Instructions for Submitting Articles to Giving & Sharing

 

Please submit all articles in Microsoft Word format.  If you have a different word processor, File Save As to Word format.  Send articles as an attachment to your E-mail; do not place them in the body of the E-mail.  E-mail articles to: Rich.Nickels@giveshare.org.  If your article is not in electronic format, mail printed copy to: Richard C. Nickels, 3316 Alberta Drive, Gillette, WY 82718.  Printed articles will not be returned.

Thanks for helping us, by formatting your file with these specifications:

 

Using the Bible

 

Our default translation is the King James Version.  Articles using KJV quotations do not need to reference the KJV.  When you use other translations, indicate the alternate translation at the end of the quotation, e.g. NKJV, RSV, NIV, etc.

In all cases, quote the Scriptures exactly.  (Only exceptions are "Spirit" instead of "Ghost" and "Lord" instead of "LORD.")

Place any comments or clarifications within brackets, [ ].

Scripture citations are separated by semi colons between books of the Bible, and commas for citations in the same book of the Bible.  E.g., Revelation 17:15; Isaiah 8:7, 17:12; Jeremiah 6:23.  There are no spaces after the colon.

Greek and Hebrew words should be italicized, e.g., parakletos.

If your article has scripture references, bold and spell them out, and use Roman numerals for books, e.g., I Corinthians 15:1, “Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel,” rather than 1 Cor 15:1.  A common mistake is to place the comma or period after the ending quote mark, rather than as it should be, before the quote mark.  In the example above, notice it is gospel,” and not gospel”,

The worst mistake one can make is to misquote or misapply Scripture.  Look up all verses cited!

 

Formatting Standards

 

Use Times New Roman 12-point font.

If you have section headings, center and bold face them.

Do not use ALL CAPS.

At the end of the article, put your name, and if you wish, your E-mail address, with an emdash (a long dash), a space, and your name, right justified.  In Word, you make an emdash by holding down the Ctrl and Alt keys, and press the minus key on the 10-key pad.  Example:

— your name, your E-mail address

Do not put blank lines between paragraphs.  Do not tab paragraphs, and do not put spaces to indent paragraphs (proper indenting takes care of that).  How do you indent paragraphs?  In Word, select the entire file (Ctrl A), then right click and choose Paragraph, then Indents and Spacing.  Under Special, select first line, and enter .25.  This creates a .25-inch indent at the beginning of each paragraph.  With this formatting, you don’t have to press Tab to create and indent a paragraph, just press Enter.

While you are in Paragraph formatting, set Alignment at Justified, Indentation Left and Right at 0, Spacing Before and After at 0, and Line Spacing at exactly 12pt.  More advanced Word users may set these formatting options in a Style, such as Normal Style.

Margins should be set at Top/Bottom .75, Inside/Outside .90, Gutter .25, Header/Footer .50, Mirror Margins.

Thanks for submitting articles to Giving & Sharing!

 

Some Other Things to Keep in Mind

 

Most usages of Church should have capital C.

Sentences end with a period, and sometimes a quote mark.  E.g., “…for the edifying of the body of Christ.” NOT “…for the edifying of the body of Christ:”  It doesn’t matter what the KJV text has: we end sentences with a period and quote.

Commas are sometimes helpful to distinguish pauses within a sentence.  E.g., “In 1976, the school moved,” rather than “In 1976 the school moved.”

It is mandatory that the last item in a group be preceded by a comma.  E.g., apples, oranges, and bananas NOT apples, oranges and bananas.

Addresses:  PO Box 123, rather than P.O. Box 123.

Many folks have fits with its and it’s.  Instead of “horizon casting it’s long yellow rays,” it should be, “horizon casting its long yellow rays.”  The reason is that it’s is a contraction of it is.

Emdash: Ctrl Alt — (the minus on the 10-key pad). Be sure to surround the emdash with a space before and after.   Note:  please have a space before and a space after an emdash.

Soft Hyphen: Ctrl ­- (the minus on the regular keyboard).

Years are usually not possessive; they are plural.  E.g. “the Philadelphia era began in the 1930s,” rather than “the Philadelphia era began in the 1930’s.”

The word Bible has a capital B.  The word Sabbath always begins with a capital S.  It is Sabbath-keepers, not Sabbath keepers.

We capitalize states, so MO is correct, rather than Mo.

It is E-mail, not email.

Personal pronouns referring to Jesus or God the Father are capitalized.  E.g. “Jesus obeyed His Father.”

The golden rule of writing is:  be consistent!

Internet addresses (unless they are secure https sites) should not have http:// preceding www.

 

 

To submit articles for the Giving & Sharing website, see further instructions.