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The Best Preaching Habit You Haven’t Started Yet

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.

Recent Articles

The Best Preaching Habit You Haven’t Started Yet

The Best Preaching Habit You Haven’t Started Yet

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:QuotesArticlesBook titlesComment cardsMagazine coversNews storiesAnything that moves meI 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.
A New Year’s Reset

A New Year’s Reset

A new year is always a great time for a reset. For most people, January 1 is not just another day on the calendar. We use it as an opportunity for a fresh start with our schedules, our fitness plans, and our budgets. But it’s also a time for a fresh start in our ministries—a time to let go of the past year’s struggles and embrace what God has in store for us this year.Paul gives us a great blueprint for how we can do this when he writes, “I focus on this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead, I press on to reach the end of the race and receive the heavenly prize for which God, through Christ Jesus, is calling us” (Philippians 3:13-14 NLT). We all need this kind of reset as we head into a new year. Maybe your 2024 didn't go as you hoped. You feel the momentum slipping away. A new ministry has struggled. Attendance and giving are declining. You’ve faced personal setbacks that have left you feeling uncertain about your leadership.That's okay. God specializes in giving us fresh starts. You see it all the time in the Bible. Just read the Old Testament prophets, where God constantly promised his people he was going to do something new in their midst. In the Message paraphrase of Hosea 14:6, God says, “I will make a fresh start with Israel.” And in Zechariah 10:6, again in the Message paraphrase, God says, “I’ll put muscle in the people of Judah; I’ll save the people of Joseph. I know their pain and will make them good as new. They’ll get a fresh start, as if nothing had ever happened. And why? Because I am their very own GOD, I’ll do what needs to be done for them.”God's mercies are brand new for you and your ministry, too. But if you want 2025 to be a better year, you'll need to let go of some things.   Let go of 2024’s baggageEven in the best years, we have disappointments. That’s normal. You can’t erase them. You can’t have last year back. But forgetting the past, as Paul describes in Philippians 3, isn’t about erasing the past. Instead, it’s about not letting it control you or limit what God will do through you in 2025.So what from the past year should you not let control you in 2025?Resentment - You can’t lead effectively when you’re weighed down by unforgiveness. It’s like drinking poison and expecting someone else to die.Control over outcomes - Often it feels like everything is riding on your decisions. But control is an illusion. God is ultimately in charge. He’s better at running your ministry than you are.Unrealized expectations - Impossible expectations that everything has to be perfect—your preaching, your leadership, your family—are a recipe for burnout. Past failures - Not everything went the way you would have wanted in 2024. Some of your best-laid plans flopped. Every pastor has some regrets. But those regrets about 2024 can’t change anything about 2025. Learn from your mistakes; don’t wallow in them. If you’re tied to yesterday’s failures, you can’t embrace the future.Spend some time at the beginning of the year writing down the resentments, attempts to control outcomes, unrealized expectations, and failures that weighed you down in 2024. Name them. Learn from them. Then release them to God. It’s time to move forward. Seize the opportunities God has for 2025Once you’ve let go of the weights of the past, you’re free to step boldly into the opportunities God has prepared for you. This new year isn’t just about leaving things behind; it’s about moving forward in faith.Paul said he was “looking forward to what lies ahead” (Philippians 3:13 NLT). You can’t look behind and ahead at the same time. So, once you’re facing forward, how do you seize the opportunities in front of you?Say no to good opportunities so you can say yes to great ones. God doesn’t expect you to do everything. You don’t have the time, and not everything is worth doing. Say no to the opportunities God is not leading you into.Evaluate every opportunity. When an opportunity comes up, make sure it aligns with the vision God has given you for your life and ministry. Not every good opportunity is a good fit for you and your church. God has prepared some of those opportunities for other churches. Just because you don’t do it doesn’t mean it won’t be done. Stay flexible. Opportunities come in a specific window. You may have specific plans you’re looking at for the upcoming year—but recognize that God can change them in a heartbeat. He may ask you to set aside one plan in order to embrace a new opportunity. Proverbs 10:5 tells us, “A sensible person gathers the crops when they are ready; it is a disgrace to sleep through the time of harvest” (GNT).Don’t be so infatuated with your plans that you’re not ready to gather the harvest when God prepares it for you!The 2025 God has planned for you and your church will have both battles and blessings. Be prepared for both. Pursuing God’s best for 2025 won’t be easy. But God will be with you every step of the way. He will keep his promises.
7 Reasons People Leave Your Church

7 Reasons People Leave Your Church

One way Satan will try to discourage your ministry is by convincing you that if people are leaving your church, you’ve done something wrong. Too many pastors feel like they’re a failure when they see people leave. It’s simply not true. Numbers matter. I’ve written many times that numbers matter because they represent people—and people matter to God.But people leave your church for a variety of reasons — most of which have nothing to do with you as a pastor. For example, here are seven of the biggest reasons people leave.Illness - No matter how large or small your church is, you’ll certainly have people from time to time who can’t attend because of illness. Of course, that’s not your fault—and it’s not their fault either. No one is immune from illness.The Bible reminds us that the church should have an active ministry to those who can’t make it to worship because of illness (Matthew 25:36). But even if you’re ministering to people who can’t be there because of illness, your attendance will still drop, which can be disheartening.Job transfers - In biblical times, people rarely moved. Most people were born, lived, and died within a few miles of their homes. In today’s mobile society, people move often. According to the most recent U.S. Census information, about 1 in 7 people move every year. That means theoretically, you could have a completely new church every seven years!People move for all kinds of reasons. Sometimes they get new jobs; other times they’re looking to change neighborhoods or get nearer to families. But it’s not likely they are moving because of you or your church.Fear of accountability - Some people leave our churches because they don’t want others to know them well enough to keep them accountable. They hop from church to church, particularly hiding in larger churches where they can slip in and out each week. The moment someone challenges them to get into a small group where they will need to let others into their lives, they leave.But that’s not your fault either. The church is a family. If people don’t want the accountability that comes with church involvement, that’s their choice.Worldliness - Others leave your church because they’re backsliding. Years ago, I had a guy tell me he was leaving Saddleback because we asked for too much commitment. When you start a building campaign, people will leave your church. They want to be on the ship, but they don’t want to pay for your ship.Sometimes people leave your church because they love their bank accounts, their sinful lifestyles, and their free time more than they love Jesus. That’s not a reflection of your ministry. It’s a reflection of their relationship with Jesus.Divisiveness - No church has 100 percent agreement in every area. That’s not realistic. Even Paul and Barnabas disagreed. You can have unity without uniformity.But some people will grab onto these areas of disagreement and use them to create divisions in the church. Romans 16 warns us to watch out for “those who create divisions.”Unresolved personal conflict - This is the number one reason people leave the church. People don’t get along with one another, and they didn’t grow up in a family where they learned how to deal with conflict.Again, the church is a family. Families have disagreements. The easiest thing for people to do when this happens is just to leave. You and I know that will not help. Often, people will go to another church only to discover the other church isn’t perfect either.Sent out in ministry - Of course, this is the best reason people leave your church. This isn’t a reason to despair. It’s a reason to celebrate! Every church should send people all over the world to spread the gospel.You’ve likely read this from me before. You should judge your church not by your seating capacity but your sending capacity. You have little control over the other six reasons people will leave your church. But you can— and should—actively organize your church to see this happen more often. It’s frustrating when people leave your church. Sometimes it hurts—especially when it’s someone you’ve poured into for years. But don’t jump to conclusions. Don’t assume you’ve failed. Look at why the people have left.
How to Become a Do-Something Preacher (Part 2)

How to Become a Do-Something Preacher (Part 2)

This is a continuation of last week's article that can be found here: https://blog.pastors.com/articles/how-to-become-a-…-preacher-part-1/ As a preacher, it’s never enough just to communicate information. God didn’t call us to be seminary professors or entertainers. God called us to be do-something preachers. He expects us to preach for transformation. Last week, I talked about how to become a do-something preacher by helping your congregation see that they cannot change their behavior without changing what they believe, because all behavior is based on a belief. Change always starts in the mind! The biblical word for “changing your mind” is repentance. When most people think of the word “repentance,” they think it means to stop doing something. But not a single Greek lexicon defines repentance (metanoia) that way. Repentance means to change your mind. Helping the people you preach to change the way they think is a battle, because they may have held these wrong beliefs for years. Changing them isn’t easy. You don’t change people’s minds.  The applied Word of God does. Paul writes, “When we tell you these things, we do not use words that come from human wisdom. Instead, we speak words given to us by the Spirit, using the Spirit’s words to explain spiritual truths” (1 Corinthians 2:13 NLT). The Bible teaches that real preaching isn’t just a matter of intellectual study and the presentation of facts. God is at work within the speaker, and that makes it different. As preachers, we “demolish arguments” (2 Corinthians 10:4). Spiritual warfare isn’t as much about fighting demons as it is about battling ideologies, beliefs, and values. That’s why we’re so exhausted after preaching. We’re not just giving a pep talk. We're battling for the minds of men and women.  Changing the way I act is a result (or fruit) of repentance. Repentance happens in our minds. It’s not about our actions. Repentance doesn’t mean forsaking your sins. It means changing your mind. That's why John the Baptist says, "Produce fruit in keeping with repentance" (Matthew 3:8 NIV). Actions follow beliefs.  Paul echoed this in Acts 20:26 when he said: “I preached that they should repent and turn to God and demonstrate their repentance by their deeds” (NIV). Deeds are not repentance. Deeds are the proof of repentance.  The deepest preaching is preaching for repentance.  Life application preaching is not shallow preaching. Anytime you teach doctrine without applying it to the lives of listeners, your teaching is shallow. Life change only happens when you challenge someone's thinking. Preaching for repentance is preaching for life change.  Repentance is the central theme of the New Testament. Just look at these verses: John the Baptist: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near” (Matthew 3:2 NIV).  Peter: “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:38 NIV).  Paul: “I preached that they should repent and turn to God and demonstrate their repentance by their deeds” (Acts 26:20 NIV).    Jesus: “This is what is written: ‘The Messiah will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and repentance for the forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem’” (Luke 24:46-47 NIV). The message of the Bible isn’t information and interpretation—it’s life change.  To produce lasting life change, you must enlighten the mind, engage the emotion, and challenge the will. Many pastors particularly struggle with the third of these—challenging the will. But as a preacher, it’s critical you challenge the will. Every message really comes down to two words. Will you.  Will you do what you were created to do?  You make the challenge, and then you have the courage to wait and let your congregation respond. It takes courage to do that because it’s risky to challenge our congregants. They may reject you. They may walk out on you. People may not like what you ask. But never forget what the Bible says in Proverbs 29:25, "The fear of man will prove to be a snare" (NIV). The moment we worry about what other people think, we’re finished as a teacher. We are no longer a tool in the hand of God because we’re worried about what others will think.  So now what? Over the past two weeks, I’ve shown just how important it is to preach for life change. God wants to help the people in our churches to be Christlike in conviction, character, and conduct. The purpose of preaching is to produce doers of the Word, not just hearers of the Word. Preaching for application isn’t just a matter of preference or style. It’s a matter of obedience. God intended his Word to be used for the changing of lives. Will you repent and never again preach just to communicate information?
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