Article

Ideas for Internuts

How we use the Web for better ministry.

The Sermonator

On our church’s Website, we have a password-protected page called “The Sermonator.” It allows our teams to build our worship services online, many Sundays in advance.

As pastor, I begin with a theme, key Bible verse, and direction.

Later the teams—worship, production, greeting, drama, and anyone else involved in the service—can visit the page, click on a date, and update and interact with that Sunday’s planned material. They add thematic elements such as drama, movie clips, participatory experiences, background music, lighting levels, songs, special music, and more.

This gets everyone on the same page without lots of extra meetings.

Scott Jones, Dryden, Ontario

A Pastoral Nudge

I’m using the Internet to send out a teaser about the coming Sunday’s sermon. It’s difficult to make frequent personal contact with everyone in the church, but now they get a weekly note from me. I get them thinking about the text I’ll be preaching on, and I ask a few questions in hopes they’ll read their Bibles more.

Paul Turek, Sidney, Montana

Men’s E-accountability

The men at our church found it a challenge to cultivate close, meaningful relationships with one another. So they drafted a covenant of accountability, and they use e-mail to support it.

Each week a member of the men’s group sends short, uplifting messages to the other members of the class—Bible verses, quotes, and prayer requests. Other members are encouraged to reply and frequently do. It has met a real need.

James Sizemore, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Church Phones Go Unanswered

Nobody’s manning the phone in more than one-third of Protestant churches in the United States. Calls to 20 percent of churches went unanswered by humans or machines in five attempts during business hours. And 16 percent have answered only by machines in five attempts.

More than half answered: Mainline churches, National Baptist, Southern Baptist.

Fewer than half answered: Other Baptists, Holiness, Wesleyan, Nazarene, CMA, Christian/COC, COG-Anderson, COGIC.

If you want to talk to a real person: Call churches in Western and Mountain states (65% live answers in five attempts), but skip the South (only 36%).

Conclusion: You may be missing ministry opportunities (or a lot of pesky survey calls).

—from Barna survey of 3,400 churches.

Copyright © 2004 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information onLeadership Journal.

Posted April 1, 2004

Also in this issue

Can you get through with the message?

The Geek Lexicon

You don’t have to be a computer expert to have success with multimedia in your services.

Spying New Leaders

They may not step forward. Here’s how to find the leaders you need.

Swimming with the Sharps

Two professionals on mastering the preaching relay.

Till Ministry Us Do Part?

The breaking and healing of a pastor’s marriage.

Tattered, Bruised-and Used

God is not easy on the people who get used in the gospel drama.

What Gives Preaching Its Power?

Amid so many forms of communication—multimedia, music, and more—what is it about preaching, even today, that carries life-changing power?

What's in the Brown Paper Sack?

Props make sermons stick.

Preaching by Street Light

You Need a Sabbatical—Free

Lilly Endowment offers up to $45,000 for renewal leave.

Bock's De-Coder Ring

Soul Deep

Why do we skip across the surface when we really want to go …

Nearer, My God, to Three

This pastor’s ambitious goal—three hours in prayer daily—is inspiring and a little irritating.

The Accompanying Presence

His voice is still small, but you’ll preach better if you hear first from the Holy Spirit.

The Subversive Art

Drawing from the prophets, the rabbis, and Jesus to confront the culture.

Killer Applications

How to make sure your listeners can apply what you’ve preached.

Setting the House Afire

Church on video brings worship services to Little Rock firefighters.

Book Reviews

Opening Closed Minds

When you address controversial issues today, you can irritate or influence, but not both.

Reach Deeper than Felt Needs

The Language of Planet Zion

Why people today wonder what on earth we’re talking about.

Gen-X Senior Pastors Double

And they’re doing ministry differently than Boomer predecessors.

A Prayer System that Works

A New Road to Biblical Literacy

Following this path, I preached through the entire Bible in one year.

View issue


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