How to Structure Your Content for Maximum Impact: A Framework for Christian Writers
A simple framework for writing that invites readers into God's transformative work
I remember, many times, sitting in the wooden pew, Bible open on my lap, trying to follow the sermon.
The speaker was sharing something meaningful—I knew that much—but my mind kept wandering.
The points meandered like a stream with no clear direction, facts and scripture references washing over me virtually no connection.
But then there were other moments.
Sermons where I leaned forward. Where I followed every word. Where the message didn't just inform my mind but pierced my heart.
For me, the difference wasn't the content of the message.
It was the journey.
Some communicators simply present information. Others guide you on a transformative path where each step builds on the last, creating momentum toward a powerful conclusion that stays with you long after the final words are spoken.
This same principle applies to everything we write as Christians—whether devotionals, blog posts, newsletters, or books.
There's a deep difference between content that merely transfers information and writing that helps open hearts to God's work.
The Missing Element in Most Christian Writing
I’ve found that a lot of Christian writing falls into one of two categories:
Information-Heavy: Doctrinally sound but emotionally distant, often delivering truth without connection.
Inspiration-Heavy: Emotionally engaging but substantively light, sometimes creating feelings without foundation.
Both of these miss the integrated approach that Jesus Himself utilized.
How Jesus Communicated
Jesus was the master of heart-level communication.
He rarely delivered abstract theological lectures.
Most often, He told stories that connected truth to experience.
He created tension before revealing solutions.
His words didn't just inform the minds of His listeners—they prepared hearts for transformation.
Why Story Matters
There are probably many words for this method of conveying information, but to put it simply, the most engaging and meaningful way to receive that information is through story.
“Story” isn't just a nice addition to our writing—it's fundamental to how God designed humans to receive and process truth.
When information comes packaged in story, several powerful things happen:
Connection Before Content: Story creates emotional resonance that opens hearts before minds need to process facts. We connect with experiences before we analyze concepts.
Memorable Framework: Our brains are wired to remember narratives far better than isolated facts. Story provides the mental "hooks" on which readers hang your message.
Disarmed Resistance: Story bypasses our natural defensiveness. When truth comes wrapped in narrative, it slips past our guards and touches places direct statements cannot reach.
Whole-Person Engagement: Pure information speaks only to the mind. Story engages emotions, imagination, memory, and intellect simultaneously.
Mirrored Reality: Life itself unfolds as story, not as bullet points. When we communicate through story, we're working with—not against—how people naturally experience reality.
This is why Jesus—who could have delivered the most profound theological lectures imaginable—chose instead to say, "A sower went out to sow..." He understood that the path to Life runs through story.
Four Elements of Story-Driven Writing
I’ve spent quite a bit of time studying just what it was about my favorite speakers and authors that made their messages so engaging to me.
And when I began writing sermons and other content for myself, I knew that I wanted to replicate that same impact in my own messages.
Through that process, I've identified four essential elements that create content that speaks to the heart:
The Door: Opening your piece in a way that invites readers in
The Tension: Building investment by addressing real struggles
The Truth: Revealing the solution that changes everything
The Transformation: Landing the impact with clear next steps
Note that the idea here is not to boil the message down into a formula. Far from it.
Instead, these elements are more like milestones along a journey—one that can take any number of detours.
The point here is to have clear, primary path that makes it easier for the reader or listener to follow along.
Let's explore each element.
(By the way, if you’d like a guided journaling template that follows this journey, check out this post!)
Element 1: The Door
The Door is how you open your piece—how you invite readers into your message.
It creates immediate connection and context.
What Makes an Effective Door:
Starts with story, not statistics
Creates immediate recognition ("I've felt that too!")
Establishes relevance in the first few sentences
Uses concrete images rather than abstract concepts
Makes readers feel seen and understood
Examples of Effective Doors:
A vivid personal experience related to your topic
A compelling scenario readers will recognize
A provocative question that creates curiosity
A counter-intuitive statement that challenges assumptions
The Door shouldn't just be interesting—it should create a sense of "this is for me."
Element 2: The Tension
The Tension identifies the core problem or question your piece will address.
It creates productive discomfort that makes readers crave resolution.
What Makes Effective Tension:
Names a specific challenge, not just general difficulties
Makes the struggle both personal and universal
Deepens the reader's emotional investment
Creates a sense that something important is at stake
May explore false solutions that don't fully resolve the tension
Examples of Effective Tension:
The inner conflict between competing values
The depth of a personal struggle that started in the introduction
External obstacles to the reader's goals or calling
Unresolved questions that create uncertainty
Cultural pressures that create confusion
The Tension shouldn't just acknowledge problems—it should articulate them more clearly than readers can themselves.
Element 3: The Truth
The Truth is the core insight or revelation that resolves the tension.
It's the perspective shift that changes everything.
What Makes Effective Truth:
Provides a clear, memorable core insight
Connects to deeper principles, not just surface solutions
Often reframes the problem in a new light
Typically connects to identity rather than just behavior
Is grounded in scripture or spiritual reality
Examples of Effective Truth:
A biblical principle applied to a modern challenge
A counter-intuitive insight that challenges conventional wisdom
A both/and solution to an apparent either/or problem
A deeper reality beneath surface appearances
The Truth shouldn't just inform—at its best, it can help create space for the Holy Spirit to work in readers' hearts.
Element 4: The Transformation
The Transformation moves from insight to action.
It helps readers apply the truth to their lives.
What Makes Effective Transformation:
Provides clear, specific next steps
Anticipates and addresses potential obstacles
Creates vision for what's possible
Often connects back to the opening story or image
Ends with hope and possibility, not just instruction
Examples of Effective Transformation:
A simple practice for implementing the truth
Specific questions for reflection
A vision of what life could look like when living from this truth
An invitation to further exploration or community
The Transformation shouldn't just tell readers what to do—it should help them see how Christ is the center of it all.
Why This Framework Works
I believe that this four-element approach works because it:
Follows the natural pattern of how humans process meaningful information
Mirrors how Jesus often taught (story → problem → truth → invitation)
Engages both heart and mind, emotions and intellect
Creates a complete journey from recognition to resolution
Again, it's not a formula for manipulation but a framework for effective communication of truth that creates space for God's work.
How This Framework Works for All Types of Content
You might be wondering if this approach only works for certain types of writing, like fiction.
But the beauty of this framework is its flexibility across virtually all content formats:
Blog Posts and Articles: The four elements create a natural flow that keeps readers engaged from introduction to conclusion.
Email Newsletters: Take your newsletters from information dumps to meaningful journeys that subscribers actually look forward to opening.
Social Media: Even in short-form content, you can incorporate micro-versions of these elements—a relatable opening line (Door), naming a struggle (Tension), offering perspective (Truth), and suggesting one simple action (Transformation).
Devotionals: Create devotionals that don't just explain scripture but invite readers into a transformative encounter with God's Word.
Sermons and Talks: Whether speaking or writing, these principles help you guide your audience through a meaningful experience rather than just delivering information.
The elements remain the same, but their expression scales with your content. A social media post might use just one sentence for each element, while a book chapter might develop each element over multiple pages.
The proportions can shift based on your purpose, but the journey remains the same.
A Simple Example
Let me show you how this framework might look in an outline for a short post:
The Door: "I stared at my phone, refreshing the screen repeatedly to see if my post was getting engagement. My mood rose and fell with each notification."
The Tension: "As Christian writers, we often find ourselves caught between our calling to share truth and the metrics-driven nature of digital platforms. This tension can slowly transform ministry into performance."
The Truth: "But Jesus offers a different measure of success: 'Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me' (John 15:4). Our calling is to abide, not to accumulate."
The Transformation: "What might change if you measured your writing by faithfulness rather than followers? Try this: before your next writing session, spend five minutes in prayer, remembering who you are in Christ. Then write from that place of security rather than striving."
For a more detailed example, feel free to read this post on my other publication, which was originally given as a sermon.
Disclaimer
I just want to reiterate here that this “framework” is not a marketing ploy or a way to paint by the numbers, so that your writing becomes generic and stilted.
Really, it’s a mental framework.
It’s a way to articulate what you, as a writer, probably understand innately.
The primary goal will never be to follow a “formula,” but simply to write what the Spirit has placed on your heart to write.
This framework works for me not because it takes the place of my instincts as a writer and listening to the Spirit, but because I’ve recognized that this is how I best receive information.
Story will always resonate with people.
Whatever path your writing takes, the most important thing is that the destination is and always will be the same.
Jesus.
An Invitation to Practice
So the next time you sit down to write, try mapping out these four elements before diving into your draft:
What Door will invite readers in?
What Tension will create investment?
What Truth will provide the key insight?
What Transformation will help them apply it?
You may be surprised how this simple structure creates greater freedom in your writing—and greater impact for your readers.
Thank you for sharing this framework with us. This is a great mental map and I am excited to get writing with this.
Thank you Grant. I love your writing and this this framework… and will now have to examine my latest writing to see how it lines up with these four pillars of good story. Again… thank you.