds…
Then adjusting timing, font size, text placement…
And then checking it again… and again…
You see, this is no longer “just content.”
This is cinema for the soul.
🎥 The Hidden Work
Before this, I never fully appreciated how much work goes into a single movie scene.
But now I know.
Now I feel it.
The weight of each second.
The emotional labour of choosing the right tone.
The spiritual labour of telling a hard truth without turning people away.
The technical labour of editing something that looks “simple.”
It’s not a hustle.
It’s not a quick gig.
It’s not “influencer stuff.”
It’s production. Of truth. Of presence. Of consciousness.
🧠 What I’ve Learned
- Truth is heavy.
Even a one-minute sermon needs grounding, vision, and precision. - The visuals matter.
People don’t just listen with their ears. They listen with their eyes and hearts. - Music is memory.
The right sound can pierce the veil between mind and spirit. - This is ancestral work.
We are modern griots.
Digital prophets.
The messages we craft will echo long after we’re gone — especially if we get them right.
✊🏾 Final Words
If you ever wondered why Bra Peter talks slow, it’s because the weight of words is real.
If you ever asked why the visuals are minimal, it’s because truth doesn’t need decoration.
If you’re walking your own path of conscious creation, then hear me well:
This work will tire you.
This work will humble you.
But this work will also free you.
Keep creating, not because it’s easy — but because it matters.
We walk in the light. Even when editing in the dark.