The database is not going to be your problem here. It's fairly trivial to use prepared statements to allow all kinds of characters to be stored safely in the database. Using anything other than prepared statements to store user input is insufficient, and essentially never recommended.
But you're talking about allowing arbitrary javascript to be executed, which is always going to be a security problem. As a commenter above implies, you're going to be replicating the complexities of jsfiddle.net without the security experience, the development know-how, or the express wish to keep on patching the vulnerabilities that will keep on cropping up.
Certainly you should be aware that what you're doing will completely compromise any domain that you set it up on, so that essentially that javascript should be only written on a throw-away domain or subdomain that you don't use for any other purpose. Of course, it's going to be trivial in such an environment to simply framebreak and pull a viewer off of the site that hosts the frame as well.
I'm sure this just scratches the surface of the potential abuses that arbitrary javascript execution (aka intentional self cross-site-scripting) will bring with it.
Since you're essentially re-inventing a very dangerous wheel with this concept, why not simply use some of the embedding services that already exist out there? codepen.io for example, allows you to embed it's snippets.
<script>
block. But if you're going to re-create jsfiddle you have to take that risk.