The answer is "no" if the degree $d$ is a multiple of $3$, say $d=3e$. I sketched the argument in the comments, but now that comment has disappeared. For a point $x$ in $X$, there is a Grassmannian $G= \mathbb{G}(\mathbb{P}^3,\mathbb{P}^{n-1})$ parameterizing linear spaces $L_x$ of dimension $4$ that contain $x$. If $x$ is a general point, then there is a dense open subset $U$ of $G$ parameterizing $L_x$ that are not contained in $X$. There is a morphism,
$$
\zeta: U \to [\mathbb{P}k[x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4]_d / \textbf{PGL}_5],
$$
that sends each $L_x$ to the moduli point of the degree d hypersurface $L_x\cap X$ in $L_x \cong \mathbb{P}^4$. There is a subvariety $S$ of the target parameterizing hypersurfaces $[Y]$ that are of the form $e[Z]$ for a cubic hypersurface $Z$ (using additive notation). If the morphism $\zeta$ is surjective, then the image will intersect $S$, even if $e$ does not equal $1$.
It is a straightforward parameter count to determine when $\zeta$ should be dominant. That parameter count can be made into a rigorous proof. An example of this is in my preprint, "Fano Varieties and Linear Sections of Hypersurfaces".
Edit. I was asked to provide more details. Let $F(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4)$ be any nonzero homogeneous polynomial of degree $d=3e$, e.g., $(x_0^3+x_1^3+x_2^3+x_4^3)^e$. Consider $F$ as an element in both $k[x_0,\dots,x_3]_d$ and in $k[x_0,\dots,x_n]_d$, the finite dimensional $k$-vector space of homogeneous polynomials $G$ of degree $d$ on $\mathbb{P}^4$, resp. on $\mathbb{P}^n$. Let $V_F \subset k[x_0,\dots,x_n]_d$ denote the subspace of those $G$ such that $G(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3,0,\dots,0)$ is a scalar multiple of $F$. Note that $V_F$ contains a subspace, call it $W$, of polynomials $G$ such that $G(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3,0,\dots,0)$ is the zero polynomial. Moreover $W$ does not equal all of $V_F$, since $F$ is in $V_F\setminus W$. Thus $W$ is a codimension $1$ linear subspace of $V_F$. Thus also the projective linear subspace $\mathbb{P}W$ of $\mathbb{P}V_F$ has codimension $1$.
Now let $A$ denote the linear algebraic group of all projective linear automorphisms $\alpha$ of $\mathbb{P}^n$ that map the point $p=[1,0,\dots,0]$ to itself. Let $U\subset k[x_0,\dots,x_n]_d$ denote the subspace of all $G$ such that $G(1,0,\dots,0)$ equals $0$.
Since $\mathbb{P}W$ is a Cartier divisor in $\mathbb{P}V_F$, also $A\times \mathbb{P}W$ is a Cartier division in $A\times\mathbb{P}V_F$. There is an induced morphism,
$$
f : A\times \mathbb{P} V_F \to \mathbb{P}U, \ \ f(\alpha,[G]) = G\circ \alpha^{-1}.
$$
Denote by $f_W$ the restriction of $f$ to $A\times \mathbb{P}W$.
Hypothesis. The positive integers $(n,d)$ satisfy the inequality $4(n-4) \geq (d+3)(d+2)(d+1)/6$.
Under this hypothesis, the claim is that $f$ is surjective. To prove this, it suffices to prove that the restriction $f_W$ is surjective. This new claim is equivalent to the claim that every point $q$ on every degree $d$ hypersurface $\text{Zero}(G)$ in $\mathbb{P}^n$ is contained in a linear $\mathbb{P}^4$ that is contained in $\text{Zero}(G)$. Assuming this claim, then we are done: let $S \subset \mathbb{P}U$ be the open subset parameterizing smooth hypersurfaces. Then $f^{-1}(S)$ is an open subset of $A \times \mathbb{P} V_F$. It is nonempty by the claim. This nonempty open subset cannot be contained in the Cartier divisor $A\times \mathbb{P}W$. Thus, this nonempty open subset intersect $A\times \mathbb{P}V_F \setminus A \times \mathbb{P}W$. That means that for every sufficiently general smooth hypersurface and for every general point on that hypersurface, there is a is a linear $\mathbb{P}^4$ containing that point whose intersection with the hypersurface is projectively linearly equivalent to $\text{Zero}(F)$.
So now it suffices to prove that $f_W$ is surjective. This can be a bit delicate if we want to get precisely the correct inequality above. However, if you allow me to make $n$ much larger, then it is trivial. We can make the normal bundle of a given $\mathbb{P}^4$ in a given hypersurface "sufficiently general", via appropriate choices of the partial derivatives $\partial G/\partial x_{4+i}|_{\mathbb{P}^4}$, so that even the derivative of $f_W$ is explicitly surjective.