It the last weekend in January – when a number of churches on the East Cost of the USA have canceled services due to snow and ice that has blanketed the region. What follows are my thoughts on getting around the weather to continue the fellowship in the respect to biblical models and traditions.
Sitting on Twitter, I saw that my former church had canceled service due to the snow/icy conditions that hit Charlotte. This makes a lot of sense, and I’m pretty sure that many churches are doing the same, since the conditions don’t make it pleasant to drive safely.
However, I did have a question in respect to the sermon. Many people attend church for the sermon and the fellowship. Missing one of these for a Sunday usually isn’t a problem, but both of those present a bit of a challenge for many believers. And so I ended up tweeting the following (two messages):
Given the state of mobile/web, weather shouldn’t impact the ability to preach a message (tweet)? But weather can and does impact the ability to fellowship; how does the church create/use virtual ties when impacts happen (tweet)?
Now, Wellspring’s pastor did say that he would be recording and posting the sermon – and this is good. But the second question remains, how can we skillfully and appropriately use mobile/web technology in order to keep the ties of fellowship when weather or other conditions dictate otherwise?
I’ve got a few ideas:
- Skype or other type of video/conference call
- Sharing an iTunes/Pandora/last.fm/Spotfy/last.fm/etc. playlist at a certain time for “praise and worship,” – adding the element of an accompanying blog post on the church blog for those who’d like to post their prayers, “amens,” etc.
- (Nearly)-Live streaming of the small groups who are able to meet in the home for worship, fellowship, and prayer
Do any of you employ these methods when weather or some other circumstance interrupts the usual flow of fellowship/worship? And if so, what have been some of the positives and negatives of doing this?
Weather is indeed a limitation of fellowship in the traditional face-to-face sense. But, is the traditional means of fellowship strong enough to deny the versatility of the technology that’s now at our fingertips?
Note: I’m not specifically asking about a full internet church experience or internet church campus. I am speaking specifically towards using the mobile and web arenas when normal fellowship and worship methods are interrupted. When we speak on an internet church, we can start talking the fun stuff like location-displacement of elements of the fellowship – which is a good bit different when it happens on a continual basis.