For preachers & speakers

Preach the sermon. Skip the slide deck.

You shouldn't have to be a presentation designer to put a verse on the wall. Write the sermon the way you write it. The slides come out the other end.

Sound familiar?

  • You finished the sermon. Now it's 11pm Saturday and you're fighting Keynote.
  • You typed Psalm 23 from memory, missed a comma, and your tech coordinator caught it on Sunday.
  • Your speaker notes and your slide content live in the same doc — and someone always reads the wrong one.
  • Every week you re-explain to the AV team which lines are slides and which aren't.

None of that is preaching. None of it should be on your plate.

What you get instead.

Write the way you preach.

Plain text editor, autosave, formatting that doesn't fight you. The sermon is the source of truth.

Scripture appears for free.

Type the reference. Get the verse, in your translation, on the slide — without leaving the editor.

Speaker notes stay yours.

Whatever you don't highlight stays in your private speaker notes. The screen only gets what you put on it.

Your tech team stops chasing you.

They get the deck the moment you finish writing. No 'can you resend that paragraph' texts.

The new week

What your week actually looks like.

  1. 1
    Tuesday

    Open last Sunday's sermon. Duplicate it. Start writing this Sunday's.

  2. 2
    Thursday

    Highlight the verses and lines you want on screen. Scripture pulls in.

  3. 3
    Saturday

    Click publish. Tech coordinator gets the file. You go to bed.

Sermon · Sunday
Title
The Lord is my shepherd

We open this morning at Psalm 23:1. The words are familiar, but the picture David is drawing is not.

Notice the verb. Not was. Not will be. Is.

A shepherd doesn't lead from behind. He goes first into the dark places.

Slides
Psalm 23:1
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He leads me beside still waters.

Try it on next Sunday's sermon.

Five minutes to set up. Free during beta. The worst case is you write your sermon in a nicer editor.