Pastor, don’t go through a single day without collecting something for a future sermon.
Seriously. If you’ll start developing this habit, you’ll save hours in preparation—and your sermons will be richer, deeper, and more effective.
I’ve been a collector for decades. Not as a hobby, but as a preaching strategy. Whether I’m reading Scripture, a newspaper, a blog, or even a comment card, I’m always looking for something that might be helpful later.
Here’s how you can build your own habit of collecting.
1. Start with Scripture.
Even if I’m preaching from a single verse or passage, I want to know everything God says on that subject. That’s why I begin every message by collecting related verses. It helps me frame each message in light of the whole counsel of God’s Word.
You can build this habit by memorizing Scripture. When you internalize God’s Word, the Holy Spirit will often bring just the right verse to mind when you’re preparing a sermon—or even when you’re not.
Before I ever preached The Purpose Driven Life series, I had studied and filed over a thousand verses. That preparation gave the series its depth. It took time—but it was worth it.
2. Use the right tools.
When I started out, collecting verses meant spreading concordances across my desk. Today, I use Bible software. If you’re not using digital tools, you’re missing a huge timesaver.
Use them to search for keywords, to gather cross-references, and to group related passages. It will save you hours—and sharpen your biblical insight.
3. Collect more than verses.
Don't stop at Scripture. I collect:
Quotes
Articles
Book titles
Comment cards
Magazine covers
News stories
Anything that moves me
I clip. I screenshot. I save digital files. I print Amazon book pages if a title looks useful. If something grabs my attention, I save it.
You’ll be amazed at how much this adds to your preaching—not just as illustrations, but as ways to help people connect biblical truth with real life.
4. Create a bucket file system.
You don’t need a fancy system. I use simple letter-sized plastic buckets from the store. When I find something worth saving, I label it with a possible topic and drop it in.
You don’t have to be organized. You just have to collect.
You can also build a digital version of your bucket file on your computer. Save articles, images, or quotes by topic, and use your search function to find what you need later.
5. Ask others to help.
You don’t have to do all the collecting yourself. I’ve had a volunteer research team for years. I let them know what topics I’m preparing for, and they look for articles, quotes, and illustrations that might be helpful.
I keep two simple rules:
Don’t expect a response.
Don’t expect your material back (make a copy if you need it).
6. Build for the long haul.
One of the most effective sermon series I’ve ever preached was on Psalm 23. Over six weeks, 446 people gave their lives to Christ.
What made the series so fruitful? I’d been collecting insights, books, and ideas on Psalm 23 for over 20 years.
When it came time to preach, I wasn’t starting from scratch—I was drawing from a deep well.
7. Don’t miss a day.
Don’t let a single day go by without collecting something. It will make a lifetime of difference in your preaching.
This habit won’t just improve your sermons. It will energize your study, fuel your creativity, and deepen your walk with God.