-
Don't Close Your Sermon Like That!
By Sherman Haywood Cox on Mar 26, 2026
The ending of a sermon is often the part people remember most. Preachers must avoid recycled conclusions and instead craft endings that intentionally reinforce the message.
The conclusion of a sermon carries enormous weight because it is usually the part listeners remember most clearly. Yet many sermons suffer from weak endings, either because the preacher relies on the same recycled closing or because the sermon fades out without intentional direction. Faithful preaching requires thoughtful endings that are specifically crafted for the message being delivered. When the conclusion reinforces the main point and moves listeners toward response, the sermon finishes with clarity and power.
The congregation leaves with your sermon close on their mind. In fact, when people ask members about the sermon, they often can only bring to mind that very last part. A while back, Peter Mead at the Biblical Preaching blog did a series on preaching that he called “finishing weak.” That was a good idea that I wanted to “riff” on. Two main problems came to mind.1. Using the Same Ending
One of the most pervasive sermon close problems that many preachers have is the “recycled end.” That is when the preacher always ends all of his sermons in exactly the same way. Sometimes the preacher might have two or three stock closes, but most of the time they are not tailored to the presented sermon.
I know you have heard the exact same sermon close with the exact same whoop or quoting the same verse. “There’s power in the name of Jesus, there’s hope in the name of Jesus …”
Some always have that “He went on the cross … He died for our sins … He rested in the grave … but EEEEAAARRRLLLLYY Sunday morning he rose …” Some end with the exact same theme, like a “relationship with Jesus” call that is not changed at all based on the sermon.
Do not use the same ending in every sermon! Your close should be tailored to the sermon that you just preached.
2. Ending Without Intentionality
It is very surprising, but many preachers spend little time thinking about the ending at all. We must recognize that our ending is what people will remember when they go home. It is the ending that gives the preacher a chance to drive home the very important points in the sermon.
However, some sermons just stop. They don’t end intentionally. Even some preachers who have reputations for being effective have a number of emotionally intensive portions to the sermon, but their sermons do not seem to progress because the preacher has not put together an intentional end.
We all have heard the sermon that goes on and on because the preacher has not decided how to end the sermon. There was one preacher who couldn’t decide if he was gonna whoop or not, and so the sermon just continued on as the preacher decided what to do. Great preaching is open to the Spirit, but it is also paradoxically intentional about how it starts and how it ends…
Someone said, “Like meat, a great sermon makes its own gravy.” As preachers, we must recognize this. We cannot take gravy from yesterday’s meal and try to serve it on today’s meat. We can’t ignore the gravy altogether, either. When closing our sermons, we must find a fitting close for this particular sermon that is based in this particular sermon. In addition, we must intentionally move the sermon forward in the way that our Spirit-led planning has suggested.
Related Preaching Articles
-
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.
-
Why I Said Yes To Pastoral Ministry
By Chuck Warnock on Dec 16, 2022
Pastoral calling can fade under pressure, success, or discouragement. This reflection uncovers why ministers lose sight of their call and how to remember it again.
-
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.
-
When Is A Sermon Good Enough?
By Stephen Gregory on Jul 16, 2024
A pastor wrestles with preparation, expectations, and perfectionism, discovering how God uses imperfect sermons when the preacher is faithful, honest, and attentive to the flock.
-
Is Your Church Telling The Truth About Evangelism?
By Greg Stier on Jan 15, 2025
Many churches claim evangelism is their priority, but few practice it. This article exposes the disconnect and outlines five steps to make evangelism a true, lived mission.
-
Preaching Without A Net: Delivering Sermons Without Notes
By Bruce Salmon on Mar 3, 2025
A pastor describes how a forgotten outline pushed him onto the “high wire” of preaching without notes and how that risk opened new freedom, focus, and trust in God.
-
Is Consecutive Expository Preaching Really The Best Method?
By Dr. Iain Murray on Jan 17, 2025
This piece questions the modern assumption that consecutive “expository preaching” is the superior method and argues instead for gifted, Spirit-filled preaching in varied forms.
-
6 Surprising Leadership Principles From The Bible
By Tom Harper on Jan 21, 2025
A journey through every book of Scripture uncovered six counterintuitive leadership principles that reshape how we handle critics, conflict, love, power, and plans.
Sermon Central