Thursday, 24 July 2025

The Ministry of Writing Humour (by Susan J Bruce)


I was striding along a path on my lunch break from work. It was a sunny afternoon, the breeze was gentle, and the footpath I was on was lined with leafy trees. It should have been a relaxing time, but I was perplexed. I had this strong desire to write fiction but I didn’t know how that could ever be ministry.

I’d felt called to full-time ministry not long after I came to faith, and I tried to follow God’s way. That path took me to theological college, ordination as a pastor, and eventually, burnout and clinical depression.

I remember marching along the road thinking that true ministry meant feeding the poor in Bangladesh, leading prayer teams, or encouraging a congregation through preaching God’s Word. 

Writing Christian nonfiction, maybe—not fiction.

I was pretty serious back then. 

Too serious.

But it turns out that God has a sense of humour.

Fast forward many years and I’m writing fiction.

Not devotionals (although my dog will probably write one soon—she’s talented). Not theology. Not Christian self-help, or even faith-based historical sagas (although I have read all of these). I don’t even write for Christians. 

I write light-hearted mysteries with suspense and romance. With banter. And an eavesdropping cockatoo in my WIP, intent on sabotaging my MC’s personal life. 

The stakes are real—someone’s usually dead in a murder mystery—but there’s also chocolate cake, slow-burn romance, and the kind of dialogue I hope makes readers smile into their hot chocolate. 

Actually, that’s not true. I want them to laugh so hard they snort their drink out their nose.

Every girl has a dream…

I want to write the kinds of books that pull up a chair beside the reader and say, “You’re safe here. Let’s breathe. Let’s laugh. Let’s solve a murder while we’re at it. Let’s share in a world where in the end, the good guy always wins.”

And I’ve come to believe that kind of writing—joyful, hopeful, and a little snarky—isn’t just entertainment.

It’s ministry.

The Sacredness of Small Joys


There’s a verse I come back to when I’m deep in edits and wondering if it all matters.
“A cheerful heart is good medicine…”  Proverbs 17:22 (NIV)

Medicine. Not fluff. Not filler. Not distraction. Medicine.

In a world where headlines are heavy and inboxes overflow, light-hearted fiction might be the only breath someone gets that day. It might be the only hope a reader gets all week. A cheerful heart—whether it comes through a romcom, a cat with too much personality, a toe-curling kiss, or a murder mystery full of friendship and food—is good medicine.

I used to think joy was an optional extra. Something to save for when the serious work was done.

Now I think it’s one of the serious things.

My stories have heart and I do go deep sometimes. I don't write on the cutesy side of cozy mystery. But if I’m doing my job, then the deep will meet hope, and hope will meet the absurd. And that snort will happen just when you don’t expect it. 

Writing humour as a Christian

There can be a pressure to be “deep” or “worthy” in Christian creative circles. But what if bringing joy is deeply worthy? What if helping someone laugh—or feel better about life—is a reflection of God’s own character?

Jesus wept—but he also ate with friends, told stories, and turned water into wine at a wedding to keep the party going.

Humour, used well, can heal. It disarms. It creates space for harder truths. It helps us carry the weight of the world without being crushed by it.

So, if you’re a Christian writer who leans toward whimsy, wit, or warmth—if your stories bring peace, hope, or delight...

Keep going. You’re doing holy work, even if it doesn’t always feel like it.

Speaking of joy (and murder)


My new book is coming out soon—Mostly Dead, the second in my Ruthless-the-Killer Mystery series. It’s got Easter mayhem, loyal friendships, a slow-burn romance, and the above-mentioned cockatoo with no filter. All set in coastal South Australia.

If you haven’t read book one Dead Ahead yet, the good news is it’s FREE today (24 July) as part of the Cozy Mystery Book Blast


The free price should go live Pacific time in the US (after 4.30pm Australian time), so check back later if it’s still at the regular price.

There are over a hundred full-length cozy mysteries available from all around the world.

👉 Click here to grab Dead Ahead and other Book Blast titles for free

And if it makes you smile—or snort—let me know. You’ll make my day.

Happy writing—and reading!

PS: Do you write on the lighter side of life? Let me know what inspires you in the comments below.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Sue,
    That's such a good message. I've shared the same quandary over the years, whether or not fiction writing could be considered 'real' ministry. I even remember one morning at church, when everyone involved in any type of ministry across the face of the congregation got a call out, yet I didn't for fiction writing, and nor did I expect it. But it's so true that this sort of work is perfect for delivering great doses of joy and humour.

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