Pastors

Making Your Message Memorable

I listen carefully to what people say to me after I speak. If they say, “Boy, I wish I could speak like you,” then I’ve failed. But if they say, “I’m not going to forget that,” then I’ve succeeded.

I speak only to change behavior. Making a speech is not an accomplishment; changing behavior is. But to make a lasting change in behavior, I need to make my message memorable. How can I say it so people will remember?

The missing third element

Some say, “If you want people to remember, tell stories.” Beginning preachers are instructed to illustrate each point with a story.

It’s true that good stories stick in the memory. But to really help people remember, I find I need to move beyond point and story to add a third element. I call this an “essence statement.” You might also call it a “handle,” because it gives people a way to hold on to the concept. Some people even call it a one-liner or proverb. But whatever the name, an essence statement is a simple, memorable statement that capsulizes a truth. Over the years I’ve developed a number of these:

  1. “God created us from the dust, but he didn’t intend for us to stay there.”
  2. “If your wife doesn’t treat you as she should, be grateful.”
  3. “When we understand each other’s motives, we can understand each other’s actions.”

They’re short, they capture a truth, and they stick in the memory.

Combination of three

The combination of point, story, and essence statement makes a message unforgettable.

For example, in my book You and Your Network, I wanted people to remember that we have the right and responsibility to choose our attitude in every situation. So I used the combination of point, story, and statement:

  1. I described the point as simply and clearly as I could.
  2. I told a story about being on a plane when the pilot announced there would be a four-hour mechanical delay. Another passenger bolted off the plane to tell the young woman at the counter (who, of course, controls all jet mechanical failures) what he thought of the way they ran the airline. Irritated by the inconvenience, I decided this was the appropriate thing to do, so I moved to join him. As I stood up to follow, I remembered Viktor Frankl’s definition, “Ultimate freedom is man’s right to choose his attitude,” and I sheepishly sat down. I had not chosen my attitude but had absorbed it from the circumstances and the people around me. I used those four hours of quiet, with free coffee, to productively do the work in my briefcase.
  3. I summarized my point in an essence statement: “When we absorb our attitude, we are slaves; when we choose it, we are free.” Point, story, statement—and the last is not the least. I’ve had many people say, “I’ve always thought that; I had no way to say it. Now I’ve got words.”

Writing an essence statement

The first and most important step in creating an essence statement is to decide what I’m trying to say. Then I see if I can express it briefly, using one or more of the following qualities:

Contrast. Often it helps if the essence statement sets up two “goalposts,” two opposing or contrasting words. Contrast wakens the mind. For example, “While celebrities may dazzle us, heroes enlarge us.”

My wife, Mary Alice, is having trouble accepting the reality of a progressive illness. As long as she thinks about the illness and doesn’t accept it objectively, then she can’t enjoy the limited possibilities that are before her. I tried to capture that truth in an essence statement: “Until you accept the bad, you cannot enjoy the good.”

Humor or surprise. I sometimes joke, “Moses was the first person to break all Ten Commandments.” People laugh, but they also remember my point: All of us have sinned.

Or when teaching about marriage, I might quip, “Too many marriages start out in bliss and end up in blisters.”

Poetic sense. Memorable phrases grab the ear with balance or alliteration. They sound right. I tried to capture this in one message with the phrase, “The fallacy of fantasy.”

Another time I said, “In middle life you don’t want to make a junkyard out of your old age.” Tears came to the eyes of one listener who was about 40 years old. Afterward he said, “You don’t know what that meant.”

I probably did know. I’d have bet anything he was thinking about divorcing his wife. I wanted to say, “Man, you’re taking away the place where the grandchildren can come. You’re splitting the home, and you’re bringing competition in when there ought not be any competition.”

But I said all that in one phrase—”Don’t make a junkyard out of your old age.”

Fred Smith is a business executive in Dallas, Texas, and a contributing editor of Leadership.

1998 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or contact us.

Our Latest

News

Trump’s Foster Care Order Sides with Christian Families

The executive order reverses a Biden-era push for LGBTQ policies that shut Christians out of fostering and adoption, but its legal mechanism is left vague.

The Bulletin

Social Media Bans, Hep-B Vaccine, Notre Dame Snubbed, and the 1939 Project

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Australia bans social media for kids, CDC’s recommendations change, college football uproar, and the far right lens on history.

The Russell Moore Show

What Makes a Song Good for Corporate Worship?

Russell takes a listener question about whether some songs are better than others for worshipping in a congregational setting.

Being Human

Finding Peace in the Chaos: Five Emotional Well-Being Tips for Christmas

How can you maintain your Christmas sanity amid holiday stress?

Christ Welcomes Us So That We Might Welcome Him

Oghosa Iyamu

The Incarnation is an act of divine hospitality, and the church is the cohost.

News

A Year After Assad, Evangelicals Help Syria Heal

Heather M. Surls

While uncertain about life under the new Islamist-led government, Christians are providing spiritual and material aid to their neighbors

News

Nigerian Parents Pray for Children’s Return After Mass Kidnapping

Emmaneul Nwachukwu

“I just wish someone can help me get my child back home soon.”

Lord Over LinkedIn

Jacob Zerkle

As layoffs mount amid economic uncertainty, lots of us are looking for work. Here’s how to approach the process.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube