Blog Post
An 800–1,200 word article based on your sermon, formatted and ready to publish on your church website.
The Blog Post turns your sermon into a polished written article your congregation can read, share, and search for online. It follows the natural structure of what you preached — introduction, main sections, scripture quotations, and a closing challenge — without you having to write a single word.
What You'll Get
An 800–1,200 word article in Markdown format, structured as:
- An engaging title drawn from the sermon's main idea
- An introductory paragraph that sets up the message
- Three to five subheadings that mirror the sermon's main points
- Scripture quotations formatted in italics with an em-dash and reference
- A concluding paragraph with a call to action
If you entered a speaker name in your church profile, the article is attributed to that person. If you added your website URL, the closing call to action links there.
Editing and Customizing
Open the output
From your sermon's page, click the Blog Post tile. The full article opens in the output viewer.

Click the tile to open the article Edit inline
Click anywhere in the article text to start editing. The viewer behaves like a basic text editor — you can reword sentences, adjust headings, or add a personal anecdote the transcription may have missed.

Click to edit any part of the article Copy or download
Use the Copy button to copy the full Markdown text to your clipboard, ready to paste into WordPress, Squarespace, Webflow, or any CMS that accepts Markdown. Use Download to save a
.mdfile.
Most website builders (WordPress, Squarespace) accept Markdown. If your platform uses a visual editor instead, paste into a Markdown-to-HTML converter first, or paste the raw text and reformat the headings manually — the structure makes it straightforward.
Tips for Best Results
- Upload your sermon notes or slides along with the recording. PreachKit uses them to catch specific points, illustrations, and scripture references the transcript might not capture perfectly.
- If the article's tone feels too formal or too casual, use the Style slider on the Generate step before creating it — lower values produce a conversational, warm tone; higher values lean more theological and structured.
- The blog post works best for sermons with a clear three-point or narrative structure. Open-ended or highly interactive sermons may produce a slightly looser article.
Plan Availability
The Blog Post is available on all paid plans. Check your plan page for monthly generation limits.
Common Questions
Can I regenerate if I do not like the first version? Yes. Click the Regenerate button inside the output viewer. Each regeneration uses one generation credit from your plan's monthly allowance.
How long is a typical blog post? Between 800 and 1,200 words — roughly a five-minute read. This length performs well for church blog SEO without being overwhelming.
Will it include every scripture I mentioned? PreachKit pulls from the transcript and any scripture references you listed during upload. If a reference was garbled in the audio, adding it manually to the sermon details before generating will ensure it appears in the article.
What's Next?
Pair your blog post with a Newsletter to send the same message to your email list, or see the overview to explore all 16 content types.