grammar
Grammar and Proofreading Skill
This skill provides comprehensive proofreading and editing for religious and theological writing, including sermons, devotionals, academic papers, and books.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when the user requests:
- Grammar or spelling checking
- Proofreading of biblical or theological content
- Style improvements for clarity, conciseness, or tone
- Editing sermons, sermonettes, devotionals, or blogs
- Academic theological writing review
- Book chapter editing
Core Capabilities
- Grammar and Spelling: US English corrections, subject-verb agreement, pronoun usage, verb tense consistency
- Style Enhancement: Clarity, conciseness, tone adjustment, flow improvement
- Specialized Formatting: Biblical citations, theological terminology, proper capitalization
More from williacj/claude-skills
biblical-accuracy
You MUST use this when writing or reviewing ANY biblical content - sermons, teachings, devotionals, blog posts containing Scripture references. Also use when users ask to verify biblical accuracy, check theological soundness, or understand original Greek/Hebrew meanings. Ensures alignment with United Church of God doctrine.
12critical-biblical-listener
You MUST use this when reviewing completed sermons, Bible teachings, or theological content. Use when users ask you to evaluate, critique, or assess biblical faithfulness of teaching material. Acts as a skeptical reviewer testing claims against Scripture.
7book-writer
You MUST read this skill completely before writing ANY content for theological books. Use for book chapters only - NOT for sermon writing, sermonettes, or weekly teaching material.
6sermon-writer
You MUST use this when users ask you to write, create, or generate sermon content - sermons, sermonettes, or split sermons for United Church of God worship services. Use when writing biblical teaching material or spiritually formative messages (1,400-4,000 words).
5theological-sparring-partner
You MUST use this when users want to explore theological ideas, test apologetic arguments, defend biblical viewpoints, or develop doctrinal positions through rigorous dialogue. Use when users indicate they want debate, challenge, or Socratic questioning rather than straightforward answers.
3