Jump directly to the Content

Sermon Illustrations about Social Media

Home > Illustrations > Topics > S > Social Media

Find fresh sermon illustrations on Social Media to help bring your sermon to life.

On the Leash

Rabbi David Wolpe wrote for Time why he sees the constant communication of modern life as a bad thing. Wolpe says, "Constant connection, increases, ...


[Read More]
The Death of the Third Place

Deane Barker, writing for the popular BoingBoing site, laments the death of America's "third places." These are the gathering spots, neither ...


[Read More]
Facebook and the Unhappy Marriage

Usually on social media sites like Facebook, marriage is portrayed in a positive light. Most of the pictures you see are lighthearted, cheery, funny, ...


[Read More]
Our ICYMI World

ICYMI stands for "In Case You Missed It,” (in case you didn't know). It is most often used on Twitter to re-promote an interesting link, ...


[Read More]
Parents, Being ‘Cool’ … Isn't

A recent piece in The Washington Post observes the growing phenomenon of "cool" parenting—complete with selfies. There's just one ...


[Read More]
114-Year-old Woman Still Curious

Anna Stoehr is 114 years old, but for one day she got to be 99. Why? Because in order for her to create a Facebook account she couldn't be older than ...


[Read More]
Cry for Help on Twitter

David Willis, from Texas, was browsing through some books at the Waterstones bookshop in Trafalgar Square. Willis said he had been upstairs in the shop ...


[Read More]
True Love? There's Not an App for That.

There's an app for everything, it seems—including dating. For anyone in the dating world who wishes for an electronic matchmaker that eliminates ...


[Read More]
Cellphones: The Invisible Addiction

Baylor University released findings about college students' cell phone use. Their shocking finding? Using cell phones is more time consuming for modern ...


[Read More]
The Old-Fashioned Phone Call's Not Dead Yet

For many people today, the phone call is dead—replaced by text messages, email, Twitter messages, and other "asynchronus" (not at the ...


[Read More]