Build a Searchable Church Sermon Library
Your church’s sermons are one of your most valuable discipleship resources. They help people understand Scripture, revisit important teaching, share messages with friends, and explore your church before they ever walk through the doors. A strong church sermon management system gives those messages a clear home. With Connect My Church, your team can organize sermons by series, date, speaker, topic, and Scripture passage so members and guests can easily find the teaching they need. Your sermon library can live on your church website, making your content easier to access, easier to share, and easier for search engines to understand.
Sermon Management Tools for Your Church Website
Connect My Church helps your team create a sermon archive that is clean, organized, and easy to manage.

Audio and Video Sermons
Add sermon audio, video embeds, or sermon recordings so people can watch or listen after Sunday. Your church can use sermon content from platforms such as YouTube, Vimeo, or uploaded audio files, depending on your setup.

Sermon Series
Organize messages into sermon series so people can follow a teaching theme from start to finish. Series pages help your church create a better user experience and give search engines more context around your content.

Scripture References
Tag sermons by Bible passage so visitors can find teaching connected to a specific book, chapter, or theme. Scripture references also help your sermon archive become a better resource for Bible study and discipleship.

Speakers and Teachers
Organize sermons by speaker, preacher, or teacher so members and guests can find messages from specific leaders in your church.

Sermon Topics
Use sermon topics to group messages around themes such as prayer, discipleship, generosity, marriage, evangelism, church leadership, spiritual growth, and Christian living.

Sermon Notes and Downloads
Attach sermon notes, discussion guides, PDFs, or related resources so small groups, families, and individual members can keep engaging after the message ends.


