CICW has awarded Vital Worship, Vital Preaching Grants for over 20 years to teacher-scholars and worshiping communities in 45+ states and provinces and across 40+ denominations and traditions—including Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Pentecostal, non-denominational, and other Protestant communities.
While worship styles and practices vary greatly across these traditions, the grant projects typically explore at least one of CICW’s ten core convictions related to worship. Explore the hundreds of projects we’ve funded across both streams of the program.
Calvary Evangelical Lutheran Church of Minneapolis
To engage worshipers of all ages in a participatory process of education and development that will result in new liturgies for evening contemplative Prayer Around the Cross worship services and vibrant liturgical symbols around which the community will pray.
Calvary Presbyterian
To empower, educate and challenge the congregation to intentionally prepare, participate and reflect on worship by offering a series of creative, hands-on workshops, book studies and reflection suppers that will lead to deeper involvement of more people both in planning worship and in understanding that worship is the mission of the entire congregation.
Cathedral of St Paul, The Crossing
To initiate research, reflection and learning that will create liturgies that embrace the gifts, needs and presence of multiple generations, that teach and form disciples, and that incorporate rites of passage for all stages of life in a robust, urban, mostly young adult-emergent church based at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul.
Central Presbyterian Church
To create within the congregation a deepened understanding of the significance of singing the Psalms in worship through a workshop introducing Psalms for All Seasons, evening study groups in homes, an intergenerational visual arts group, a choral music study for all ages, a Lenten devotional Guide and a focus on the Psalms in all levels of Christian education.
Christian Theological Seminary
To invite local congregations into a year long process that will engage worship leaders in worship design that emphasizes broad participation, artistic collaboration and multi-cultural Christian practices, that encourages habits of reflection and evaluation and that provides opportunities to come together for reflection and sharing what is being learned and experienced within each congregation.
Cornerstone University
To facilitate a study of the history and usage of the chapel program that will lead to the creation of an architectural programming guide for the construction of a new chapel building that is historically rooted, contextually useful and communicates theological truths of the Christ-centeredness of the school.
Eastern University
To explore how different populations of students can come together in a shared experience of worship, spiritual formation and growth that will lead to deeper understanding of Christian traditions globally and historically.
Ebenezer United Methodist Church
To initiate a collaboration of at least 14 pastors in the South Florida region to discuss and identiy issues impacting worship in African-American churches in the 21st century and to develop new worship practices within the congregations by offering workshops on worship and the POWR (planning, ordering, worshipping and reflecting) worship planning model.
First African Church
To immerse the congregation and local partnering churches in a process of intergenerational, collaborative thinking and reflective negotiation that will engage the full participation of all worshipers in learning what it means to be an African-centered worshiping community connecting ancestral memory to prophetic vision.
First Reformed Church
To engage children of all ages in creating drama, storytelling, dance, music and visual arts centered on the Psalms that can deepen understanding of Scripture and be used in worship.
First Union Church
To develop celebrations of the milestones of the Christian faith that can be used in worship by engaging the congregation in an intergenerational yearlong study that will identify important events of faith formation, consider how we are formed by the Spirit during these events and how the congregation can celebrate these milestones.
Granite Springs Church
To immerse the congregation in baptismal practices, “affirmation of baptism” practices and public and private psalm-saturated liturgical practices that help believers identify themselves as part of the baptized community as seen and practiced by generations of those saturated in the psalms by offering sermons, monthly baptismal services based on psalms and informed by rituals from the global and historic Christian church, and curriculum for family devotions, small group life and children’s ministry.