Saturday, July 21, 2007

Sermon post format

Using the content suggestions at OurChurch, below is a sample template for a sermon posting in a Pastor's blog:



Bible passage(s): [link(s) to an online bible]

Key Bible verse: [link to an online bible]

Sermon Title:
  • Main point 1
    • Sub-point 1
    • Sub-point 2
  • Main point 2
    • Sub-point 1
    • Sub-point 2
    • Sub-point 3
  • Main point 3
    • Sub-point 1
    • Sub-point 2

Action step: [The specific action you want people to take in the coming days as a result of this message.]

Dig deeper: [linked references for added information related to the sermon topic.]

Ask the pastor: Click on the "comments" link at the bottom of this posting or contact me at the church's email address. [The "contact me" link could go to the church's "Contact" web page or the actual church email address for the pastor.]

Traits of a great web site

Titus Hoskins in SitePro News lists seven traits of a great web site:
  • Keywords are used
  • Design is simple
  • Pages are optimized
  • Navigation is easy
  • Content is fresh
  • Good enough to bookmark
  • Looks cool

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Content in Pastors' blogs

What content should appear in a pastor's blog? Anything they want, of course. On the other hand, it depends on why the blog was created and the purpose of the blog.

Pastors may arrive at a church with a blog already. They may well use it for publishing daily happenings (journal style) and musings. If the church wants "their" Pastor's blog to integrate with the church web and church worship, the church and pastor need to discuss a blog that is directly tied to the church. Both type blogs can exist at the same time. Authoring multiple blogs is common.

The Christian Web Trends blog posting lists some great content ideas for "Supercharging sermons with a blog", which I have added to the below tips.

Come decision points about pastor blog content and design on which the church and pastor need to reach agreement:
  • If the pastor has or wants a personal journal type blog, is the pastor also willing to author a pastor's blog that is a more direct extension of the local church?
  • Should the design integrate with the church web design or its existing blogs?
  • Should the pastor's blog contain any sermon texts, summaries, or outlines? Sermon messages can be one form of online evangelism.
  • Should a "Sermon blog" be a separate blog or mixed in with the other postings in the church's Pastor's blog?
  • Should the church offer (and link) sermon podcasts or video?
  • Should the blog allow comments, as is the norm?
  • Should any comments should be "moderated", so as to avoid anti-Christian rants and foul language appearing in blog comments? Yes, of course!
  • Should the blog contain short "point of view" postings about spiritual life in a secular world? These could be "thought for the week" style, supplement a past sermon, or based on the pastor's and congregation's daily life experiences.

Sermon information

If the pastor's blog will contain sermon information, decide the following:

  • When should such information be posted?
    Immediately or after a week or two delay?
    Some pastors and church leaders may fear that offering full text or even outlines immediately might lower actual church attendance. Others may want to immediately offer the message to shut-ins or people who were unable to attend church.
  • Should it be full text, paragraph summary, or outline?
    I suggest a two-level outline format, which is easiest to scan. After all, research shows that most surfers scan, not read text on web pages. An outline of two levels includes the key points and yet is short.

Add sermon resource links

If posting sermon outlines, help people dig deeper by stirring in:

  • Links to resources related to the sermon topic. Remember that your own church web may contain information or related link collections.
  • Links to bible passages for the sermon.
  • Titles of materials available in the church library.
  • Links to Books, say available from Cokesbury, that are a really great reference.

Add the "So what?"

Sermons at their best are like editorials, not just commentary. Editorials urge their readers to take action. Here's the pastor's chance to reinforce the Christian actions that readers should take in their lives during the coming days and weeks. The Christian Web Trends blog calls these "Action Steps." Be specific. Make each action step short. Use bullets – make the action steps easy to scan.

Encourage contact

If you have enabled comments, your blog postings automatically have a way to "contact us". Some readers, though, may wish to contact the pastor personally, not via a blog comment. So it's best to also add a "Contact us" link. Since this is a Pastor's blog that is tied to your church, how about adding a "Send a prayer request" link too? It couldn't hurt and might be just what some blog reader needs.

Methoblogger Lectionary & other helps

When your pastor, teachers, or any other interested people want to get someone else's take on Common Lectionary readings for the week, surf on over to "The Methoblogger Lectionary Group" site.

There are a ton of helpful web sites and blogs related to preaching and teaching. Add to that web pages helpful to various committees and work areas in the church and you have the makings of a great resource page for your web.

Gather a list of such links and put them on a special "leader helps" type web page, similar to what Avondale Pattillo United Methodist Church has done.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Pastor blog uses

Your congregation might well benefit from a blog authored by your pastor. Why? Your church web site needs to include changing content -- content that will keep people coming back. A pastor's blog is one of many parts to a complete church web site, even for a basic site that's not "fancy":

Some types of static information church web pages:

  • Information pages (who we are, what we believe, service information, location, contact information, ...)
  • Resource pages (links to spiritual topics and online tools)

Some types of dynamic (changing) web pages:

  • Photo albums
  • Church news
  • Pastor's blog
  • Syndicated news
  • Syndicated religious cartoons
Here are a few of the many possible uses for a pastor's blog:
  • A weekly (or more frequent) pithy spiritual message, musing, or "thought for the week"
  • Sermon texts
  • Sermon summaries
  • Sermon supplemental references (linked)
  • Topics related to the denomination

I believe that the below possibilities are of much lower interest and value in a pastor's blog:

  • "Pitches" for upcoming events.
    This type subject might be a low-interest item and better suited to a church newsletter or Sunday bulletin supplement.
  • "Congratulations" on past events.
    Such items might be better posted in a church news blog or online newsletter.