Collegeville Institute

Bearings Online

  • About
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • News
  • Make an Impact
  • Comprehensive Campaign

Title of the document Make A Gift Now

Menu
  • About Us
  • Bearings Online
  • Calling Initiatives
  • Fellows Program
  • Make an Impact
  • News
  • Podcasts
  • Comprehensive Campaign
  • Residency Programs
      • Scholars, clergy, church leaders, thinkers, artists, and writers who are seeking to discern and communicate the meaning of Christian identity and unity in a religiously and culturally diverse world are invited to apply for our residency programs.
      • Get Practical Information »
      • Apply for a Fellowship »
      • Resident Scholars Program

        for those looking to stay a semester or a full academic year

      • Program Details
      • Work and Scholarship
      • Housing and Facilities
      • Application Process
      • Former Resident Scholars
      • Short term Residencies

        for those looking to stay for a shorter period of time

      • Program Details
      • Living and Working
      • Application Process
      • Former Short Term Scholars
      • Learn More »
    • Close
  • Writing Programs
      • Each year, the Collegeville Institute opens its doors to writers of faith for intensive writing workshops. In addition, the Collegeville Institute partners with other institutes, seminaries, or churches to coordinate regional off-site workshops.
      • Apply Now »
      • 2026 Workshops

      • Writing in the Wilderness: reflecting on the immigration stories that have shaped our lives with Isaac Villegas, March 2-7, 2026
      • Reading and Writing with Joan Didion (led by Alissa Wilkinson), March 16-22, 2026
      • Out of the depths: writing prayer: a poetry workshop with Marie Howe, May 4-8, 2026
      • Writing in the Wilderness: reflecting on the immigration stories that have shaped our lives with Isaac Villegas, May 15-19, 2026
      • Apart, and Yet a Part, a workshop with Michael N. McGregor, June 1-10, 2026
      • Writing in an Age of Anxiety, a workshop with Sara Billups, June 15-20, 2026
      • Publishing for the Public with Katelyn Beaty, June 25-30, 2026
      • Writing with the Mystics: A Generative Fiction Workshop with Garth Greenwell, July 13-19, 2026
      • Poetry, Scripture, & Imagination: A Workshop for Preachers with Amy Peterson, July 27-Aug 1, 2026
      • Grounded by Place/Growing through Time, a workshop with Camille T. Dungy, August 5-11, 2026
      • Autumn Rhythms, Rituals, & Writing: Nourishment for Creative Souls with Charlotte Donlon (a 3-part virtual workshop series), September 14, October 12, November 9, 2026
      • Waiting for Words: An Advent Writing Workshop with Lauren Winner, December 8-11, 2026
      • 2027 Workshops

      • Creative Convergence: A Gathering of Words with Patrice Gopo, February 11-16, 2027
      • Apart, and Yet a Part, A Workshop with Michael McGregor, March 2-11, 2027
      • About Me, About You: a writing workshop by and for women of color, March 15-21, 2027
    • Close
  • Calling Initiatives
      • The Communities of Calling Initiative invites congregations into a 5-year project on vocation.
        The Called to Lives of Meaning and Purpose Initiative, coordinated by the Collegeville Institute, funds 13 innovation hubs from across North America.
      • Calling Initiatives Overview »
      • Research Seminars on Vocation »
    • Resources on Vocation:

      • BridgeIntroducing Calling & Discernment – language of calling, models of discernment, and calling across the lifespan
      • gabriel-brito-80atz53Th9o-unsplash-2Prayer & Worship – prayers, hymns, sermons, spiritual practices, and liturgical year resources
      • Vis-Group-2Small Group Series – adult education and faith formation guides for congregational use
      • FrancoisVideos & Interviews – video storytelling projects on vocation from Christian and interfaith perspectives
    • Close
  • Fellows Program
    • Bringing together an ecumenical group of gifted Minnesota faith leaders, the Collegeville Institute Fellows Program focuses on leadership development with the goal of strengthening religious leaders’ sense of themselves as civic leaders.
    • Fellows Program Overview
    • MinneEncounter
    • Close
  • Participant Publications
  • Search
You are here: Home / Events / Pastoral Writing: for the church, the world, and the pastor


Pastoral Writing: for the church, the world, and the pastor


July 2, 2026 By

Event Details

  • Date(s): Monday, Jun 21st, 2027-Saturday, Jun 26th, 2027
  • Venue: Collegeville Institute
  • Categories: Writing Workshop

Note: This writing program is designed for early-career pastors. It consists of a two-part workshop on basic lyric craft writing skills over the course of two summers, and three Zoom sessions. The program structure is as follows: a six-day, in-person workshop (Part 1) in summer 2027, a six-day, in-person workshop (Part 2) in summer 2028, and three Zoom meetings with the cohort during the intervening year. Those who apply must be able to commit to both workshop weeks, and the three Zoom meetings.

Workshop Dates:

  • Monday, June 21 – Saturday, June 26, 2027 (Workshop Part 1)
  • Monday, June 19 – Saturday, June 24, 2028 (Workshop Part 2)

 Zoom Dates:

  • Tuesday, September 21, 2027
  • Tuesday, January 18, 2028
  • Tuesday, March 21, 2028

Zoom Time:  1:00-2:30pm EST

Since the apostle Paul first wrote to the churches under his care, the pastor’s life has been a writing life. This is a workshop for early to mid-career clergy who love words–or who, at least, want to learn to love them. Accepted applicants will form a cohort for shared study over the course of a year, including a workshop in 2027, a workshop in 2028, and three zoom gatherings in the intervening months.

The first summer session will focus on writing for the church (not only sermons but also prayers, newsletters, recommendation letters, text messages, and even instagram captions). The second summer session will widen the lens to include writing for the broader public (via op-eds, articles, denominational resources, and books). We’ll practice close reading of texts, study literary techniques, and consider how pastoral writing can be an effective instrument of formation for the church and world, and for pastors themselves.

Why this emphasis on writing for pastors? Pastors who write well are pastors who have learned to think well: to connect emotion to intellect, to make complex ideas accessible, to consider and address a variety of audiences at once, to think and speak with the nuance that effective Christian formation requires. Learning to write well equips pastors for the work that they needs to do within their congregations—but it also equips them for the inner spiritual work that keeps their own lives of faith from stalling out, that keeps their wells from running dry. Wrestling with words helps pastors attend to themselves, to their congregations, to the world, to Scripture, and fundamentally to Jesus, the Word. Finding the right word isn’t simply an aesthetic pleasure. The right word carries with it theological clarity, spiritual sustenance, and pastoral care.

Co-leader Bios:

Amy Peterson (MA, MFA, MDiv) is the Associate Rector of Trinity Episcopal Church in Asheville, North Carolina, and the author of two books: Dangerous Territory (2016) and Where Goodness Still Grows: Reclaiming Virtue in an Age of Hypocrisy (2020). She’s also contributed to Saving Words and Common Prayer, volumes of essays on Episcopal language and worship; and her work can be found in many places, including Image, The Millions, Washington Post, and The Christian Century. Before ordination in the Episcopal Church, she worked in cross-cultural and honors-level academics and student development, teaching in Southeast Asia and the States. Most recently, she taught creative writing, intercultural communication, and interdisciplinary honors courses at a Christian college in the midwest.

Isaac Villegas (MDiv) is the author of Migrant God: A Christion vision for Immigrant Justice, and a contributing editor at The Christian Century magazine. His writing has also appeared in Sojourners and Anabaptist World, among other publications. In his capacity as a Mennonite pastor, he served as an editor and contributed as a writer for sections of Voices Together, the hymnal and worship book of Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada.

The Collegeville Institute will cover all workshop fees, room and board, as well as most travel expenses to and from the workshop within the continental United States. International travel costs, and travel from Hawaii and Alaska may be shared between the Collegeville Institute and the workshop participant. Those who join the workshop will be expected to reside at the Collegeville Institute during both weeklong terms, and to join the scheduled zooms.

Application Process: Applications due by Monday, January 18, 2027.  Apply here.

More from my site

  • Detours of IntentionDetours of Intention
  • Christians, the Bible, and the Ecological CrisisChristians, the Bible, and the Ecological Crisis
  • Illuminating the WordIlluminating the Word
  • Ten Thousand Garden Questions AnsweredTen Thousand Garden Questions Answered
  • May 2018 NewsletterMay 2018 Newsletter

Writing Workshops

  • Current Writing Workshops

Event Categories

Collegeville Institute Tour

Check out our virtual 360-degree tour experience and see our beautiful campus with its many amenities!

CI 360 Tour

Latest News

Collegeville Institute receives $3.88 million Lilly Endowment grant to fund four years of the Ecclesial Literature Project: Words for the Church and the World.

October 28, 2025

The beloved founder of the Collegeville Institute, Fr. Kilian McDonnell, OSB, passed away September 8, 2025

September 10, 2025

Beloved Fr. Michael passed away July 15, 2025

July 17, 2025

Subscribe

Sign up for our email newsletter today, and keep up to date with what's going on at the Collegeville Institute.

Sign Up Today

Get Involved

Give online

Check out our writing workshops and our residential programs.

Contact Us

2475 Ecumenical Drive
PO Box 8000
Collegeville, MN 56321

Phone: 320-363-3366
Email: staff@collegevilleinstitute.org

Map/Directions

Copyright © 2026 Collegeville Institute. Read our Privacy Policy.