How it works

Three steps from sermon to slides.

The whole point of Easy Sermon Notes is that the work you already do — writing the sermon — is the same work that produces the slides. No second app. No retyping. No handoff doc.

Step 1

Write your sermon.

Open the editor and write the sermon the way you actually deliver it. Headings, quotes, lists, scripture, the joke that lands and the one that doesn't. Autosaves as you go.

The point is to keep your prep workflow intact. We don't want you to learn a second tool — we want the one you're already using to do double duty.

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.
Step 2

Highlight what belongs on the screen.

Select a verse reference and the full text appears, formatted for the projector. Highlight a quote and it becomes a slide. Highlight a single word and it's the only thing the congregation sees.

Everything not highlighted stays in your speaker notes. The line between “what I'm saying” and “what they're seeing” becomes obvious.

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.
Step 3

Hand off to your tech team.

When you're done, your tech coordinator gets a ProPresenter-ready .pro file plus a clean speaker notes PDF. One link. No screenshots. No “can you resend that paragraph?”

Their job goes from rebuilding your deck to dropping the file into Sunday's playlist. Yours goes from second-shift slide design back to actual prep.

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.
sermon.pro · ready

Ready to try it?

Free during beta. Set up the account in five minutes, write next week's sermon in it, and see what comes out the other side.