EMQ and IJFM also cover these issues.
We believe that the Web and digital media are God-given tools that are especially significant for relatively unreached countries and people groups for these reasons:
- Builds relationships: Missions rightly stress the need to plant churches within easy geographical reach of target people groups, because we know that it is only through real relationships, with people they can comfortably relate to, that unreached peoples will see biblical Christianity modeled. But in a community, city or country where believers are perhaps 1% or less of population, most people may never knowingly meet a Christian, let alone build redemptive relationships with those in a Christian community. The Web can enable an initial contact.
- Seeking non-seekers: The Web is unique as a ‘pull medium’ that can target people based on their language, ethnicity, felt needs, life problems, or general interests. It is not limited to locating and connecting with people who are already seekers or vaguely inquisitive. It can also engage with people ‘much further back’.
- Anonymous intimacy: There is a remarkable online phenomenon called ‘anonymous intimacy’: people are often far more willing to share their questions, needs or problems online, than they would with even a close friend. Although it may express itself differently in various cultures, this online behavior seems universal. And in countries and religious systems where there is, at minimum, considerable social disapproval towards someone seen to be asking even cursory questions about Christianity or reading Christian literature, the Web is a safe and private channel of inquiry. For example, there are many thousands of monthly downloads of the Bible within the Middle East. Mentoring relationships can be established online that would be difficult to initiate or maintain, face-to-face.
- Mobile phones: The dramatic growth of mobile phone use is a major opportunity. In poorer countries, a phone may be the only digital device people will own, and they can increasingly use it to access the Web rather than visit an Internet Cafe. Mobiles are transforming trade, development, healthcare and communication throughout the Majority World.
Facebook has made it easy for mobile users to read and update their Facebook pages without incurring online access charges. Mobiles also offer a unique 24/7 channel to share the good news: downloaded video clips or longer movies, as well as books and Bibles. Any Christian with a mid/high-range phone can load a portfolio of appropriate video clips in various languages, and share them face-to-face with others as part of a conversation, indeed as a discussion starter. If the contact has a Bluetooth-equipped phone, video clips or books can also be quickly passed across to that phone too. Cheap portable DVD/MP3 players can also be used to share videos on a personal basis with two or three people. Portable tablet devices and book-readers (eg. Kindle) may increasingly have a similar role.
IEDay.net/mobile -
Video shorts: Video clip production is now also within the scope of the amateur. A good webcam, high-end phone, digital camera or camcorder can produce video of sufficient quality to post online or install on a mobile phone. Free or cheap editing software, allied to an understanding of the medium and creative thinking, can produce strategic video shorts.
- Social networking: Facebook and other regional social networking sites are proving hugely popular in Africa, Asia and S America. For many people, these sites are their main portal for messaging and relationships, obviating the need to use the wider Internet so much. Relational Facebook evangelism and sensitive outsider-friendly Facebook fan pages have huge potential for building dialogue and sharing faith.
IEDay/facebook - Discipleship and teaching: There are also huge opportunities for digital discipleship and teaching, using the Web, digital books, audio/video and mobile phones.
- Back home too: The Web can also enable any returned or retired missionary to continue ministry to their area of service. Many opportunities need no technical knowledge at all!
How Can We Help?
We know that digital media are already playing a huge role in fulfilling the Great Commission and concur with George Verwer’s statement:
“The Internet is one of the most key tools that God has given us in the church today. Internet Evangelism is a dynamic, effective, cutting-edge ministry that more people should get involved in!” – George Verwer, founder Operation MobilizationThe Guide Network is an informal grouping of ministries (including Lausanne) to equip and enhance digital ministry online and by mobile phone, especially in the non-western world. Within the network are a number of informal smaller networks for digital evangelism in specific countries and regions. Their strategic significance is to draw together digital outreach teams, radio and BCC ministries, mission staff on the ground, and local church groupings, leading to vital synergy and the ability to link online inquirers with real believers at local level. Digital media are often at their most effective when integrated in this way:
IEDay.net/guide
We also work closely with Visual Story Network, who focus on using visual digital media for evangelism:
VisualStoryNetwork.org
Distance-learning modules are being planned by Biola University, to equip mission staff for digital ministry, and there are other online training resources:
IEDay.net/training
We can provide speakers for mission staff conferences, team discussions or colleges, and are freely available for consultation in these areas:
IEDay.net/speaker
We would be honored to assist your vital ministry in any way we can. (or use our contact form) to discuss any aspect of digital evangelism. Please tell us also of any digital initiatives you plan or are involved in.
Yours in His Service,
Tony Whittaker | Coordinator, Internet Evangelism Day
Editor's Note: This article is a re-post from the Internet Evangelism Day website.
