Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Podcasting your sermons
It seems like a neat idea to be able to publish your services in mp3 audio or even in video. Newcomers can get a feel for what being in church might be like, while those unable to attend on Sundays can catch up with what’s happening too. So I thought I’d add another post to this series suggesting how you might do it with WordPress.
Audio
You first need to record your services/sermons in MP3 format. It is usually best taking your source from the church’s sound system. There are many ways to do this but the cheapest by far is to buy an MP3 player that has a “line in” recording feature like the Creative MuVo N200 or Creative Zen Nano Plus
. This will record any line signal and encode to MP3. You can then upload the recording to your pc at home, ready to post to your web site. Alternatively you can also record direct to a PC.
You can use the Upload section in the WP dashboard to upload the file to your blog (the same way you would upload an imag) and provide a download link in a post to the mp3 file. Or, better still download the PodPress plugin for WordPress.
Video
You can also use PodPress to publish videos of your services. Though perhaps an easier way would be to publish via YouTube or similar.
But there is nothing worse than listening or watching yourself online…
More posts in this series:
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Getting Started
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Posts and Pages
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Tweaking a theme
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Managing images and photos
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Choosing a Theme
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Calendars & Events
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Podcasting your sermons
- Blogging Your Church with WordPress:– Adding a map














At our church we tried using a Creative MuVo to record our services but the sound quality was just too poor. I convinced the church to purchase a laptop for recording. We use Audacity to record and get much better results.
We use Podserve (http://podserve.biggu.com) to store our mp3s and handle the rss feeds. It’s free and has proven reliable thus far.
We’re going a step beyond podcasting the sermon. We’re experimenting with an Open Source Sermon, built from the ground up by a pool of contributors. If it works, I’ll preach it from the pulpit and release it on a Creative Commons license. Come check it out!