Your Sermon Was Never Meant to End on Sunday

Most sermons are treated like events.

They’re prepared over days. Sometimes weeks. They carry prayer, study, conviction, tension. They hold the hope that something eternal might shift in someone’s life.

And then they end.

The room empties. The stage clears. The slides close. By Monday, attention has already moved to the tasks of the week.

Not because the sermon lacked depth, but because it lacked extension.

What if the Sunday sermon was never meant to be a moment? What if it was meant to shape the entire week?

Keep reading this article on CareyNieuwhof.com.

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