
Books on preaching often highlight the wrong kind of sermons as examples. Too many teach you to prepare academic outlines so vague and general that they’re robbed of power.
Take this outline for a sermon on 1 Corinthians 12, titled The Corinthians and Spiritual Gifts:
The source of the Corinthians’ gifts
The function of the Corinthians’ gifts
The purpose of the Corinthians’ gifts
Does that grab your attention? Probably not. Here’s why:
It’s abstract and academic, not applicational.
It’s in the third person—about them, not us.
It’s focused only on the past.
It doesn’t mention God or people.
In short, the points don’t say much to anyone. But you can avoid this pitfall with a few simple steps.
1. Start with application.
Use biblical application as your sermon points. Begin with what God wants people to do today, then show how Scripture grounds it.
2. Put a verb in every point.
Verbs turn biblical truth into action steps. They help your people become doers of the Word, not hearers only.
3. Put God in your points.
A sermon isn’t a pep talk. Changed lives come from God. Keep him at the center by naming him directly in your points.
4. Use personal “you” pronouns.
Speak personally: “God gave you gifts.” “Jesus calls you to serve.” Avoid vague “we” language that weakens the application.
5. Give a weekly assignment.
Jesus often ended with assignments like, “Go and do likewise.” Do the same—offer one specific practice for the week.
Instead of the academic outline about the Corinthians’ gifts, try something like this:
God gave you gifts.
God gave you gifts to use.
God gave you gifts for the benefit of the body.
This version is personal, practical, God-centered, and positive.