"What?" you ask me.
Seems like a pretty silly question. Authors, like Tolkien, for example, because of their being authors, build worlds for their fantasy novels, because fantasy novels without worlds aren't fantasy novels.
But it's not so silly, when we consider deeper.
World building doesn't just mean building a fantasy world. It means constructing any sort of world, fantasy or otherwise.
If I was writing, say, a detective novel, then the characters I create, the setting a choose and develop, the elements right down to a character's eyebrows, or a details like a cobblestone street, are all world building.
So, the question is not whether you world build, or write. All writers build worlds.
The question is, why do you write? Why do you build worlds?
I started the whole fantasy thing when I was probably around twelve. Looking back, I've realized that all those stories I made up were merely vehicles for exploring and creating worlds. I am a world builder. I tell stories primarily because that's the best way to build a world, and secondarily because I want to share my world.
On the other hand, some people want to tell stories. World building is merely the way to get that story told.
So why am I talking about this?
A lot of people, including me at one point, don't see how world building for it's own sake brings Glory to God. But I've realized the answer: God delights in us using the gifts He's given us. When we create, we are doing what He intended us to do. We are bringing glory to Him, even if our world only ever exists in our private thought-life.
Likewise, writing is an act of creativity that brings glory to God in and of itself.
So, tell us, are you a writer, or a world builder? Do you write fantasy because you have a story that's desperate to be told, or a world that you want to share? How do you feel about how your work glorifies God? What has your journey through this process been like?
Here's a chance to leave your own bit of lore for the village.
And, hey, just writing that post is glorifying God. Provided your motivations are good.
And your grammar.
