Do you wish you could grow your church by preaching unforgettable sermons?
Do you want to remove the pain of sermon prep?
Preach Better Sermons is a 3-hour online conference designed by pastors for pastors.
At this free event, we’ve assembled 8 world-class communicators to share what they’ve learned about sermon preparation.
One tool to put in your pocket as you prepare….stories.
Here are seven interesting stories to
save in your files, along with a quick thought on how you could leverage
the story in a message.
7 Preaching Stories You Can Use In Your Sermons
Here are seven interesting stories to
save in your files, along with a quick thought on how you could leverage
the story in a message.
Story 1. A Texas police officer writes a ticket, but folded a $100 bill inside the citation. Read the story about #grace. God gives us a great gift, even though we are guilty.
Story 2. Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that everyone writes, put the mega-staffed, super-popular Microsoft Encarta out of business. Read the Wikipedia article about itselfand remind your congregation that everybody is better than somebody. #volunteers
Story 3. Chinese bamboo produces
little outward growth for the first four years of its life. Though it’s
puny and pitiful, there’s something powerful happening underground. In
the fifth year, the tree grows eighty feet! We must cultivate our
#soul and understand that the root comes before the fruit.
Story 4. Starbucks reclaimed four shipping containers and
made a pretty cool store. They say the containers are “reclaimed,
refurnished, renewed and revived.” Sounds like what God does in our
hearts. #restoration
Story 5. There’s a 99.99% soundproof room in Minneapolis that
holds the Guinness World’s Record for being the quietest place on
earth. NASA rents it to train astronauts. Reminds me of what could
happen when we heed the words of Psalm 46:10 and be #still.
Story 6. Duffy Daughtery was the
football coach for the Michigan State Spartans from 1954 to 1972. At
the end of one game, Daughtery sent in his kicker to win the
game. As the kick sailed through the uprights, the kicker looked at
the referee. Why? Because he had forgotten his contact lens and
couldn’t see! Though he couldn’t see the goalposts, he’d practiced the
kick so many times, it was routine. This story might work great in a
message on spiritual disciplines, Bible reading, consistent community or
parenting.
Story 7. A famous violinist named Joshua Bell once played for 45 minutes in
a Washington DC Metro station. Though he paid a $3 Million violin and
had sold out a Boston theater just two nights before, only six people
stopped to listen to his music. What a great story to illustrate that
we should never take people for granted.
Want more help with your weekly sermon? Preach Better Sermons is a free online event to help you learn sermon prep and delivery from some of the best.
Sign up here. Availability is limited.
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