Thank you for your interest in submitting your conversion story to be considered for publication by the CHNetwork. Please read our guidelines carefully before submitting your story. You can also review written conversion stories on our website to have a sense of the tone, length, and style of our published conversion stories.
(If you have already or are planning to submit your story to other possible publication venues please let us know.)
Please note that all stories will be reviewed by CHNetwork, but submission of a story does not guarantee publication (whether online or printed in a newsletter, book, ebook or other format).
Here are general guidelines to follow as you write the story of your journey towards becoming Catholic.
STORY GUIDELINES
- The target word count for written stories is 4,000 words. Please use 3-5 subheadings within the story to help shape your narrative.
- Keep in mind that you’re writing primarily for a non-Catholic audience whose theological training varies widely. Try to avoid Catholic jargon that may be unfamiliar to non-Catholics.
- Please write in a first person, conversational style to create a narrative story. In all stories shared, we want to display an attitude that is confident of Catholic truth without being smug, dismissive, or hostile, especially toward the non-Catholic traditions from which we and other converts have come.
- In your story, please address at least 2-3 different theological issues that you encountered in your journey and how you came to understand them in light of Catholic teaching (the Eucharist, Mary, salvation, etc.) and provide some sense of how these issues were resolved. Please remember to share these issues in a narrative format detailing your own faith journey and refrain from a separate apologetic treatment of the issues. (The apologetics should occur in the context of your own experience.)
- Our readers will also want to know other elements that factored into your conversion: not just theological and intellectual, but also devotional and emotional, social and relational, and even what we might call the providential factors — the “special arrangements” God seems to have made to bring all these other elements together in an effective way. In general, how did you come to be dissatisfied with your spiritual status quo? What aspects of the Catholic Faith attracted you and ultimately drew you to the Church?
- Providing a few dates (years are sufficient) for the most important milestones in your story will help readers to have a sense of how long your journey took and how long ago it took place. Also, please include a few places (states, cities) to give readers a sense for where your story happened.
- Include a brief account of what has happened since you entered the Church and some sense of how God is using you now as a Catholic.
- Be sure to specify the religious tradition(s) from which you have come (or lack of religious background, if that’s the case). Though, of course, you may mention particular denominations and institutions in your background, it’s better not to provide the names of individuals (except perhaps for immediate family members) who opposed your conversion or who might remain opposed to it (e.g., a particular pastor or college professor in your former denomination). We want to avoid appearing to cast individuals by name in an adversarial role.
STYLE GUIDELINES
- If you quote Scripture, please use the Revised Standard Version (RSV) 2nd Catholic edition. If you don’t have the 2nd edition available, you may use the 1st Catholic edition, but please note that you have done so. We prefer that you not use the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV). If you prefer the New American Bible (NAB) translation for a particular passage quoted, you may use it, but make sure you identify it as coming from that translation.
Make sure that all quotations of Scripture have a citation in parentheses. For example:
“Jesus wept” (Jn 11:35).
All other references to Scripture and allusions to Scripture should have citations as well. For example:
Jesus gave St. Peter the keys (Mt 16:19).
- If you quote from other texts, please include a brief citation (author, book title, publisher, year, page number). If you are quoting a text from a Church Father or another historical figure, and the English translation of the text quoted is in the public domain, you may simply cite the title of the work and the section in which the quote appears. For example:
St. Irenaeus wrote: “The blessed Apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate” (Against Heresies, III, 3, 3). - Don’t forget to include a brief author’s bio — two to three sentences providing a simple introduction to you for our readers (not a summary of the testimony). Feel free to include a personal website or blog address if you have one.
- Please submit the document as a MS Word .doc or .docx file.
- Please use 12-point type. The Arial or Times New Roman font is preferred. Please indent paragraphs rather than putting a line space between them and use double spacing throughout.
Please note: The CHNetwork edits all conversion stories in-house prior to publication.
We regret that we’re unable to pay you for your story. But if we choose it for publication, we trust you’ll rejoice in knowing that your journey will be a help and inspiration to our readers.
Please email your submission to [email protected].
Thanks again for thinking of us!