Insights to Keep You Connected

Graphic Design

Free Images Included for Your Church Website

Finding beautiful images for your website can be time-consuming and expensive. So, we include hundreds of images as part of an Aboundant subscription, and we keep adding more. Check out the collection here. These images are uploaded in three formats: 4K Background...

Featured

30 Top Church Website Wishes Granted

What's your wish for your church website? Really, we'd like you to think about that for a moment. Pick up that imaginary dandelion and blow... Wish granted. Over our next 30 posts below, we'll be telling you about some of Aboundant 3.0's amazing new features....

Church WebsitesSmall Church Websites

Amazed That There are Still Churches without a Website?

So are we! Which is why we are launching Aboundant Boot Camps. We did a successful pilot program last Summer and are ready help more churches. Aboundant Boot Camps are ideal for parent organizations that understand the vital nature of web ministry for their member churches. Using our innovative software and interactive teaching methods, we’ll help a group of your churches to create their initial site in a single workshop. Participants will leave confident knowing they can maintain and develop their own site.

Innovation

The Harsh Cost of “We’re Not Ready for That”

In 1996, now megapastor Craig Groeschel was an associate pastor at a United Methodist Church in Oklahoma City. As I did, Craig studied business in college before choosing a life in ministry. In his book, Confessions of a Pastor, he alludes to presenting his church leadership with a plan to use modern marketing techniques. In 1996, marketing was a dirty word in the church, though obviously we have softened to the idea A) because it’s effective, and B) because when Jesus is the message, how can marketing it be wrong! The first time I heard this story (admittedly second hand) it was said that the answer Craig got was, “We’re not ready for that.” Evidently Groeschal disagreed. He decided to leave the United Methodist Church and open up his own church in his two car garage. This church became Life Church, which now has over 24 campuses and claims to be one of the largest churches in the United States.

Theology and Technology

Reformation > Disruption

Disruption: when a new technology significantly changes the way people live or do business, often challenging the status quo. It was in 1996 when then Vice President of Intel, Steven McGeady, claimed that the new tech boom was akin to the Reformation. He called it The Digital Reformation. His argument was not theological in nature; instead he compared the common person's level of access to technology in the modern era — to the mass access to religious freedom during the Reformation. In each case, the new paradigm led to rapid--indeed, “disruptive”--levels of cultural, political, and social-economic change. He noted that the difference between a reformation and a revolution is that reformations change everything, not just a single target.

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