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.

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St Luke's Lutheran Church

To develop a six-week series on understanding and applying liturgical practices in daily life that will include orders of worship focusing on each practice, a sermon series, and weekly family activity booklets.

Worshiping Communities
Grand Rapids, michigan
2005

St. Catherine of Siena Center of Dominican University

To explore and animate the linkage between worship and justice through a process, including a conference, theological reflection, and a series of public worship events, which will lead to the creation of resources to help deepen the connection between worship and justice.

Worshiping Communities
River Forest, illinois
2005

St. Clare of Montefalco Catholic School

To encourage a deeper involvement in and understanding of worship among students by focusing on prayer in small group gatherings and creating concrete sensory liturgical experiences.

Worshiping Communities
Grosse Pointe Park, michigan
2005

St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church

To study the implications of church architecture and sacred space in worship through a Peer Learning process that will assist the congregation to develop plans for the construction of a new church building.

Worshiping Communities
Grand Rapids, michigan
2005

St. Paul/Minneapolis District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church

To engage laity and clergy from nine historic congregations in critical dialogue, theological reflection, action and celebration around the historical aspects of worship in the AMEC, in order to identify new interpretations of traditional models for worship, seek new vision for worship that is intergenerational, and bridge historical worship traditions with contemporary ones.

Worshiping Communities
Minneapolis, minnesota
2005

St. Thomas Episcopal Church

To develop resources for the four parts of the Episcopal Eucharist service, four activity sessions for young people and a Vacation Bible School program for ages 6 through 12 around the Vertical Habits themes, focusing on how these themes are aspects of a healthy relationship with God.

Worshiping Communities
Terrace Park, ohio
2005

The River Community Church

To teach Vertical Habits through a series of seven worship services that will include creative elements focused on Scripture and a person in history who cultivated a specific Vertical Habit.  The series will include take home materials that will help both adults and children practice the habit throughout the week.    

Worshiping Communities
Edmonton, alberta
2005

Third Christian Reformed Church

To integrate the speech we offer to God in worship with our words and lifestyles outside of corporate worship, through teaching basic worship vocabulary of faith, building Christian community, and connecting people with each other and existing ministries within the congregation.

Worshiping Communities
Zeeland, michigan
2005

Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church of Manhattan

To engage congregants of different ages and different ethnicities/languages in worship preparation and celebration as one body through intentional, joint learning, reflecting, planning, and creating worship for September 11, Reformation Sunday, a service focusing on the communion of the saints and commemorating martyrs, and Pentecost.

Worshiping Communities
New York, new york
2005

Trinity Reformed Church

To plan and create a Lenten series accompanied with a devotional resource,with particular attention to the relationship of worshipers to God and to the development of this relationship outside of worship.

Worshiping Communities
Orange City, iowa
2005

Tualatin Presbyterian Church

To develop worship services that focus on our relationship with God with emphasis on youth involvement in planning and leading as well as worship team development, and to stimulate an awareness of the continual spiritual dialogue of daily life through three community spiritual formation projects.

Worshiping Communities
Tualatin, oregon
2005

United Theological Seminary

To recruit and train a core of ecumenical colleagues for leadership of a Lenten catechetical study in their congregations that will culminate in an Easter Vigil service planned with the participation of the catechumens.

Worshiping Communities
Dayton, ohio
2005