If you could increase your church’s impact using something you already have, would you be interested? Social Sermon Sharing is a way to get your message in front of more people and engage the people who are already listening.
And then, at the majority of churches, it gets delivered once. And in most cases, on any given Sunday, it is delivered to less than half of the congregation. Even in churches with multiple services, the result is a well-crafted message that only hits about half the ears in the congregation and they only hear it one time.
Since the majority of the work of the sermon is preparation, why not expand the reach? What if more people could hear it, and for the people who have already heard it, what if we could remind them of the most important points?
Social Sermon Sharing: Get 6X the Impact from Your Church’s Sermons
1. Preach It!
2. Post the Text
The most common objection I hear to this comes from pastors who don’t preach from a manuscript or don’t feel that their rough manuscript is in good enough shape to share. This is a great place to engage volunteers. I am willing to bet that, in every congregation, there is someone who would be honored to serve by either transcribing the audio from the sermon or editing a manuscript draft. There is likely someone out there looking to serve in a way they can do from home or when the time is convenient.
3. Share Sermon Quotes
Sometimes preachers are willing to pull out quotes of what they thought was important. This is also an excellent role for a volunteer. Look for the people who take notes during the sermon. They probably have them ready to go as soon as worship is over.
You can post these quotes as plain text on Facebook or Twitter. But, for more impact, make them into a graphic. Using a free web app called Pablo (https://pablo.buffer.com/) you can create beautiful images with overlaid text. Pablo will even help you get the image sizes right for posting on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Click here to watch a video of how easy it is to create a graphical sermon quote using Pablo.
So far, everything I have mentioned is virtually free. Sure, it will take some time either from a pastor, staff, or volunteer, but there is no budget impact. These next two may cost a little money, but the return on investment is potentially significant.
4. Post the Audio
5. Post the Video
6. Post Video Excerpts
This is the same basic idea as sharing sermon quotes. The difference is these quotes will be in video form. This may be the most time intensive way to increase your sermon impact, but it might also be the most effective. You will need to record the sermon on a video camera and then edit it to come up with some short video clips. You can share these clips on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. If you are interested in doing this and need some help, let me know in the comments, and I will put together a guide.
This is Going to Take Some Work
This all takes time, dedication, and discipline. However, given the time already dedicated to preparing the sermon, it will be worth the effort. This is an opportunity to take a resource you already have, and use technology to increase you impact the reach out to new people.
Ready for a new website?
Is it time for a new website for your church? Check out my new webinar series, “Church Websites for Everyone.” Rio Texas Conference United Methodist Churches can click here for more information. All other churches are invited to sign up here for another webinar open to all churches.

