How to Present Your Message Quickly and Concisely with Message Maps

Message Maps helps communicators effectively share a single idea in a moment. Use Message Maps to organize your ideas, express them simply and quickly, and effectively offer a convincing message to hearers.

The video below shows communicators how to do this. It’s focused on business communications, but I want to adapt it to Biblical communications.

Thanks to Lifehacker for the post and video.

As the video states, use three steps to help you communicate your truth with Message Maps.

Message Maps Start With a Twitter Friendly Headline

First, boil the message down to a single idea that you can share succinctly enough to post on a service like Twitter that limits the author to 140 characters or less. For preachers this means express the main idea or Big Idea of your message in this same concise statement.

For example, the simple message of the Gospel could be posted on Twitter like this:

Jesus knows you make a lot of mistakes, but he took the consequences for your sin and wants to forgive you.

That’s pretty simple and seems to encompass the whole thing. If I worked harder, I could word it better, but for demo purposes it suffices.

Message map used to share gospel

Use a Message Map to organize a Gospel presentation or to propose ideas to your church.

Share the Main Ideas

In the video the speaker shows how to pull the three main ideas from the Headline and state them in a map. You can use something like a mind mapping app or just a piece of paper or whiteboard. Draw a circle with the title in the center. Now draw a line coming from the center to these three other ideas. State them in as simple a fashion as you can. That will help you quickly present the idea to someone.

Using our above idea, we could give the following three lines:

  • Jesus knows you sin
  • Jesus suffered in your place
  • Jesus wants to forgive you and work with you

The man in the video wants us to use three main ideas, but not all ideas include three. You could present two or four. In fact I might prefer to split the third statement above into two:

“Jesus wants to forgive you. Jesus wants to work with you sharing His forgiveness to others.”

Support Your Sub-points

Now that you have the gist of your message, support each of the main ideas. You only do this if your main idea and sub ideas get a hearing. For example, in a witnessing situation you could state the above and ask if its okay to talk with the person more about this. Or you might ask, “Can I tell you how this changed my life?”

In a sermon, you assume they want to hear more. Preaching teachers tell us that each idea must get treatment with the following:

  • Explanation – appeal to the mind and answer the question, “What does that mean?”
  • Illustration – appeal to the imagination and answer the question, “What does that look like?”
  • Argumentation – appeal to the will and answer the question, “Is that true?”
  • Application – appeal to the commitment of the person and answer the question, “How do I use that in my life?”

sharing the message using message maps

Use the following to do the previous four things:

  • Stories: tell your story AKA your testimony of how you were saved
  • Facts: share the facts of the Gospel AKA the Roman Road
  • Examples: tell about what Jesus did for others you know, if your audience already knows your story

The above could serve as a good presentation. It’s not really a sermon since it’s not based on a text of scripture. It’s a presentation. Use it for a witnessing situation with a friend or as a short message to a civic group.

Other Uses in Ministry

I could see this being useful when you’re presenting ideas to your church board for a potential new ministry or a change in something the church already does. You might use it to communicate your church’s vision to the congregation. Share facts about how your vision will help your church minister. Give stories about ways people have served or how Jesus changed people’s lives.

What do you think? How could you use this ministry to effectively communicate the Gospel? How could an expository preacher use it to get across the idea of a text?

Improve Your Preaching with Free Videos from More Than Cake

If you’re like me you’ve collected some online friends you’ve never actually met in person. Dr. Joe Miller is one of mine. He’s the brains behind More Than Cake, a YouTube channel dedicated to ministry, Logos Bible Software and preaching. He does a bunch of videos on his active channel that can really help any preacher who wants to improve.

Joe teaches, writes and preaches among other things. He also shoots some good videos that help us who like to use Bible software in preaching.

Joe Miller's Sermon Prep videos

I try to watch each of Joe’s videos and always find them interesting, informative and sometimes even entertaining. Check them out over at YouTube. One of his best series focuses on the five day sermon prep process. You can watch the set below starting with day one.

The Topical Method of Preaching from Joe Miller

If you’re a preacher, then you’ve likely used the topical method of preaching. My colleague Joe Miller shares his explanation and evaluation of Topical Preaching in a even-handed fair way. I’d likely not offer as positive view of it. I do agree with all that he says in this excellent video.

Check out Joe’s other videos and his excellent website More Than Cake. Also check out his book by the same name.

more than cake book

How Had Bible Study Software Improved Your Preaching?

Read a tweet last night that was actually a link to a forum post at the Accordance Bible Software forums. The question in the tweet and forum post was how has Bible study software helped to improve your preaching.

Portability

The first response is one I wholeheartedly agree with. The key word was “Portability” by which he meant that using a laptop and software enabled him to port his entire library around. I would add things like the iPad or iPhone (or any other mobile device) which lets me use that fifteen minutes as I am waiting for a meal or for someone to meet me somewhere. When previously that fifteen minutes might just let me read my bible or one book, now I can search my whole library for a word, find a sermon illustration, or get some information about a passage I am preaching.

Connection

The second post makes another great point that I agree with. We’ve always been able to connect one passage to another via things like concordances, margin notes in our study Bibles, or just our memory. But with Bible software these connections are more accessible and therefore more likely to be found. The person posting gave an example of the word “ridicule” in Luke 14:28-30, the passage counting the cost and not wanting to be ridiculed for not doing so when building a tower. He said that the same word is used to describe Jesus’ treatment in passages about the crucifixion (the soldiers, the religious leaders while on the cross). The connection brings up the idea of ridicule and counting the cost. Did Jesus fail to count the cost when he came to earth and did things that led to his crucifixion? The answer of course is yes he did but felt it worth the cost to redeem our souls. GREAT POINT!

Time and Efficiency

A third way cited was the speed of Bible study software. It saves a lot of time in all three stages of preparation. It saves time in study as I don’t have to search a stack of books manually. They are there ready to go at my finger tips. The time saved allows me to go deeper. In the sermon writing phase, it saves me time in finding good illustrations, in copying and pasting texts or notes into the sermon, and if you use your Bible software to actually write your sermons you don’t have to switch between two applications.

Enjoyment

The final point is my own. I am a tech geek and I love technology. For that reason I am more likely to play around with something if it has to do with technology. Put Bible study software on my computer or mobile device and I am more likely to do things like read my Bible more regularly and longer.

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