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The
Need for Internet Evangelism
The Great Commission of Matthew 28: 19-20 instructs believers to
"Go make disciples of all nations." Technological
advancement should always be used to fulfill that commission and
spread the gospel.
Once every few hundred years the Lord gives His followers a unique
opportunity to excel as fishers of men. The succession that began
with Roman roads includes the printing press, the telegraph,
airplanes, telephones, television, videotapes, CDs, DVDs and now the
Internet. Each of these tools has proven to be helpful for
intentional evangelism. God has allowed the development of these
marvelous technologies to assist believers with sharing the gospel
of Jesus Christ. It is time for believers to take greater advantage
of the potential of the Internet for global evangelization.
The Acts 1:8
commission includes instructions to go to "the ends of the
earth." Jesus went wherever there were people that would listen
to the gospel. There are a lot of people online, many of whom are
seeking a relationship with the Creator God. The Internet allows us
to fulfill the Great Commission in areas not otherwise accessible:
gated communities, exclusive condominiums, public libraries and in
almost every country on earth. Read
on...
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BUILDING COMMUNITY
INTO EVANGELISTIC SITES
Writer and commentator Justin Long discusses community in his
latest issue of Monday Morning Reality Check:
Read
more... Click Here
For more on this issue of helping people feel they 'belong' to an
online community:
Read
more... Click Here
Rather than being a later add-on, this sort of functionality can
ideally be built into a site right from the design stage.
From: WEB
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CHURCH
SITES ESSENTIAL, SAYS SECULAR NEWSPAPER
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A
feature article in the Houston Chronicle is a good overview on
the importance of church websites and the strategies they use.
They highly recommend the use of a 'virtual tour' so that
people can get an advance sense of what they will find if they
choose to come to the fellowship. It also cites a church who
put up a single billboard on a main highway with a provocative
and challenging URL - and got 400,000 hits in less than a
month.
Read
more... Click here
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Americans Embrace
Technologies that Bring Control to their Lives
The 1990s saw Americans widely adopt
the personal computer. During the second half of the decade, the
Internet and cell phones became mainstream. What technologies have
ridden the wave of expansion in America since 2000? In the current
study we explore Americans and technology, including:
- The massive rise in personal
home entertainment technology - such as DVD players and home
theater systems.
The growing use of technologies
that enable Americans to live increasingly mobile lives.
How the use of desktop
computers has slowed down, but use of the Internet - and
penetration of high-speed Internet connections - has continued to
make headway among consumers.
The profile of the most (and
least) technologically enabled groups - including the technology
use of born again Christians.
Read on...
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Church seekers knocking at digital front
door |
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Mary
just moved into town and is seeking a new
church home. Instead of driving around, she
logs on.
Tocarra needs to know when her church youth
group is leaving for its mission trip to
Mexico. She clicks on her church’s Web site
instead of picking up a phone.
Joel is on a business trip to Korea, but he
doesn’t want to miss the Sunday morning
service at his home church in Montgomery, Ala.
He goes online and participates in worship
...
Read on... |
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The Internet Moment In Human History
It appears that the ability to live in the future is a gift of God,
not given to everyone. It has nothing to do with intelligence,
education or experience, although they help contribute to being able
to understand trends and directions. It might be described as a
sense for the future, and, like any other sense, you have it or you
don’t. A friend of mine, who is an official with the San Jose Police
Department, says they will not hire an officer who does not have a
God-given sense of direction. They have learned the hard way that
people do not learn direction, they sense it. Without that sensing
ability officers can not instinctively head in the direction they
need to be going in when on an emergency call. The military has
learned the same thing.
Consider the following
statements from those of great intelligence, wisdom and experience,
but who lacked a sense of future direction:
Marshall Ferdinand Foch, a French military strategist and WWI
commander: “Airplanes are toys and will be of no military value.”
Read on...
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"Reaching
Lost Churchgoers and Notional Christians Through
Intra-Evangelism"
One of the most important
articles you'll ever read! |
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Those online
puzzles for churches The Church -- going, going, gone?
Creekside Church visitor cards contain all the data slots and
questions one would expect at a seeker-friendly establishment in a
wired Colorado suburb.
Newcomers can inquire about salvation, baptism, the Bible, youth
activities or private concerns. A visitor may share his or her age,
marital status and kid statistics. The candid can review the quality
of the service. Next to a telephone number, a visitor can provide a
home email address, a work email address and then another email
address at work.
Full
Story... |
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HUNGARY'S CYBER CHURCH CELEBRATES CHRISTMAS
Internet 'congregation' opens for prayers -
Hungary's Internet Church hopes to celebrate
Christmas with especially those who are planning
to commit suicide. "It is our understanding that
around this time many people feel lonely and want
to kill themselves," said 41-year old Laszlo Banfi
the founder of the Hungary based operation ...
Full Story...
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Internet users get religion - 1 in 4 U.S. users
seek spiritual information online
God trumps money online, a study released Sunday
found, as more adult Americans use the Internet
for religious purposes than for gambling, banking
or trading stocks ...
Full Story...
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Bringing cyberspace into church
Not
content with setting up a website for his church,
Rev Scott Burton made it the basis for a series of
services. He says: "Kelty Church is already
attracting to its fellowship new people who have
had the chance to look at who we are and what we
do from a distance, and then get involved with
what is going on." ...
Full Story ... |
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Surfing for God in Cyberspace
It took radio 38 years to reach 50 million users.
TV hit the mark in 13 years, though personal
computers reached that many users in just 16
years. But the Internet left them all in the dust.
It nailed the 50-million-users mark in only four
years ...
Full Story... |