This paper examines how women survivors of sexual abuse collectively reimagine biblical texts in the aftermath of violence. It focuses on interpretative responses expressed in art and creative practice, articulated within the material space of the Bible and examined within a social media hashtag campaign. This online space affirms women's interpretive agency and authority to engage biblical texts in light of trauma, a form of theological reflection from which women have been historically marginalised. As such, these reimaginings participate in a broader collective imaginary through which meaning and identity are rearticulated together in ways that are theologically significant. This paper adopts a process-theopoetic framework oriented toward how theological meaning emerges through creative, embodied and imaginative response. The analysis examines how interpretation, when taken up within a networked community of practice, enables women to exercise interpretive authority beyond institutional and traditional boundaries, generating forms of connection and opening alternative ways of seeing and living in the wake of trauma. This research forms part of a Government of Ireland Irish Research Council funded project, The New Illuminators: Women in Search of Spiritual Authority and Resilience (NISAR), which examines women's visual interpretive practices in contemporary contexts.