CreativeChristian
A man's pride tells him to journey alone.

My Testimony


Church websites that reach non-Christians

Help for church webmasters

Church websites are an essential part of local churches’ public profiles to their communities. Indeed, in some parts of the world, church websites draw more people into face-to-face church activities than any other method. Church sites outnumber all other types of Christian sites by a ratio of 5 to 1. Church sites could therefore be powerful outreach tools. However, research reveals a discouraging picture:

  • most church sites are written purely for their members, using ‘religious insider’ content style and religious language.
  • many do not create a sense of welcome to outsiders or include any material that they would perceive as relevant to them.
  • either they do not provide any hint about the life-changing Gospel; or else they present it in heavy-handed terms which may be ‘too much, too soon’, a counter-productive ‘Bible-bashing’.
Yet there are many ways you can create or redesign and upgrade your church site to be truly welcoming to non-Christians. Ideally you would want to include these strategies when you plan your site. But you can also apply them to an existing church site and transform it into one that reaches out into the community.

Strategies for effective church sites include:

  • a natural informal sense of welcome, even humor, throughout the site.
  • lack of insider ‘churchy’ language and jargon.
  • photos showing not only the church building exterior, but also interior shots including people; these will help prospective visitors feel the church is familiar even before they first visit the physical building.
  • church members photos and profiles, some prominently displayed on the home-page. These may not be full testimonies in the normal sense. Instead, they may be introductions to some real church members with background to their lives: hobbies, jobs, pets and other personal details.
  • Bible explanations for pre-Christians.
  • Online leading to face-to-face support for recovery from life problems (divorce, alcohol/substance abuse, bereavement etc.)
  • Age-specific content (children, teens, seniors)
  • clear directions with online map to find the church, where to park, public transportation links.
  • a sense of identification with the local community, in terms of secular news, photos, links; this can also draw in website visitors.

Christian blog evangelism

Strategy for outreach to the blogging world

Blog’ is short for ‘weblog’. A blog is a type of website, but differ from the usual site style, by having these characteristics:

  • An informal, personal, ongoing diary-type commentary by an individual: either about his/her life, or opinion/news about a specific topic.
  • Most blog entries are plain-text mini-articles, though pictures, audio, and even video clips can be incorporated too.
  • Latest blog entry appears near the top of the front page, with previous entries below it in date order.
  • Blog entries are usually short; longer posts are sometimes split so the balance of the item is on a new page.
  • Readers often have the opportunity to add their own comments about a blog entry, or even respond to other people’s feedback.
  • Readers can opt to receive an alert by RSS every time a new entry is posted on the blog.
  • Most blogs are created and updated through a web-based interface system such as Blogger. No technical knowledge is needed to start a blog, though technically-minded people can install software on their servers to create more sophisticated and customizable blogs.
So-called ‘blogging’ has vastly grown in popularity over the last few years – the whole world of blogging is sometimes called the ‘blogosphere’. It matches (and shapes) the modern desire to receive (and be able to comment on) information in short personalized conversational blocks. Many people, even in the Western world, are in fact some distance along the oral communication spectrum.

For some of the very best blogs for Christians, about evangelism and strategy, go here.




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