Most ministries are involved with edifying the lives and minds of the people to whom the ministry is to. These ministries many times use various methods to deliver their message to their audience. Publishing a book that displays the message of your ministry is a smart, savvy, and powerful way to reach your audience.

A book can say more to your following than you can say in one sitting. You can develop your message and show attention to details in a book that you couldn’t possibly do when you speak on television, radio, or in person. Once a person has your book in their hand, they will be able to learn your message intimately, and in their own time. When you speak you do realize that people don’t take all that you say. People will generally only remember a small percentage of what you said. Yet when they can see it and digest it at their own learning pace, you become successful at being an effective teacher. And isn’t that what you’re trying to be?

There are not too many people that are in ministry or are passionate educators that couldn’t be more effective at their mission with a book.

Even if your ministry isn’t a teaching one but an activity based one, the ultimate goal of any ministry is the changed life of a human being. So after you’ve fed, clothed, or treated a person, you can hit a home run if you were to give that person a book that teaches the doctrine, philosophy, and heart of your organization and spirit.

I believe that it’s impossible to be successful at accomplishing your goals in ministry without being a doer and leading by example. But after or as you do that it’s also equally important to bring understanding to the people to whom you minister. You should never be presumptuous and think that someone will be changed simply because you did a good deed for them. People will consume all that you have and leave away completely un-changed and not be spiritually affected in the least. You and I know that reaching the spiritual man is the ultimate goal. If that’s true then you need to have a book. It will take your ministry to a new level and/or make it more productive and effective.

Anthony Obey is the owner of GMA Publishing providing book publishing and marketing services to authors. One of his greatest passions is to help Christian Pastors, Ministers, and Leaders share their message in book form. http://GMApublishing.com

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Sailors had it for years. Great explorers had it as well. If you go on an expedition to an ancient Aztec mound, more than likely the archaeologist will have one too - so, why shouldn’t you own one?

No, I’m not speaking of the scurvy that plagued the sailors! No, I’m not speaking of the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot, whom explorers claimed to have seen in snowy Manitoba winters. Nor am I speaking of a lost city, which was never truly lost, but simply buried under mounds of earth and recently dug up by an archaeologist.

I’m speaking of journals. Journals? Yes! Keeping a journal can be just as much of an adventure as sailing the high seas, exploring unknown Canadian wilderness or digging in the dirt to find buried treasure.

Journals have been a source of reflection for centuries. My suggestion is to look at your writing career as if you’re an explorer analyzing new-found land; an archaeologist digging up new artifacts and renaming them and so on…

How can you do this? Well, view your journal as a logbook and document your daily happenings. Here is a suggested format for keeping your captain’s log.

Divide your journal entries into sections: Date, Weather, Mood, Events and Freewrite

1. Date: This is the obvious one (for some people). Write the month, day and the year. Also write which day of the week it is (i.e., December 17, 2001; Monday).

2. Weather: Make note of the temperature outside. Is it 100 degrees? Or perhaps it’s only 20 degrees? Is it raining and 35 degrees? Snowing and 110 degrees? Raining cats and dogs? (Don’t step in a poodle….)

3. Mood: What’s going on in your head? Did you just get off the phone with your ex-lover who ruined your day and sank you into the depths of depression? Write about it. Did you manage to pull off some wondrous passive-aggressive revenge against said ex-lover? Write about that too and how it made you feel.

4. Events: Here’s where things get a bit complicated - for some. You have to do your homework. Watch television, read the newspaper and write a few lines about what’s going on in your city, state, country or the world in general.

5. Freewrite: Here’s your chance to shine. Since we’re all writers, we should leave a section for freewriting. Allow yourself some space to simply write aimlessly without direction. But, here’s the challenge - try to limit yourself to a certain number of lines.

When you keep these entries for a week, two weeks or a longer period of time, it can be extremely beneficial. Comparing and contrasting the Mondays or Tuesdays could be a surprising learning experience.

Many times I’ve written stories and wanted to “know” what 78 degrees felt like, so I went to my journal and found an entry, read my mood descriptions and weather descriptions and was easily informed from my own documentation.

Keep in mind, a good writer documents everything - whether it be on paper or just in the mind’s filing cabinet. But, to keep things in order, try to keep your documentation on paper - or at least saved to disk.

About The Author

Stephen Jordan, a medical editor, has five years experience within the educational publishing industry. Stephen was a freelance editor with such educational foundations as Princeton Review, The College Board, New York University, and Columbia University. Away from the office, Stephen promotes his creative writing with his home-freelance business OutStretch Publications and his artwork. Stephen holds two Bachelor of Arts degrees in writing and literature from Alderson-Broaddus College of Philippi, West Virginia.

Editor@OutStretch.net

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May-29-08

How To Write Your Book Quickly

posted by admin

Have an idea!
If you can’t think of an idea for a book or other product, get some help by asking contacts, colleagues or clients. Failing that, get some brainstorming software such as Mind Manager. If none of that helps - go for a long walk, forget everything and let your subconscious get to work.

Think
Once you have an idea, just let it mull over in your mind. Jot down associated ideas and thoughts. Produce a mind map, if that’s your thing, or a list of ideas and thoughts related to your original product concept. Always have a notebook with you so you can jot down ideas as they strike you. That means keeping the notepad by your bed so if you wake in the middle of the night you can record the idea and go back to sleep!

Set up an ideas bank
Get a folder or a concertina folder that is divided into sections. Label each section for one of the themes your book or product will cover. Put your notes into each appropriate section of the folder. As you read newspapers and magazines, tear out any useful information and bung it in the appropriate section. As you browse web sites and see useful pieces of information, print them out and store them in your folder in the relevant place. Don’t judge what you collect; if you think it may be valuable, just collect it and file it.

Talk to people
Don’t keep your book idea a secret. Talk to anyone who you know who could help provide you with useful information. Interview relevant experts and chat with colleagues and contacts to collect extra material.

Produce an outline
Having written some notes, collected some background material and chatted to people you should now be able to come up with an outline for your product. At first, start with a broad outline of the main themes you will cover. These will make up your chapters. Now, take each theme and subdivide it into the particular points you want to make or things you want to discuss.

Write
You don’t have to start at the beginning. Choose any of the small parts of any chapter and write as much as you can about it. Don’t worry about the grammar, the spelling or the niceties of your literary style at this stage. Just write whatever comes to mind about the specific subject you have chosen. Once you’ve done that, select another part of your detailed outline and write about that. Let’s say you have 10 chapters each with five sections. That’s 50 sections you need to write. For a 30,000 word paperback of around 120 pages, that means you need around 600 words per section. By taking it a section at a time it is more manageable. If you only did one section per day, you’d have a complete book in only seven weeks.

Edit
Once you have your sections written, you’ll need to pull them together. You will also need to write some connecting paragraphs and sentences to make things flow.

Get some help
Having produced your first draft, get someone else to read through it and suggest changes. Do not be precious about your work. You are seeking their changes; you want them to change things. Otherwise your material will not be from a reader’s perspective, making it less attractive. Once your reader has suggested changes - make them! Then tidy up your work.

Get some more help
Now get someone else to edit your work. They need to go through it with a fine toothcomb, looking for inconsistencies, poor argument and lack of detail or clarity and so on. There are plenty of freelances who will do this from the Society for Editors and Proofreaders (http://www.sfep.org.uk).

Check and re-check
You are on the home straight now! All you need to do is check the work of the proofreaders, make sure that your final text is correct. Stop thinking you could have written a different or better book. Just check this one is OK.

Graham Jones is a psychologist who has investigated the way people use the Internet. His research can help you make the most of the Internet, particularly if you are hoping to make money online.

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