Some of the greatest preachers in history were great at introducing and delivering sermons, but poor at closing them. We preach Christ and we preach a gospel that calls for commitment, so powerful preaching presses for a verdict.
This is an area I spend a lot of time on when I’m preparing a message because a sermon without a conclusion is a message without a purpose. Changed lives come from great conclusions. John Stott said, “If there’s no summons, there’s no sermon.”
First, avoid these four common mistakes:
- Don’t just summarize the message. Ask people to act.
- Don’t announce that you’re concluding, especially if you don’t mean it.
- Don’t blame the clock and rush to a conclusion.
- Don’t introduce new ideas or extra points in your conclusion.
Instead, conclude by doing these things: Keep reading
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