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Contribute

Share your voice.
Reach faith-driven leaders.

We're always looking for thoughtful writers who sit at the intersection of faith, culture, leadership, justice, and real life. If that's you, we'd love to hear from you.

What we're looking for
  • Articles that make readers think — not just articles that confirm what they already believe
  • Personal stories grounded in a larger truth or takeaway that readers can apply
  • Cultural analysis that takes faith seriously without being preachy or defensive
  • Leadership insights rooted in character and conviction, not just strategy and tactics
  • Justice perspectives that are practical, hopeful, and community-rooted
  • Life & relationship pieces that are honest, warm, and spiritually grounded
📝
Word Count

800–2,000 words for standard articles. Long-form articles up to 3,500 words are accepted when the topic warrants it. We'd rather have something tight and powerful than long and padded.

🎯
Originality

All submissions must be original and unpublished. We do not accept pieces that have appeared elsewhere — including other websites, blogs, or your own newsletter.

⏱️
Response Time

We review every pitch within 2–3 weeks. If we're interested, we'll reach out to discuss the piece further. If you haven't heard back in 4 weeks, feel free to send a brief follow-up.

✂️
Editing

Accepted pieces go through our editorial process, which may include structural edits, cuts, and rewrites for clarity. We collaborate — we won't change your voice without conversation.

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Compensation

We're currently a volunteer-contributor platform. Writers receive a full author bio, social promotion to our 15K+ audience, and the opportunity to grow alongside a fast-moving publication.

©️
Rights

You retain copyright of your work. By submitting, you grant The Relevant Leader the right to publish, promote, and archive the piece. You may republish after 90 days with attribution.

What we don't publish
  • Partisan political endorsements or content that reads as campaign material for any party
  • Listicles with no original thought — "10 Bible verses for anxiety" without real insight
  • Content that condemns specific individuals, churches, or organizations by name
  • Pieces that have already been published elsewhere (including social media threads)
  • Purely academic writing without a personal voice or practical application
  • Advertisements or sponsored content disguised as editorial
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to be a professional writer to submit?
Not at all. We value lived experience, honest reflection, and a genuine voice over credentials or polish. Some of our best pieces have come from first-time writers. What matters is that you have something real to say and say it clearly.
Can I submit a completed article instead of a pitch?
Yes, we accept both pitches and completed drafts. For completed drafts, paste the full text in the "article content" field of the pitch form. We'll review it as-is and let you know if we'd like to move forward.
Can I write about my own church or organization?
Yes, as long as the piece is honest and not promotional. Stories rooted in specific communities are often our most powerful pieces. Just be transparent with readers about your relationship to the subject.
What happens after my piece is published?
We promote every published piece through our newsletter (15K+ subscribers), social media channels, and sometimes feature it on the homepage. You'll receive a notification when it goes live and a link to share. We encourage you to promote it through your own channels too.
Can I submit to multiple sections?
Absolutely. If you have ideas across Faith, Culture, Leadership, Justice, and Life, pitch them all — separately. Many of our contributors write across multiple sections.
800–2K
Words (standard)
3,500
Max (long-form)
2–4
Weeks to review
Voice & Tone

We write like we're talking to a thoughtful friend who takes faith seriously. Not a professor, not a preacher — a friend. That means contractions are fine, rhetorical questions are welcome, and showing up honestly on the page matters more than sounding impressive.

✓ Do this

"I've been thinking about this for years, and I still don't have a clean answer. But here's what I've learned..."

✗ Avoid this

"This article will examine the theological implications of the contemporary phenomenon of spiritual deconstruction."

Structure

Open with a scene, a question, or a moment — not a thesis statement. Let the reader in before you start making your argument. End with something that opens a door rather than closes one.

✓ Do this

"It was the third Sunday I'd sat in the back pew without crying. I wasn't sure if that was progress or something worse."

✗ Avoid this

"In today's polarized culture, faith leaders face unprecedented challenges that require nuanced responses."

Scripture & Theology

Use scripture when it illuminates, not when it just sounds authoritative. Cite references naturally (John 1:14, not "The Holy Bible says in John chapter 1 verse 14..."). You don't need to explain every theological concept — our readers are educated. Trust them.

✓ Do this

"The incarnation is not just a doctrine — it's the posture God took toward a broken world. That changes how we show up."

✗ Avoid this

"According to John 3:16, God so loved the world. This verse teaches us that God loves us very much and wants us to believe in Him."

Politics & Controversy

We engage hard topics — we just don't let partisan politics do the driving. You can write about immigration, race, economics, or sexuality. Write about the issue, not the team. Don't tell readers who to vote for. Do challenge them to think.

✓ Do this

"Both sides of the immigration debate claim the moral high ground. What if the question isn't who's right — it's who's being seen?"

✗ Avoid this

"Christians who vote for [party] are clearly not reading their Bibles. The answer is obvious if you care about justice."

Formatting Notes

Submit as a Google Doc or plain .docx. Use simple headings (H2 only — no H3+). No footnotes. Hyperlinks welcome where relevant. Don't embed images — we'll source those editorially. Include a 2–3 sentence author bio and a suggested headline (we may change it).

Tell us what you're working on. A strong pitch is 2–3 sentences: what the piece is about, why it matters to our readers right now, and what perspective you bring. You don't need a completed draft — a compelling idea is enough to start the conversation.

About You
Help us understand your perspective and why you're the right person to write this piece.
Your Pitch
This is the most important part of your submission. Be specific — "a piece about prayer" is too vague. "Why silence is the most overlooked spiritual discipline for busy leaders" is a pitch.
Not required, but helpful — especially for first-time contributors.

We review every submission and respond within 2–4 weeks.
No follow-up needed unless you haven't heard back after 4 weeks.

Pitch received — thank you!

We'll review your submission and get back to you within 2–4 weeks. In the meantime, feel free to explore the rest of the site. We're glad you're here.

Already been accepted as a contributor? Fill out your writer profile below. This information will appear on your published articles and in our contributor directory. Take your time — a strong bio builds trust with readers.

Personal Information
Professional Info
Your Bio
Keep it to 1–2 sentences max. Focus on your perspective, not your resume.
Links & Social
Minimum 400×400px. Professional but doesn't need to be formal. No filters please.

Your profile will go live with your first published article.
We'll reach out if we need anything else.

Bio received — welcome to the team!

Your contributor profile is now on file. We'll publish it alongside your first article. We're excited to have your voice in The Relevant Leader community.