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Ten Reasons Your Church Should Have a Website

By Jeremy Myers
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Ten Reasons Your Church Should Have a Website

I am constantly amazed at how many churches do not have websites. I recently called about twenty churches in my area to see if they had any community outreach ministries I could serve with, such as a food pantry or a homeless shelter. I also asked if these churches had a website I could look at to find out more about their church.

Of the twenty churches I called, only two had websites. That’s only 10%. Two other churches actually told me that all the information I needed could be found in the Yellow Pages. The Yellow Pages?! I don’t even own a Yellow Pages. Do you? Who uses them anymore? If I want to find something, I jump on to Google, and within thirty secondsย have addresses, phone numbers, maps, customer reviews, and often, a website.

With GraceGround, setting up a page for your church has never been easier, and best of all, it’s free. But if you are still undecided, here are ten reasons your church should have a website. All of these, of course, are why you should start a blog on GraceGround.com.

Ten reasons your church should have a website:

1. A church website helps you think about your church.

Creating a website forces you to think through what is more important about your church, and then organize it in a logical and orderly way.

2. A church website helps members stay connected during the week.

If the site has a blog, calendar, forum, or members-only area, the regular attenders at your church can connect with one another during the week for prayer, encouragement, or updates. If the weekly bulletin is posted on the site, then members who missed a service can still get the announcements and any other church updates that the bulletin contains.

3. A church websiteย helps people find you.

How would you find your church if you didn’t know where it was? Most people in our culture turn to the internet. When a person wants to find a church, they search Google for churches in their community. If your church isn’t listed, they will never know you exist. You must make it easier for people to find you.

4. A church websiteย helps people learn more about you.

When people are considering whether to attend your church or not, they want more information than just an address and phone number. They would also like to see some pictures of the building and the people, as well as a list of programs. They might also want to see doctrinal, mission, and vision statements. Some will even want to listen to (or watch) a few sermons to see what the teaching is like. A website can provide all of this.

5. A church website helps you connect with other community organizations and events.

If there are community organizations and events that your church is involved with, you can write about them on your site, and it is quite likely that your church will get listed on other websites as a participant or sponsor. Churches are always looking for ways to connect with the community, and the internet is one of the best ways to do so.

To read reasons 6-10, or to comment on this post, head over to GraceGround.com.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Blogging, Theology of the Church

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GraceGround is Live!

By Jeremy Myers
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GraceGround is Live!

I have created another website over at GraceGround.com. It is for churches and ministries around the country (and the world) to set up free blog pages for themselves.

Think of it as Blogger.com, but with a location map and instant community built right in (of course, right now, the community is quite small).

So if you have a church ย (whether traditional, house, missional, emerging, whatever) or are simply part of a group of people who want to follow Jesus, you are invited to join us and blog in a community.

Here are a few pages to get you started:

  • Home Page
  • Core Beliefs
  • Writing Guidelines
  • Map
  • Application

I’d love to see you over there!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Blogging, Theology of the Church

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Should a church have a doctrinal statement?

By Jeremy Myers
24 Comments

Should a church have a doctrinal statement?

Here’s a quick question. Should a church have a doctrinal statement?

If not, why not?

If so, what should be on it?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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The One Thing the Church Must Be

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

The One Thing the Church Must Be

In case you didn’t read it, this was posted over TheOoze.com last week. Hardly anyone ever comments over there, so now that a 48-hour waiting period is up, I am reposting the article here.ย It is similar in content to my post from yesterday.

* * * * *

As I have read and thought, written and talked about the church over the past few years, I have come to realize that the purpose of the church includes something the world gets nowhere else. The church must be a humanizer.

If there is one thing the world, sin, and the devil does to people, it is dehumanize them. In this world, we become numbers, statistics, projects, targets, customers, consumers, and victims. We are told to sit down, shut up, and let the powers have their way. We are reminded that the majority rules and while individuals have a say, it is only money that talks.

The church has the chance to step into all of this, look a person in the eyeโ€”a person who has been beaten, battered, and trampled by the worldโ€”and say to them, โ€œYou matter. I hear you. I love you.โ€ Remember how Jesus responded to the leper in Luke 5? By most accounts, this leper was no longer part of the human race. He was less than human, treated worse than a dog. He was dead, but simply didnโ€™t know it yet. When he shouted at others, they threw rocks at him, and told him to get away. But when he shouted at Jesus, Jesus not only heard him, but walked up to him, and embraced him. In that one little touch, which was not so little, Jesus humanized the leper.

This is what the church must do. We are called to humanize. It doesnโ€™t take much. A touch here. A smile there. A word of encouragement where criticism is the norm. Treat people like the image of God that they are, even if that image is buried beneath months of unwashed grime and the smell of urine. Itโ€™s not about preaching the gospel to crowds of thousands or inviting people to church. A gentle word or a generous tip are better than any gospel tract.

Who can you humanize today?

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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The Humanizing Church

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

The Humanizing Church

I am a guest blogger today over at “The Ooze.” Do me a favor and go check it out. Use the Facebook plugin to comment.

I’ll see you there!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, Theology of the Church

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