A friend responded:"On the Mayflower, the Pilgrims brought over a printed copy of the Geneva Bible. On the good ship Digital, what form do you suppose the 'Bible' will take?"
Not only scriptures but all significant texts will morph into dynamic forms that are interactive, modular, and fluid (like this one)... self-modifying structures that respond to responses from all who engage with its multitude of faces. Everyone encountering that 3D space or fractal narrative will change and be changed by it.
Real canons are open evolving and free ... including canons (we see now) that seemed to be fixed in print but which in fact evolved in the consciousness of readers, changing every time they were read.
Sacred digital space will look more like a flowing mobile than a straight-line text, except that the nodes of the mobile will be mobiles too. But as I said, printed texts are like that too (we see now), the text rewritten by each reader's experience: our linked modular minds the framework of the text which flows like electric words on a sign through the bulbs of our brains.