How to Give Your Sermon Conclusion More Impact
We
spend hours working on our sermons, in particular, making sure we grab
the congregation’s attention at the start. Yet, far too many of us
simply trail off at the end. We never press the congregation for a
decision. A sermon without a conclusion is a message without a purpose.
Here are a few ways Pastor Rick makes sermon conclusions more effective —
— Always point back to Christ. Offer an opportunity to receive Christ and expect people to respond.
— End with emotional intensity. Preach through the head to the heart. Once you’ve informed their minds, you must touch their emotions and challenge their wills. Your conclusion should be the emotional high point of the sermon.
— Ask for a specific response. Nothing becomes dynamic until it becomes specific. The goal of the sermon should be to storm the citadel of the will and capture it for Jesus Christ. Here are some ways to do that:
— Avoid common mistakes:
— Rewrite your conclusion after the first service to make it better. This is an advantage of having multiple services. You know how the sermon feels after preaching it so you can write a stronger conclusion if needed. Don’t change the message; rewrite the conclusion.
— Think through your closing prayer. Rick’s closing prayer of commitment always applies the points of the message. Remember to say the closing prayer slowly.
Here are a few ways Pastor Rick makes sermon conclusions more effective —
— Always point back to Christ. Offer an opportunity to receive Christ and expect people to respond.
— End with emotional intensity. Preach through the head to the heart. Once you’ve informed their minds, you must touch their emotions and challenge their wills. Your conclusion should be the emotional high point of the sermon.
— Ask for a specific response. Nothing becomes dynamic until it becomes specific. The goal of the sermon should be to storm the citadel of the will and capture it for Jesus Christ. Here are some ways to do that:
- Use an argument. Anticipate the objections the audience might have and logically refute them.
- Use a warning. Warn them of the consequences of disobedience.
- Use indirect conviction. A good example is the story of Nathan and David (2 Samuel 12).
- Use compassion. Express God’s love and concern for them and others.
- Use vision. Paint a picture of what is possible if they obey God. Help them to have faith.
- Use encouragement. Tell them they can do this with God’s power.
- Make it personal. The person listening should feel like you are only talking to him or her.
- Restate your major points forcefully. You reinforce the truth by summarizing it.
- Use a compelling illustration. This helps to make the message memorable.
- Use a piercing question. This engages people in processing and applying the message.
- Use surprise. The best conclusions sneak up on congregations rather than being obvious and expected.
— Avoid common mistakes:
- Don’t introduce anything new in your conclusion. Don’t add a point that you forgot in the sermon. You’ll just confuse people.
- Don’t just summarize your message. Conclusions are more than summaries. It’s where you challenge your church to apply the message.
- Don’t blame the clock when it’s time to wrap things up.
- Don’t say “now in conclusion” unless you mean it.
— Rewrite your conclusion after the first service to make it better. This is an advantage of having multiple services. You know how the sermon feels after preaching it so you can write a stronger conclusion if needed. Don’t change the message; rewrite the conclusion.
— Think through your closing prayer. Rick’s closing prayer of commitment always applies the points of the message. Remember to say the closing prayer slowly.
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