-
Finish Strong: 8 Great Ways To Conclude Your Sermon
By Joe Mckeever on Sep 16, 2019
The preacher told the church, “My job is to preach and your job is to listen. If you get through before I do, please be patient and I’ll try to do the best I can.”
Everyone has opinions about sermons. Those of us who deliver them are always looking for the most effective way to get one across. The great majority of people–those who have to listen to them!–have opinions also. Most say they want the conclusion as close to the introduction as possible, but I suspect that’s mostly a tease. Surely anyone who bothers to get dressed and drive to church and sit through a worship service wants the sermon to be worthwhile and to do its “perfect work.” So, we all have interests in this.
Most preachers spend far more time on the introduction than on the conclusion, and I think that’s a mistake.
Would a sales person spend all his time planning a pitch for the product without a thought as to getting the customer’s name on the dotted line? That signature is the whole point.
The response to the sermon is the point of the message.
This assumes the pastor is preaching for life-change. He is delivering a message based on the eternal Word of the Living God to people in serious need of Christ. He should approach his task reverently and faithfully, deliver the message carefully and dutifully, and do all in his power to drive it home.
When the people leave the House of God, they should know they have heard from the Lord today.
The conclusion to the sermon is a big part of that, how the message ends and how it leaves them.
So, what would be the best way to conclude a sermon?
Some would say the best way is just to quit. To shut up and sit down.
That seems a little abrupt though. Harsh, even.
We have all teased that the preacher “missed several good stopping places” in his sermon. I’ve heard that, said that, and been guilty of doing that.
But there really is a “best way” to end a sermon.
Here are some thoughts on the subject….
End your sermon intentionally, not because you ran out of time or energy or stuff. Doing that takes planning. So, you should plan your dismount as well and as thoroughly as you do your takeoff.
End your sermon positively, not haranguing the people but calling them to greatness and commitment.
End your sermon while they’re still wanting more, before you have exhausted their patience and exceeded their endurance.
End the sermon seriously, not with a joke or some silly reference. Creativity works best in the introduction, but not so much in the conclusion.
End the sermon naturally, not forcing another point onto the message, one you forgot earlier, or something that just occurred to you. Stay with your plan. And if you forgot something you meant to insert in the message earlier, save it.
End the way you began–with a reference to what you started with. Suppose you began your sermon with a story. What issue did the story raise that launched your message? Now, return to that issue and drive that point home.
End the sermon clearly, making plain what you are asking your hearers to do during the invitation. As a matter of fact, those who do invitations well suggest you explain what you are asking people to do at least two or three times in the body of the sermon, so you’re not springing it on them at the conclusion.
End your sermon wisely and freshly, not tacking on some hackneyed altar call that sounds exactly like the last 95 altar calls you extended. Plan it, pray over it, and prepare.
The preacher told the church, “My job is to preach and your job is to listen. If you get through before I do, please be patient and I’ll try to do the best I can.”
That’s all anyone asks, pastor. Do the best you can.
Related Preaching Articles
-
Can We Preach The Tithe?
By Dean Shriver on Apr 2, 2025
Scripture presents covenantal, legalistic, and worshipful tithing. Only worshipful giving reflects New Covenant generosity rooted in gratitude, allegiance, and grace.
-
Just What Is Pulpit Plagiarism?
By Ron Forseth on Jan 1, 2024
A thoughtful look at plagiarism, quotation, and citation in preaching, showing how conscience, diligence, and trust shape ethical and faithful sermon use.
-
Why Preparing Sermons Takes Me So Long
By Joe Mckeever on Jul 31, 2020
A candid walk through sermon preparation, showing how prayer, Bible study, reflection, and disciplined refinement shape faithful and Spirit-led preaching.
-
Five Things God Never Said
By Dr. Larry Moyer on Jan 1, 2025
Common sayings about God and salvation often distort the gospel. Exposing five popular misconceptions helps believers regain clarity, confidence, and grace in evangelism.
-
Building A Healthy Pastor–worship Leader Relationship
By Chuck Fromm on Mar 4, 2020
Pastors and worship leaders thrive when unified. Addressing conflict, clarifying roles, and pursuing Spirit-led collaboration strengthens worship and the church.
-
Busting Out Of Sermon Block
By Haddon Robinson on May 28, 2020
Weekly preaching can feel creatively exhausting. Learn a two-phase approach, practical rhythms, and daily habits that keep your sermons biblical, fresh, and deeply fed all from Haddon Robinson.
-
The Power Of Multisensory Preaching
By Rick Blackwood on Jun 2, 2020
Multisensory preaching engages more of the listener, increases clarity and retention, and can reignite your joy in teaching by making sermons more vivid and memorable.
-
Why I Love To Preach
By Joseph M. Stowell on Nov 25, 2021
Preaching is a strange mix of joy, agony, insecurity, and calling; this article explores why pastors keep returning to the pulpit and how God uses their weakness.
Sermon Central