Showing posts with label gifts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gifts. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Stretching the Benefits of Our God-Given Gifts by Zoe M. McCarthy

I gathered my checkbook and pre-stamped envelopes and opened up my worksheet for my quarterly giving. I hate diseases, the effects of wars, and anything that hurts people. I want to use the monetary gifts God has given me to help people, but I’m convinced that help without the Gospel is sadly only temporary assistance. So my quarterly checks travel to organizations I trust, are committed to helping people in their current circumstances, and offer Christ to benefit their eternal situations.
Zoe M. McCarthy


One of my spiritual gifts is teaching. Besides teaching the Community Bible Study, I write stories. Many people who love to read are hurting. They often read to lose themselves in a story. If I write to simply entertain them, my help is temporary. But if I write from a Christian worldview and offer Christ in a way I hope piques interest instead of anger, I believe I may potentially plant seeds that God will use to save some beyond their current pain.

Recently, a woman clicked on an ad for my book and sent me a message. She said: “Sadly, as much as I read, I tend to shy away from "Christian" romance. I read for the story. In Christian romances, the Christianity often overwhelms the story.”

I wrote back: “I hear you, XXXX. In American Christian Fiction Writers, we often talk about what you brought up. Story is important, and we don't need to hammer readers over the head with the Gospel. We can write from a Christian worldview, but if it's fiction, then the story has to delight and satisfy the reader. Thanks for taking the time to write, XXXX.

She responded: “It is always about the story in any writing. Thank you for your response.”

I praise God for this woman. She didn’t read my book, but she took the time to write what was on her mind. And she could have been rude. Instead, this woman, who loves to read, shared what bothers her about Christian romance stories.

On the other side, my book received a review from a woman who doesn’t read Christian romances. She admitted she liked to read racier stories. She read my book before she realized it was Christian, but said she was glad she did. And why was that? Story. And she recommended the book.

I will still depict heroines and heroes overcoming life’s hurts. I will still write with humor and tenderness. I will still share Christ, but I will work hard to write stories readers, Christian or not, will enjoy and remember.

How about you? What are your thoughts about using your gifts to help people bearing life’s hurts—now and eternally?

About the Author

Zoe M. McCarthy believes the little-known fact that opposites distract. Thus, she spins Christian contemporary romances entangling extreme opposites. Her tagline is: Distraction to Attraction, Magnetic Romances Between Opposites. Christian Fiction Online Magazine published two of her short stories. Zoe self-published two books of contemporary Christian short stories. She’s a member of American Christian Fiction Writers. She enjoys leading workshops on the craft of writing; speaking about her faith; planning fun events for her 5 grandchildren; and exploring the Blue Ridge Mountains, where she lives with her husband, John.
Learn more about Zoe M. McCarthy at her website: http://zoemmccarthy.com.

Calculated Risk


What happens when an analytical numbers man meets a mercurial marketing Rep? Romance is a calculated risk…
Calculated Risk
by Zoe M. McCarthy

Jilted by the latest of her father’s choices of “real men,” Cisney Baldwin rashly accepts an invitation to spend Thanksgiving weekend with a sympathetic colleague and his family. Nick LeCrone is a man too much her opposite to interest her and too mild-mannered to make her overbearing father’s “list.” Now, Cisney fears Nick wants to take advantage of her vulnerable state over the holiday. Boy, is she wrong.

Nick wants little to do with Cisney. She drives him crazy with all her sticky notes and quirks. He extended an invitation because he felt sorry for her. Now he’s stuck, and to make matters worse, his family thinks she’s his perfect match. He’ll do what he can to keep his distance, but there’s just one problem—he’s starting to believe Cisney’s magnetism is stronger than he can resist.

Purchase links for Calculated Risk: http://zoemmccarthy.com/books





Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Today Matters by Emily Conrad

Emily Conrad
The nature of publishing gives writers years and years to dream about what will happen “someday.” 

Someday, we’ll get THE call. 

Someday, these stories will touch lives.

Someday, our books will be on shelves.

In the meantime, there are no adoring crowds. No packed conference rooms hoping to learn from us. Other than comments from critique partners (usually more aimed at improving the writing than praising it) and a couple notes on the blog or some much-appreciated retweets or shares, all is quiet.

In my home, between bursts of thought that result in clicking keys, I hear the clock tick and my old pit bull snoring on the living room rug. 

Novelists are trained to expect this. Publication takes a long time (as does reaching career goals beyond that first step). So we keep posting and writing and working like each action is a penny in a bank that will someday amount to something.
But each penny has value. Every word does, too. 


Though anticipation, goals, and improvement are all good, let’s not spend so much effort striving for someday that today’s significance gets lost in the bustle. 


Many of us write because we believe God wants to use us, but as we follow him, he is using us. Already. Today.


Regardless of our platform size or our agented/unagented, published/unpublished status, today matters for today’s sake.


Today, God will use our gifts. 


Today, we are commissioned to follow Jesus. 


Today, we can speak hope into someone else’s discouragement whether it’s through a blog post or a card to a friend or a comment on social media. 


There is a meaning and value to all this writing. It’s not about platforms or numbers. It’s not about best seller lists or advances. It’s about being available to God, following Him, and seeing where that leads. 


Actually, I know where it leads. It leads to people’s hearts. As writers, no matter where we are in our careers, we have been blessed with a gift that allows us to be that one voice of hope to that one person who needs it.


Because to the one person who needs it? That means so much more than any words could convey. 


Here I am, Lord. Send me. You can have my someday. All I ask is You give me words for today.


What is God nudging you to write today? How have you been touched by words someone wrote recently?



Tweetable: Don’t let today’s significance gets lost in the bustle of striving for someday via @novelwritergirl



About the Author
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Free Short Fiction for Email Subscribers
Emily Conrad is a wife and writer who lives in Wisconsin with her husband and two rescue dogs. Her debut women’s fiction novel is underway with Pelican Book Group. Emily loves Jesus and enjoys summer road trips to the mountains. You can connect with her on social media and at EmilyConradAuthor.com.

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www.EmilyConradAuthor.com