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Verse of the Day
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Visitor informationYou are always welcome at our church.Include on this page: - what they can expect - time service starts/ends - activities after the service - dress code if any - who should they look for (photos of members) Page tips... 5. Avoid all ‘churchy’ jargon and ‘Christianese’ language throughout the site, especially on the homepage. Non-Christians, almost by definition, do not like or understand these words. This even applies to the navigation menu. Many churches have a menu link called ‘ministries’. This is actually a jargon word meaning ‘Things we do’ or ‘what’s on’. Much better to use neutral alternatives like these. 6. Non-Christians may have negative images of Christians: boring, killjoys, judgmental, etc. A light-hearted, informal, witty website may help to counteract these misconceptions. Opinion polls show that evangelicals are increasingly perceived in a very negative light, in almost all countries. 7. Christian outreach often fails because Christians do ‘megaphone proclamation’ from behind the protecting walls of their ‘ghetto’. A church website should not aim to be an impersonal electronic ‘cut and run’ tract distribution system. Its primary aim should be to draw people in the community towards real relationships with real people within the fellowship. Most conversions result from relationships. 8. A primary task of the website is to convince non-Christians of these four things:
Integrate it into your overall strategies, both as a way of contacting individuals, and giving the fellowship a higher profile within your community. 15. Consider a ‘New to this site?’ visitors link on your homepage. This enables you to offer a particular welcome to an outsider. But – very important – this is not a ‘let out’ so you do not need to apply these strategy tips to the rest of the site. The entire site must be user-friendly to non-Christians. A visitor page should be very welcoming and written in plain language. It needs to provide all the info a potential newcomer to a church meeting would require. (#5-9, 15 from Internet Evangalism Day ) |



