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Three internet campus models

In the last few months in my conversations with various churches doing or preparring to do internet campuses, online church and/or what ever you want to call it, I have formed the hypothesis that all of them fall into one of three buckets.

Billboard or Sample Church

The internet campus primarily is a vehicle for people not attending the church to get a feel for what it’s like before they show up at a physical church.

Church Online

This is a full functioning church existing on the web. Worship, small groups, pastoral care, communion and everything that would traditionally take place at a physical church happens online. Multisite churches may view this as simply another one of their campuses.

Network Model

The internet campus is a content creator and distributor for local communities (read: house church). This is our model at Gateway Church Austin.

I see that these are targets for the voice and strategy of a church’s online ministry presence and, as with any target, there is some collateral effect. Anyone of these models will also see some of the other two happening along side.

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Incarnational Evangelism | John Burke at Verge

John spoke at Verge in 2009 and I just dug up this video. This talk is a look at the foundation of what Gateway Church is about.

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This is how you present the gospel

Stop trying to convince people to believe in God…because they already do.

I don’t know if Jeremy Rifkin intended to present the Gospel, but he did. Maybe it’s just me, because this is how my brain works. You may think you hear a pluralistic doctrine, but this talk doesn’t complete the story…it is merely a springboard to which the conversation can be completed. You can’t introduce Jesus until you can get this far in the conversation. I don’t know anything about Rifkin, I assume he is an atheist/humanist. I imagine your first reaction will be to consider what he is saying that is wrong, but look for the common ground you may have with this conversation.

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Internet Campus Answers | Part 1 – toolbox

I get tweets, emails and phone calls weekly from people asking various questions about how we rock the internet campus at Gateway Church. It’s probably a good idea for me to put those thoughts and answers in one place.

Read the rest of the series – internet campus answers

Some of these things will seem obvious to some readers…bare with the new guys for a minute.

Twitter & Tweetdeck

It’s a non-negotiable that you have twitter and use it, and I have yet to see a Twitter client that can match Tweetdeck. In Tweetdeck I am managing 5 Twitter accounts via 19+/- different columns. I can manage Twitter search feeds, lists and more.

Personally I have two Twitter accounts because I use one for missional content and one for leadership content. I was finding that the conversations I was having with church leaders around the country was so much different than the ones I was having with everyone else that I was selling someone short and hurting my message, so I launched @vincemarotte for churchie stuff. You can read my thoughts on Missional Social Media at ChurchCrunch.com.

Gmail & Google Apps

You gots to have Gmail to be a communication Ninja. For real. Stop asking why and just get an account. Calendar, docs (with sharing and collaboration), chat, video chat, RSS reader and even manage multiple email accounts, I mangage 7.

TokBox

Tokbox.com is a multi-user video chat platform and 90 percent of your needs can be accomplished with the free account. Online meetings, online small groups, interviews and more. It’s hard to believe something so rad can be free.

Android

I love android. Don’t get me wrong, the iPhone is incredible, but since I live in Google, the real time syncing and the communication features of Android are tough to beat.

Textmate

Andrew turned me on to Textmate and it quickly became my text editor of choice on Mac. Light, fast and clean; everything you could ask for.

Devonthink

With the exception of my journal, I more or less run paperless and Devonthink helps with that. In a nutshell it’s a searchable dumping ground for all my data.

What are your weapons of choice?

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Gateway church internet campus studio tour

Head over to ChurchCrunch.com and take a look at out studio. It’s not done, but the core gear is working and we’re kicking out killer content and live streams.

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Gateway Church Internet Campus Launch

The first phase in our internet campus family of sites launches this Sunday January 17th!

We will be live streaming the Sunday morning services from the Gateway Church McNeil campus starting at 9:30 AM (CST).

I can’t say enough how excited I am about it.

Here’s how you can help:

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7 reasons I feel at home in liberal towns

When I was laying the groundwork for planting a church last year, one important value I had was planting in a city where I fit in. Long story short; the profiles kept pointing to liberal towns. Which I could have told you prior to taking assessments and doing the interviews. On a side note, the church we’re planting is now going to be on the Internet…based in Austin.

In conversations with people back in California and the various other places I have people, I often mention the fact that I really dig Austin because it’s a liberal town. When I say that, I mean it in the most broad sense and I’m not even thinking about politics; let’s face it, when it comes to the issues that actually make the world go around the difference between Democrats and Republicans is nominal at best. Not to mention the fact I don’t subscribe to either paradigm; I’m a Pro-Life Libertarian for what it’s worth, which means I’m more conservative than Republicans and more liberal than Democrats…if that’s possible.

7 reasons I feel at home in liberal towns:

#1| Less Hummers
Historically I drive small cars and I can’t stand getting stuck behind monster trucks when I’m going down the freeway. Not to mention the taking up of two parking spots. I won’t say drivers are better in liberal towns…but they do less damage in their Volvos and hybrids.

#2 | Educated Population
I suck at small talk and I don’t watch much in the way of sports, college basketball being the one exception. In a highly educated liberal town I find it much easier to find people to talk with about things like the Large Hadron Collider, flaws in the federal reserve system and whatever was on NPR this morning. I’m not saying there is anything wrong with blue collar towns…it’s just not my thing.

#3 | Protestors
I’m someone that thinks the American population needs to take to the streets a little more often; it’s a great way to keep our government in check, because our power to vote doesn’t seem to be working. I can’t quite pinpoint the exact reasons why there seem to be more protesters in liberal towns, but my best guess is that most liberal towns have a generous surplus of college students and a larger single population in general. Married people with kids a far less likely to take the day off work to go protest the WTO, Monsanto, war or whatever.

#4 | Whole Foods
I love me some Whole Foods. I’m a foodie and a hack chef and I can always count on Whole Foods to have the goods. Not to mention the fact that my family eats organic, natural, grass fed…blah blah blah. It’s clear that Whole Foods targets liberal towns as their market.

#5 | Local Everything
Liberal towns are good to their local businesses. Educated liberals tend to care about stuff like that where as in conservative towns people have become dependent on Wal-Mart and Costco.

#6 | The Arts
I love music and art. Liberal towns are really the only place where music and art scenes flourish. Again, this has something to due with the population of single people, and they are willing and able to do the starving artist thing.

#7 | People Give You the Benefit of the Doubt
At the center of a conservative view of politics is the concept that mankind is inherently evil; whereas at the core of a liberal view is the opposite, that mankind is inherently good. These thoughts are quite often subconscious and not often completely understood by either side of the concepts and there are exceptions to the rule. All that to say the people in liberal towns general give everyone the benefit of the doubt and it creates good energy. I will say that a proper understanding of either view can lead you to think positive of everyone.

Maybe the sociologists out there can help me complete my thoughts?

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The Intersection goes live

intersection-logoOver the weekend theintersection.tv was pushed live with out much promo…we want to slow roll it out through the next two months. But, needless to say, it is live and rocking. It’s built on Thesis and in the future we will probably get around to really tricking it out, but for now, it’s about the content.

So head on over there and while you are at it, follow theintersection.tv on Twitter – @intersectlive

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