Transcript

The Church Website

Who is / should be the target?

What are the most important features?

What would you want to see in the 1st 5 seconds?

How would you describe GPC in a word? In a

sentence? With a picture?

That is thinking social media-ly

Blogs (and Podcasts)

What do you want to read? Local? Global?

Theological? Faith & Culture?

What can blogs do for the church?

What would you want to write?

Interviews? Who?

Topics? Curation? Lists? How To‟s?

facebook

Spontaneous and planned prayer times

Spontaneous polls that make a difference

Mission blogs

Video communication

Brand marketing / Post publicity

twitter

# hashtag – a way to catalogue tweets

#conferences

#encouragement

#live sermon tweets

#church/class publicity

YouTube (don‟t forget vimeo.com)

1 Minute Bible Lesson // Faith Lesson

Weekly update for church, committees, other

New brand of outreach, invitation, publicity

Share interesting theological, inspirational vids

Keep a video journal of spiritual journey, missions, life, etc…

Google+

Stay connected facebook style

Have live discussion via „Hangouts‟

Yelp!

Increase popularity of church, class or service

by leaving a review and asking others to do the

same.

foursquare

Check in when at church or bible study or youth

group…publicize to facebook and twitter

automatically

instagram

Share your faith life through pictures

Create a themed photo journal that invites

people to return for updates

Take 101 pictures of the church that look like art

Take pictures around the church that create an

alphabet in photos

Pinterest

Create themed boards and host shares

Check out what matters to others and leave a

comment or re-pin

Online Integrity In A Tweet

The Digital Sabbath

John O‟Keefe - ignatianlife.org

“Before I left, I turned off all my email and vowed not to check it for 7 days, even though my retreat was only 3 days. The retreat place had almost no cell service, so I was unplugged there is well. It actually felt fantastic to disconnect. I am one of those people who is perpetually plugged in, almost obsessive about checking my email when I see the little numbers ticking up on the inbox icon on my iPhone. Not this week. I walked into the retreat center and started a technology fast along with this long-delayed encounter with silence”

The Digital Sabbath

John O‟Keefe - ignatianlife.org

“I have to say, it was fantastic for me. I pray

regularly, so I do make space for silence in my

daily life, but there is no substitute for serious

silence and for time dedicated to prayer. A retreat

is time for focused discernment and for clearing a

space for the spirit of God to work it‟s way to the

forefront of our attention. For this we need time,

we need rest, and we need silence....”

The Digital Sabbath

John O‟Keefe - ignatianlife.org

“I never did turn back on the automatic fetch

feature on my iPhone. One of the fruits of silence

was the clear message that I don‟t need to be

controlled by the tyrannical upticks of email counts

on my mobile devices. God is good.”

Via www.contemplativecomputing.org

sabbathmanifesto.org

Avoid technology

Connect With Loved Ones

Nurture Your Health

Get Outside

Avoid Commerce

sabbathmanifesto.org

Light Candles

Drink Wine

Eat Bread

Find Silence

Give Back

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