Archive - May, 2009

5 (useful) links #6

Five websites to inspire, inform and enthuse.

  1. The Big Word Project. Buy a word, then associate that word with your website. ‘Jesus’ has been ‘bought’ and links here.
  2. Webby Awards. Recently announced winners of the best websites for 2009 in 70 categories.
  3. Gold, Silver, Precious Stones? Andrew Katay has launched a blog on Christian leadership that has really got me thinking…
  4. Shazam. Hear a song but don’t know what it is? Shazam is a tool to identify music from the radio, tv, film, or anywhere you hear it.
  5. The Forgiveness Project. Inspiring stories of people who have forgiven others.

30 ideas for community outreach (3 of 3)

Today we reach day three of the three-part series of ideas for community outreach. 10 more to chew over:

  1. Launch a community newsletter – last year my church launched The Proclaimer and distributed it to all letterboxes in the Parish, and online.
  2. Display generosity and give something away. In the current financial climate, generosity will stick out like a (well received) sore thumb.
  3. Coordinate an art show, encouraging locals to submit artwork expressing what they love about their suburb. This was the brilliant idea of the Community Pastor at my church – Hayley Neal. Read more about the I HEART KIRRIBILLI art exhibition and prize.
  4. Write cards, and give them to local business owners, thanking them for their service of the community.
  5. Coordinate a ‘clean up our suburb’ Saturday – with a BBQ back at the church. This year my church got involved with others in the community during Clean Up Australia Day – and hosted a BBQ back at the church.
  6. Run a course at the church, offering skills in managing your finances in tough times, or helping people to cope with depression, or 10 weeks of conversation French – or whatever skills people in your congregation have.
  7. Encourage the youth group to run a community car wash on a Saturday outside the church – with all proceeds to a local charity.
  8. Create a community calendar, sponsored by local businesses, including details of church service times and activities (along with other community news), and distribute to local letterboxes.
  9. Host a Q&A night at the church – inviting locals to come and ask any questions they have about Christianity.
  10. Copy some sermons to CD and drop them in local letterboxes.

There are many, many ideas for how we can be getting involved in our communities. Let’s continue the discussion.

What ideas do you have? Do you have any suggestions for websites with more resources?

30 ideas for community outreach (2 of 3)

Yesterday I shared 10 ideas for getting our churches known, and making an impact in our communities. Here are 10 more ideas:

  1. Coordinate a Winter Appeal (in association with Anglicare) to collect clothes and food for the needy this winter. Your church could be used as a drop-off centre, or you could door-knock houses offering to collect clothes and food.
  2. Run a kids holiday club.
  3. Invite your community to take part in a challenge (e.g. 40 Hour Famine, 5 Days in May, or create your own).
  4. Create an online form and invite locals to share what they love about living in [suburb]. For example “What I love about living in Kirribilli“.
  5. Teach Scripture in the local school/s.
  6. Host a concert (e.g. carols, jazz) in the local park. My church hosted ‘Carols under the Bridge’ last December and about 1,000 people turned up.
  7. Join the local tennis/quilting/running/model train/gardening/food appreciation club, or start your own.
  8. Design and print posters with details of church activities, and place them on the footpath. For example, “Grab the attention of passers-by“.
  9. Run a marriage enrichment or parenting course.
  10. Buy a coffee for a stranger – offer to pay for the coffee for the person lining up behind you in the local cafe.

10 more ideas tomorrow!

30 ideas for community outreach (1 of 3)

The people in our communities need to hear about Jesus. And on the whole in Australia (and you can share what it’s like in your country), I don’t think we doing a great job at connecting with our communities. How many people are attending our churches who have never been to church before, or haven’t been in years? Or as I asked earlier in the week, if your church burned to the ground would the community care or even notice?

Over the next three days I’ve decided to share ideas for how we can get involved in our community, and by God’s grace, connect with the people who need to hear about Jesus. I’d love to hear your ideas too – let’s put our heads together and see what we can come up with. Our communities need us to do this.

Here’s 10 to get us started:

  1. Host a fair trade market (selling fair trade coffee, gifts, toys etc). Check out Tribes and Nations. My church hosts three or four per year. We also give away free cupcakes and fair trade coffee samples.
  2. Host a free community lunch. My church runs one of these every 6-8 weeks, and between 20-40 from outside church will join us.
  3. Get a decent website with quality, regularly updated content. Sure, this is my hobbyhorse, but people will check out your website once your church starts to gain a bigger presence. You don’t want your website to turn them off.
  4. Run a fitness session in a local park with a personal trainer. My church be doing this as part of our 125-year anniversary celebrations later this month.
  5. Hand out bacon and egg rolls to commuters on their way to the nearby train/tram station or bus stop.
  6. Volunteer your church to doorknock for a charity (e.g. Red Shield Appeal).
  7. Hold a church service outdoors (e.g. in a local park). This will make it easier for people to see what a church service is like, without the fear-factor of venturing into an unknown building.
  8. Encourage the people in your church to participate in a ‘invite your neighbour to lunch’ Sunday.
  9. Sign-up your church to Outreach Posters.
  10. Send a media release to local media each time a new event is run. Read more…

10 more ideas tomorrow! Read Part 2 and Part 3.

Grab the attention of passers-by

How many people walk past your church each day? What do they discover about your church? How are they inspired to visit your church, or check out your church’s activities, or even investigate Christianity as a result of wandering by?

Many people walk past my church each day – it’s close to the station, and on the restaurant/café strip. We wanted to make use of our position to communicate to people as they walk past the church.

cbtb_web

We purchased an a-frame (see below – essentially two signs, connected at the top with a hinge, that expands to stand on its own) with the capacity to display interchangeable content. This is a key advance in an (albeit simple) technology. In the past, if you wanted to use an a-frame you would either need to print your message onto it (limiting its use and lifespan), or get a whiteboard frame for each side (limiting its visual appeal to the creativity of the person with the whiteboard marker). The newer-style a-frames enable interchangeable content – and almost limitless possibilities for engaging passers-by.

Image_Community Lunch A-frame

How does it work at my church? One of the talented graphic designers at church created some A1-size posters that promote some of the regular activities at church, and can be easily placed within the frame. Each day we put the a-frame on the footpath with different posters inside – for example, promoting a community lunch, a kids holiday club, weekend church services or our upcoming art competition.

I have been amazed (and pleasantly surprised) by how many people stop by to take a look at the posters. In fact, some people have even had their photo taken next to a poster!

This strategy was so effective that a couple of months later we purchased three single frames, and now place posters inside them and lean them up against the wall (see below). This way we can promote five different events at the same time – appealing to the different ages and interests of people who walk by.

Image_Explorers frame

This has proved to be a really effective and cost-efficient concept ($264 for the a-frame, and $99 for the stand-alone frames). Some people glance at the posters as they walk past, others stop to read them in detail. With this in mind, our next idea is to create some posters that discuss some common questions about Christianity – e.g. “why is Jesus the only way to God?” or provide a Biblical perspective on world events. Our prayer is that these will encourage people to stop and think, and perhaps even come inside church to ask questions and find out more about our magnificent Saviour.

Not all churches get the same amount of through-traffic, but the relatively low cost of this idea makes it worth considering even if your church has a small but steady stream of passers-by.

Image_Passers by

Ideas for missional living

I just came across a website that posed an interesting question for our churches to consider: “if our church burned to the ground would the community care?” Michael Kellahan has kick started a discussion on “small ideas, big impact” for connecting with the tribes around you. Be great to share your ideas – however small.

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