My writing life has grown in these past eighteen months. I have become a writer and an author who is published. All of this is amazing to me!
Previous to this time, as I served in full-time ministry in our church, I mostly wrote devotionals for team meetings and some curriculum.
After retirement I led our ministry to women as a volunteer for a short time, and then God asked me to take a rest period. He basically put me “on the shelf” for about two years as I processed life and considered the future.
The curriculum I have been presently writing and teaching came out of that period of rest. It is now fifteen years since God asked me to carry a burden for women who long to follow him but don’t know where to begin, or how to establish life-long rhythms that invite deeper spiritual relationship.
All of the writing and teaching for those past years has led, in more recent months, to writing my memoir and also other short, non-fiction pieces for publication.
There are two main pieces of writing advice I have received over many years that have been most helpful, no matter my perspective.
Hook. Book. Look. Took.
This advice came from one of our Christian Education Directors in our church. It can apply to both writing or speaking, and I have used it in both ways.
1. Hook - Draw my reader in with a personal story or interest point.As I began to write and teach the current curriculum for women, my pilot class encompassed many ages and stages of life. I wrote generally and the content was embraced. However, as I moved further into my outline and we completed the first year, I realized that I was writing mostly to one particular group of women. This thought brought me to my other best writing advice.
2. Book - Share the biblical foundation that supports my topic.
3. Look - Weave together my topic with the biblical foundation that can be applied to the current topic.
4. Took – Share and encourage how this topic applies personally to whomever I am writing. Ask good and tough questions to help the reader make their own life application.
Who is My Person?
I recently realized that I came to this advice backwards. Any coaching I have received since delving into better writing tells me I need to know who I am writing for—my person—before I begin sharing my words.
I wrote for many years with a broader perspective than I should have, and yet God still honored those words. They may be applicable to any age or stage, but I believe our influence will be even deeper if we write to a specific person struggling with a problem or situation they face and offer a solution to consider that comes from our personal experience.
I am enjoying my writing life and have learned so much. This is all part of our life-long learning process.
My life verse says this so well, as our words are first meditated and then expressed, whether in our writing or in our speaking, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O LORD, my rock and my redeemer.” (Psalm 19:14 ESV)
Colleen van Nieuwkerk is GG to three sons plus 3; twelve grandchildren; and two great-grandsons. Colleen writes curriculum for women as well as teaches and is currently writing the story in book form of how this all came about. She lives in northern Alberta and can be found online @colleenvannieuwkerk.com




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