Video Transcript: Effective Conclusions Part 1
Welcome back to this class on so you've been asked to preach, or you've been asked to teach, or you've been asked to speak at a function, we've been looking at, how do you structure a message, and then how do you conclude the message effectively? And here's where we left off last time the discouraging finish that can be an ineffective conclusion because it just creates too much confusion for people. Another kind of ineffective conclusion is what we're going to I'm going to call summarizing the whole tell them, tell them, tell them. Tell them when I was taught to preach or when began studying preaching, I looked at classical preachers in the United States from about the 1950s and I found that they had a style of organization that was, you know, in the conclusion, you tell people, or the introduction, you tell people what you're going to tell them, and then you tell the first point, and then you summarize the first point, and then you tell them the second point, and Then you summarize the first point and the second point, and then you tell them the third point, and you tell them summarize the first and second and third points, and then on the conclusion, you tell them again what you just told them. That can become a very repetitive kind of thing that people in nowadays world of communication that is fast will simply tune out. And so that would be a poor conclusion. Another kind of poor conclusion is what I'm going to call I'm out of time. I've used that one, and you only use that in great desperation, because all of a sudden these people say, Well, wait a minute, you didn't quite wrap it up. You didn't quite finish the puzzle. But sometimes you got to do that very early. When I was preaching, I was in seminaries in a church in Phoenix, Arizona, and I was using a cassette tape, back then 30 minute cassette tape, to tape my messages. And it was July 4, Sunday, July 4, which in the United States is a big holiday, so you can expect many people in the evening service where I was preaching, but I wanted to tape my message, so I put my my recorder, tape recorder inside the pulpit, and I set it to record me when I started my message. And there weren't that many people there that night, but I started going, I got lost in my message. I didn't have it well organized. And that 30 minute blue group, the recorder clicked off, which is one thing, except it was inside this wooden pulpit, and it was like a gunshot that door was reverberated through the whole sanctuary, and people were just kind of like, what was that? And took me a minute to realize it wasn't a gun shot. It was just my tape recorder going off, and I said, I'm done. I'm done. And they were relieved. I hate to say it, but that kind of thing says I didn't organize this very well, did I? And then another kind of bad conclusion is the left field conclusion, and that is that you've been building this case. You've been in this Bible study passage with them. Are you in this topic with them? And then at the end, you go off on something entirely different. Well, before I go, I just want to say something about this which has nothing to do with what you said that will tarnish your message. And so that's, I call the left field conclusion. So those are a variety of ways that don't work very well. What kind of conclusions do work well? What
kind of conclusion? Now, this takes work to work on a conclusion that is effective. But here are some kinds of conclusions that are very, very effective. But remember the purpose of conclusions, emphasizing the main point, sending people off with some kind of action, whether it's a thought or deed, and then landing the plane, so that you come to a conclusion. And people are ready to say, yeah, yeah. You know, think again of Tony Campolo and that message, it's Friday, but Sunday is a coming. You know that main point came back at the conclusion, where the conclusion was, you know, you people here gathered in this place. You think you can't impact the world, but I'm telling you, it's only Friday, and then they're all shouting at Sunday coming. Wow. It was a send off with action to be engaged in the world, and it was a landing place for the message. So how do you do that? Well, one way of doing it extremely well. That takes work, but it's incredibly positive, is to connect to your introduction. Now, this man was a radio figure here in the United States for many, many, many years, they had a radio program, and one part of his radio program he would call the rest of the story. So he'd tell a story about someone or something, and then you get to the end, and you're kind of, you're kind of craving the end of the story, because there was usually a twist at the end of the story, and so he'd begin a story about a young woman, for instance, who was a scientist, but she lived in the middle of the 19th century in England, and women scientists were not accepted, they were not received well, and as a result, she was somebody who just didn't was not able to fulfill her destiny, she spoke once before a group of scientists, and they criticized her to no end. So she decided to give up her dream of being a scientist. But one of the things she then comforted herself with was taking on a task in her life. She had a neighbor boy who was sick, and they were looking for someone to care for him, and so she decided to care for him. And while she was caring for him, she would tell him stories. And she created this world of little rabbits, and the story of these rabbits and how they lived out their life. And there were moral lessons along the way, and she illustrated them well, and said, in a moment, I'll tell you the rest of the story. And he comes back after commercial. And the rest of the story was, this is the story of Beatrix Potter, who's in the history of the United States, one of the children's authors, with a story about Peter Rabbit. And it's that sort of thing. Now, when you do that in a message, it can be incredibly powerful that you say, here's the introduction, and I'm giving you part of the story so you want more, you're going to stay tuned, and at the end, we're going to wrap this up. I heard this done recently with somebody preaching about Joseph. It's a young man I was privileged to work with for about seven or eight years, and he began his message by the point where Joseph is 31 years old and he's in prison, and he says I was thinking back to when I was 31 and he described his life when he was 31 he was a worship leader in the church, and he had just gotten fired. His wife was pregnant with her second child. He found out their first child had some defects, some
health issues that were going to maybe cost a lot of money over a period of time the economy was and therefore health insurance was a big thing. And the economy was such that they owned a house, but they owed more on the house and what they could sell it for. And so all of these issues going up. And now what is my future going to hold and I get fired by this new boss, new boss, and we just didn't see right, same way. And then he told about Joseph in that situation, and how things changed in a moment, how, you know, all of a sudden he's hauled out of prison. He's forgotten, right the man that he said, please remember me when you serve Pharaoh again. And forgotten him. He's forgotten for two more years, but then all of a sudden, he's called to go before Pharaoh, to interpret the dream. And he does. And all of a sudden, he's second ruler in Egypt, and says, things turn like that at the end of the story, end of the message, he said last week, couple weeks ago, said I got to sit down with that man who fired me when I was 31 and we acknowledged our own each our own culpability and what went on and the way things had built. We we acknowledge all of that, and then we apologized to each other, and we committed to each other as brothers again, and he said, and I got to move on in ministry to where he was at the present time, that kind of thing. That bracketing a message in such a way that the introduction and the conclusion of bracket the message will bring power to your message. So connect to the connect to the introduction. Variety ways you can do that, but if you do it well, this will have power. Now, having said that, a second way is use an illustration of your main point. You know, you've got a main point that you've been emphasizing. Okay, bring an illustration of that point, somebody who's lived out the action that you're calling people to that you want them to understand. You want them to understand God's love. You know, have somebody give a testimony as a conclusion. Have a picture of God's love. I'm preaching on God's loving. So that's mine. I'm preaching on that this Sunday church. And you know, I just think of John Harper's word, God is closer than you think. So he ended a message on that by talking about being on a plane next to somebody, a guy who's on his computer and he's looking at pictures of his young son, and his son has gotten old enough that he recognizes dad now and sees dad and smiles. And so, you know, this guy is telling John Ortberg about all these showing of all these pictures of his son that he's got us his computer or his phone and and John Ortberg is thinking about God's loving. Suddenly, I realized this was. This guy's screensaver, a picture of his son. Him with his son. He said, I realized I'm I'm on God's screensaver. That kind of conclusion. Illustration of your point can be incredibly, incredibly powerful. Asking people to take an action of some sort is another way that can just bring home your point. Now there are a variety of actions to think about that. I'm thinking of a woman named Rachel Bloom who asked people to come up and light a candle as a prayer for someone. And so at the end of her sermon, just asked people to come up a bunch of candles up there. It was an action that allowed that message to be
cemented in people's lives and minds. In the church I served in the last church I served, we had a practice of this, you know, we had people come up and they would do a variety of things, such as nailing, writing their sins out and then nailing them onto a cross. We'd have people come forward for prayer. We'd have people gather in groups praying together. One time, we had people picking up a stone or dropping a stone, or, you know, a one time we had to write on a mirror, you know, what? What do you want to reflect of God's glory? What? What is it you want to reflect and or writing names? One time, we had people come up and just we had plexiglass frame, Plexiglas in a wood frame, and we had people write names of people that they wanted us to pray for, that these people would come to faith. These kind of conclusions are marvelously powerful, and they bring it home. Let's say they bring the message home in a powerful way. So if you could find ways that ask people to take action of some sort, whatever it is, it will cement your message into their hearts and minds more powerfully. So you can do an action, you connect to your introduction, illustrate your point in action, or an appeal. Now these appeals could be of a variety of kinds. It could be an appeal to stewardship. I, my blog, not long ago, I talked about preaching about money, and several posts and things you could do about money. Well, you know, I've been involved, I think, in my ministry, in six different building programs, and thank God, I don't have to do that again. But one of the things we'd have to do is raise money for that. And so oftentimes I would give a message, and the appeal would be, all right, would you make a pledge? Would you make a three year pledge that will help us accomplish this leading of a legacy, or help us accomplish this, reaching out in this community in an impactful way for the next 100 years, or whatever? A stewardship appeal is very important. An appeal that's a response to the gospel that if, in your message you've been giving the gospel, and you say, you know, if you'd like to receive Jesus Christ, today, I want to talk to you, or we've got people available here afterwards to talk to you. It may be signing up for a program. Maybe you're you've talked here in a sermon series about grief, and now there's grief share, which is a marvelous program to help people who are grieving Come, come sign up for this program. It might be introducing a mission and and challenging people to be part of that mission. Recently, the church that I'm a part of, and we adopted a new Michigan, a new mission in Rwanda. And so there was a challenge to say, Okay, there's this need within this community. How many of you are willing to go to help build this school? How many of you are willing to fund it, to pay for it? How many of you are willing? It's that kind of appeal, that kind of challenge, that these kind of Appeals, and you may be thinking of others, but anything that appeals makes an appeal to people to engage the gospel more effectively. It can be marvelously powerful. Now I'm going to continue this next time. I think I've come back to the end of my time for this session, and so next time, we'll begin session nine, and we'll see you then.