From the monthly archives:

May 2007

The Hidden Power of Electronic Culture

by Cynthia on May 31, 2007

I've wanted to feature an interview with techno-author / lead pastor Shane Hipps for quite some time.  And no, it's not just because I like his website. 

I discovered his book, The Hidden Power of Electronic Culture, after reading what Quentin J. Schultze said about it:

"This readable book challenges the Church to think wisely and courageously about how it communicates in and beyond worship.  Shane Hipps is proof that ancient wisdom is immediately practical, that prophetic voices are still alive and well, and that great ideas are the basis for servant actions."  

Dr. Schultze is professor of Communication at Calvin College and author of several great books including these two well-known publications: High-Tech Worship? Using Presentational Technologies Wisely, and Habits of the High-Tech HeartI'm so fond of his work that I'd read just about anything he recommends.

Shane answered a few questions for me and yes, it does make me miss McLuhan and I might spend my summer reading Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man again.

Shane, can you briefly define your views about how electronic culture shapes our faith and the modern-day operation of the Church.

Electronic culture presents us with a hall of mirrors, it creates a condition of brain-bending disorientation in which the mind can scarcely discern realty from a reflection of reality, or a reflection of a reflection.  This new environment erodes and reconstitutes our understanding of everything.  The way we conceive of the gospel, community, leadership, and discipleship have all undergone a complete renovation during the electronic age.  These changes are a direct result of the media we use to communicate. 

The strangest part of all?  This juggernaut force resides in our peripheral vision.  As a result, it has been completely misunderstood, or ignored.  Nearly everyone can see what is happening in church and culture, but few have understood why it’s happening.   The answer can be found when we train our eyes to perceive the subtle yet overwhelming force of our media, regardless of their content. 

Forget about what a blog says, do we have any idea how the form of a blog shapes us?  As we read, debate, and respond in the blogosphere, the very medium of a blog atrophies certain capacities (i.e. sustained linear concentration, careful language patterns, and polite discourse).  At the same time, it generates new capacities.  It creates the mental equivalent of Pandora’s Box born of infinite hyperlinks, tickling the intellect ensuring it never stays in one place too long.  It also creates in us a preference for holistic thinking, as well as imprecise language patterns to name a few.

As our intellectual capacities and preferences are unknowingly altered, it transforms our approach to the gospel and the church.  For evidence, see the emerging church movement.  It reflects perfectly the biases of electronic culture.  This is largely what part one of my book unpacks.

Will the Church be able to operate without using / embracing / redeeming communication technologies?   Should it? 

I am no Luddite.  Such a stance is an impossibility.  The reason is, nearly everything is a kind of communication technology.  Even low-tech things like the clothes I wear, the sermons I preach, and the letters I write, these are all communication technology.  My interest is first to understand the way our media shape us before we critique, adopt, or avoid.  In fairness, I do make recommendations in my book, but I’m careful not to give them prematurely.  Too many of us are looking for quick answers, when what we most need is to be asking good questions.

What features of new media technologies stand out to you as those Christian leaders should really be embracing / pursuing at this point.

I get this question a lot.  But here again, there is no universally good or bad media that we should or shouldn’t use.  Every medium will present us with significant gains and very real losses.  The question is, do we know what we’re gaining and what we’re losing in our specific context with the specific media we’re employing?  If we don’t we’ll create unintended consequences.  If we do understand the bargain we’re making, then we have the chance to use our media rather than be used by them.
 
Shane Hipps bio can be found here.  Additionally, through the website you can read a sample chapter (the introduction) from the book and get a great feel for it's premise.
 
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Ten Challenges facing the Church in Cyberspace

by Cynthia on May 28, 2007

igeneration

    1.  Accept the Virtual World's significance (MySpace is the most visited site on the Internet)
    2.  View online expressions of Christianity as valuable extensions of real world faith
    3.  Embrace the opportunity for Church without borders (time, geography, etc.)
    4.  Welcome the presentation of God's Word in the vernacular of current culture
    5.  Respond to the globalization of the planet with hope not cynicism
    6.  Develop and maintain an online presence purposefully populating cyberspace
    7.  Establish virtual outposts for evangelizing, preaching, equipping & training
    8.  Create interactive portals for experiencing Church (streaming media)
    9.  Practice spiritual disciplines in the global online conversation
   10. Encourage strategic investment in the iGeneration

 Why?    Because there are "multitudes in the valley of decision" online.

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The Work of The People

by Cynthia on May 25, 2007

The next generation, the Internet Generation, will not be able to imagine a world without social media.  From MySpace to Bebo, from YouTube to Wikipedia, new media technologies create dynamic opportunities for people to interact and share their faith.  As God's people, we are to proclaim His mighty acts from one generation to the next (Psalm 145:4).  It only makes sense to do it in a language they understand.

Traditional forms of media (like video) get madeover in the hands of the iGenerationStreaming video, for example, creates an extremely powerful gospel presentation.  Such streamed clips, filmed with state-of-the-art technology featuring Scripture-based messages and accompanied by musical tracks can have a profound effect on the human heart.  These are not attempts to glitz up the message.  They simply declare the works of God to the next generation in the vernacular of their day: interactive (vote, rate, comment) technologically-mediated communication.  Consider it visual liturgy.

One of the best clips I've seen lately was emailed to me by The Work of The People.  Under two minutes.

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Search Term Awards - What’s Your Traffic Like?

by Cynthia on May 23, 2007

TypewordsNotice, unlike other bloggers, I have no humor category. Why should I?  My daily laughs come from simply reviewing the search terms used to arrive at this site.

Here are a few of the best ones recorded this month:

(No, I am not making these up….)

  • learn the bible in 24 hours on mp3
  • demolishing church sanctuarys (spelled this way)
  • Apple + Satan
  • keep the internet out of my church
  • long tail catholic
  • start your own instant bible institute (yes, the words appeared in this order)

I'm just saying these are my readers, my people.

Besides the US Military, including both the navy and the army, I've been visited by NASA, A. C. Nielson (Nielson was my dream career in college), MIT, Cornell & Harvard Universities.  From the Screen Actors Guild, Intel and Google to The Christian Broadcasting Network, from Nord-Pas-de-Calais Strazeele, France to The United Republic of Tanzania, they've all stopped by. 

I guess just about everyone is interested in the Church and technology.

I won't tell you whose search terms are whose.  What's your traffic like?

 

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New Barna Research - Biblical Views Wane

by Cynthia on May 22, 2007

The new Barna Update states:

"It is hard to miss Americans' comfort with and interest in spirituality. Most adults say that their religious faith is very important in their life. Two-thirds of the nation’s adult population firmly embraces the idea that their most important purpose is to love God with all their heart, mind, soul and strength. However, a deeper look at people’s full array of spiritual beliefs and behavior calls into question the sincerity of their commitment."

For example:

  • The study shows that of ten activities studied, Americans are most likely to pray.  More than four out of every five Americans (83%) said they had prayed in the last week.

But:  

  • Few adults possess orthodox views about Jesus.  For example, just one-third of Americans strongly disagree that Jesus sinned (37%).

Barna has tracked the nation’s religious behavior and beliefs since 1984. 

View all Barna Updates here.

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Web 2.0 Used for Requesting Prayer

by Cynthia on May 21, 2007

prayer

A nice guy in Oklahoma named Ben put up Church Ministries Online, a website that uses Joomla! for social interaction. 

When I clicked over to his discussion forum, I realized I had kinda anticipated some standard probability distributions in terms of subjects, posts, most active threads, etc.  Guess what I found? 

  • General Discussion      8
  • Prayer Requests        792
  • Encouragement            1

 Not what I expected.

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Global Missions Resources Online

by Cynthia on May 18, 2007

missionequip         

       Mission: Equip  

            An Online Missions Toolkit

 
Frank Johnson is very knowledgeable, innovative and well-respected.  I thought we met online until he reminded me that we've known each other for many years.  Among other things, Frank is the author of Strategic Digital Outreach and co-proprietor of Christian Cruz, an online portal for believers living in the Santa Cruz, California area.  I appreciate Frank's enthusiasm for using online technology to extend our opportunities for ministry, while at the same time balancing it with a faithful commitment to the local church. 

Recently, Frank let me know that he's involved in a team that has put together a new online resource for those who are interested in missions.  It's called Mission:Equip.

The purpose of the website is to provide valuable resources to short-term mission team members, long-term missionaries, missions pastors, missions agencies, and denominational mission boards.

Here’s some detailed information Frank provided me about the new site:

  • Prepare

This section of the site includes links to various resources which we feel will be helpful to long-term missionaries and short-term mission team members as they prepare to travel overseas. From travel documents to overseas medical insurance to information on vaccines, we’re compiling a growing list of valuable tools to help overseas workers plan ahead for their travel needs. 

  • Go

Through links to a trip planning module, a helpful travel checklist, a printable emergency contact card and more, we are striving to equip the worldwide missions community with the tools they need to travel safely and effectively.

  • Connect

Once long-term missionaries and short-term mission team members have reached their field of service, how can they keep in touch with their family, friends, church, and supporters? This section of our site aims to provide links to several communications resources which will serve to improve contacts between overseas workers and their support structure back home.

  • Share

This area of the site consists of 228 country-specific blogs and 228 country-specific wikis. The idea is that long-term missionaries, short-term mission team members, missions pastors, missions agencies, and those with a heart for missions can all gather in a common place to tell and hear the stories of God’s work among the nations. Our hope is that as missionaries and short-term team members tell their stories and those with a heart for missions hear those stories, an excitement for God’s work will build in all our hearts.

Also, through telling their stories in our Share section, missionaries can broaden their exposure and: a) widen the extent of their personal contacts; b) solicit prayer support; and, c) raise funds (through the automatic inclusion of their online donation link in the footer of all articles they submit).

We also have the ability to aggregate stories from existing missionary blogs (with permission of course!) to broaden an individual missionary’s exposure within the worldwide missions community.

All I can say is, I've been hoping someone would put up a site like this - 228 country-specific blogs and wikis.  What a resource.

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Church on the Net

by Cynthia on May 16, 2007

churchonthenet

I get emails regularly about online church campuses.  I've been holding on to quite a few links but wanted to post on this one before it launches rather than after. (See Holy Trinity Ripon.)

It's been a couple of weeks since I was first contacted by Nicola David; she's the project leader for the new site with a projected launch date of early June.  Nicola wanted to draw my attention to this specific ministry because it's a collaboration between The Church of England and The Methodist Church.   Appropriately called Church on the Net, it's an evangelistic project designed to help bring the concepts of God and church into the comfort zones of people who are in no way currently engaged with either.

I love this idea because it seems that when Jesus went to select his disciples, he didn't pick any of the already religious folks of His day.

The opening address will be presented by the Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu - second in seniority in the Anglican Communion after Rowan Williams (Canterbury).

The Revd. Dr. Steven Croft, said "Church on the Net is one of a range of ways Christians are extending a new invitation to community, to exploration and to faith through fresh expressions of church. I warmly commend it."  It's officially registered as a 'fresh expression' of church in the UK (www.freshexpressions.org.uk).

Nicola asks me, "Is it church or is that a debate?"   Good question.  A place designed specifically for outreach is more like what we in the US would think of as a Christian coffee shop or bookstore.  But that's changing.

Additional posting here and some other links on innovative cyberchurches along the same lines from Dr. Heidi Campbell who is one of a handful of researchers studying such phenomena.

 

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Pew Report - Typology of Tech Users

by Cynthia on May 14, 2007

Five days ago I got an email from Cornelia Carter-Sykes at the Pew Internet and American Life Project notifying me of their most recent report.  I hadn't posted because I wanted to study the findings which summarize the newest data on technology adoption.  This particular set of data is presented by Pew staffer John Horrigan who acts as an Associate Director in Pew Research. 

The report (download the Pdf here) outlines Pew's categories of Information and Communication Technology Users.  The findings show that a full 31% of the American population fit in the most elite categories of technology usage.  

Here are the ten categories they've identified:

  • Omnivores
  • Connectors
  • Lackluster veterans
  • Productivity enhancers
  • Mobile centrics
  • Connected but hassled
  • Inexperienced experimenters
  • Light but satisfied
  • Indifferent
  • Off the Network 

By taking this quiz you can determine where you fit in the spectrum of users.  To identify the group you belong to, take the quiz and calculate the results from your own media usage. After you answer the quiz questions, press the 'Calculate My Results' button.  A new page will tell you which group you fit into, along with a description of the general characteristics of that group. 

If you're reading this blog, chances are you are an omnivore or a connector

The Pew Internet Project is a non-profit, non-partisan initiative of the Pew Research Center that produces reports exploring the impact of the Internet. 

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Creative Synergy Podcast 5 - Copyright & Church

by Cynthia on May 10, 2007


Creative Synergy podcast logo

Just received an email from Greg Atkinson and the new podcast from Creative Synergy is up covering “Copyright and the Church”.  Anthony Coppedge and Greg interviewed 3 copyright professionals (including two lawyers) and had a great discussion. This is their 5th podcast and is designed for for any church leader / staffer who has questions about copyright law.

Also included is a better understanding of the Church Copyright Administration. 

Additionally, one of Greg's other sites, Church Video Ideas just provided this exhaustive list of media resources so you never have to go searching again:

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