Reset CSS | Skip to Content | Skip to Secondary Content | Contact

Home | Mobile Version | About | Issues | Inner-Linked | Contact Us | RSS | SMS

Mobile Ministry Magazine

Setting a foundation at the intersection of faith and mobile technology

Image: MMM logo

How do churches, mission groups, organizations, communities, parents, and people respond to life when their use of mobile technology intersects with their faith? Here, we not just ask that question, but present the foundations for answering it. Read more about Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM) and its mission/vision.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Putting the Mobile in Mobile Ministry

Image: QR Code of Putting the Mobile in Mobile Ministry

There's a reason for the scatted postings of the past weeks. I've picked up some more work, and have been a lot more active in using mobile tech than just writing about it. That being said, this past weekend allowed me to put into play some mobile tech that might add a hint of fun to your next community outing.

Things started with a montly biking event that I lead at my church. The goal is simply to get out and bike, engage with your community, and promote wellness. The added benefit of things in my neck of the US is that there is a gas shortage and so this is one of those kicks to an alternative means of transportation which can put less strain on resources.

Despite the event being cancelled, I still went out and a friend joined me. The course was to simply bike a local park/greenway and go from there. To log the event, I used my N95 along with Nokia's Sports Tracker application.

Sports Tracker is a beta application which enables one to log their workouts and do things such as see speeds, lap times, and measure progress over a course of workouts. It also uploads to Nokia's Sports Tracker web service and then one is able to see a map of the road traveled, pictures taken, and music listened to. So you know what that meant...

ARJW Rides

In order to view the Nokia Nseries Widget you need JavaScript and Flash Player 9+ support

Pretty cool isn't it. Imagine what mobile looks like when ministry starts not just promoting the Gospel, but what the life abundantly looks life on the way to glory. Neat ain't it.

Does your church do anything similar where mobile tech like Sports Tracker or similar programs can add to the exposure, emphasis, or effectiveness of such endeavors?

Labels: , , , , ,

Saturday, August 16, 2008

To Be Relevant, or Just There

Image: QR Code of To Be Relevant, or Just There

This year, one of my biggest struggles with just about everything has been to remember that there's a good bit of relevance that must be undertaken with everything. And especially in the field of mobile technology where things just move faster than people want to even write about, its important to remember something I've been told often, technology is only relevant when it is personal. Some recent thinkings have put me in a position though where I realize that I have to do a lot more evangelism than just using this stuff in order to make this point clear.

I can start with the example of my use of Nokia's Mobile Web Server. Frankly speaking, this is probably one of the most far out things that I use and one of those things that people go "ooh" about, but just don't understand. Without repeating the entire post that I wrote up on my personal website, I will say it like this: using a web server on your mobile phone, or even just the idea of having a web server in your home gives YOU control of the information that you put on the net. Not Google, not Nokia, not anyone. You administer it, and you say how it gets anywhere, if it goes out at all.

The mobile device that's that and adds the ability to associate that personal information with the context of your environment. Its not just an IP address, its an IP address that's attached to a photo of a place or a contact person or a a mesh of all of those and more. That's not the web virtual, that's a literal web. And its already something in your hands. Imagine knitting the Body together with that kinda stuff.

Or about about mobile devices in general? Most would say that while they are enabling, that they offer no real benefit over other computing situations. That might be right, until you consider the cost of powering devices. The wastefulness that we display as a computing culture is crazy. Slimming down to the bare essentials should allow us the time to develop more accessible and renewable solutions, while making all of those previously stated connections all the more fruitful.

Connecting: I want to be the kind of parent who has the "key" for allowing his household to be online. If you will, I'd like my mobile device to be the gateway for my family. This way I can see and interact with what my kids are doing, and my wife has an accessible and open means to keep me accountable. Far reaching? Nope. Using something like this soon to come software and a solid smartphone this is not just possible, but probably advisable.

Look. I am not saying that we have to do this. I am saying that the technology is relevant if we look at it as being so. I still think that a partnership between churches and developing nations could do more for increasing technical competencies for both sides than just doing nothing. I still feel that solutions like Earthcomber should be used by more urban missionaries to share and live the Gospel. I still see the need for people to put these devices down and interact with one another being an important part of using these devices. I just have a problem with just letting it sit here. I'm made in God's image. I'd like to believe that somewhere in me beats the ability to be relevant with whatever is in my hands and life.

For me, it just happens to be mobile tech and its various applications, intersecting with my faith, in a way that just happens to push the green light out a bit longer.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Tools of the Global Nomad

Image: QR Code of Tools of the Global Nomad

One of the things that I've tried to do, even before starting Mobile Ministry Magazine, has been to reduce my computing needs to the bare essentials as much as possible. A big reason for doing so is because I've been one to travel a good bit and besides taking long trips, I tend to have taken many trips. Ironically, this weekend, I hit 100,000 miles in my 3yr old Civic.

Knowing what I can do with as few physical materials as possible is something that is a bit of an aim of being mobile. To skillfully and effective utilize the environment and services offered so that one can get a job done and connect. Andy Abramson, CEO of Comunicano, Inc. (an advertising, marketing and public relations agency based in Del Mar, CA), tends to do writes a blog called Working Anywhere and in a recent post talks about some of the tools that he uses as a global nomad.

...Basically, I've built the company (and am now rebuilding my house) by being the executive who works anywhere but the traditional office, allowing for a business lifestyle that is highly productive, and mostly more effortless than many people would ever imagine. For example right now I'm in Europe, floating between Lisbon, Portugal, Barcelona, Paris and London over a two-week period. After that I’ll be on the East Coast, the West Coast, back to the East Coast, into the Midwest, all before August 9, when I finally move back into my house. Along the way I’m staying in very business executive work-friendly and amazingly artistic, modern and well run hotels, all of which offer very high-quality Internet and many of the comforts and services a business traveler needs...

That's a good deal of traveling and the really good thing about this post is that while many of us might not have his resources, we can utilize some of the behaviors and services in our own capacities to make traveling less of an issue, or in the case of missions work, less a chore of logistics and more of just going and serving.

Check out the rest of the post The Tools of The Global Nomad at Working Everywhere and let's chat about some of the tools or behaviors that you have found sufficient in those times when you've been more nomad than settler.

Disclosure: Comunicano has worked with MMM in the past through the Nokia Blogger Relations program to provide devices and notification of services that may or may not be relevant to our community.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Go Mobile to Sustain the Earth

Image: QR Code of Go Mobile to Sustain the Earth
Image: Nokia 3110 Evolve, via Nokia
So God created man in His own image, in the image and likeness of God He created him; male and female He created them. And God blessed them and said to them, Be fruitful, multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it [using all its vast resources in the service of God and man]; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and over every living creature that moves upon the earth. (Genesis 1:27-28 AMP)

One of the reasons that I have gone mobile is because I better understand that while the ability to be connected is good for the Body, the ability to use devices and services that better utilize the limited resources of this planet means that other generations will also be able to enjoy such inventiveness.

Something that many do not think about when they use computers, build offices, or even get in their cars to travel to this and that event is that there is a considerable impact on the earth around us that can be minimized when we start looking at the excess and start working to trim things.

It could be as simple as instead of having a church office that the church starts to use a mobile office where the office is actually a data center that is exercising environmentally mindful policies and then the staff members are working from home where they can be a more integral part of their local communities. Trading paper bulletins for SMS alerts might seem like a struggle for some members, but the saving of paper means that the administration staff can spend less time at FedEx and the church can spend those funds on enabling more members to stay connect whether they can make it to a service or the service come to them.

Now, we might not get immediately to the place where we are using phones made from biodegradable materials, but looking at the simple command at the beginning of creation to steward this earth, we can definitely do more than we do.

Has your church or organization started any policies to minimize the environmental impact of doing the work of ministry?

Related Articles:

Disclosure: Inner-Linked provides consulting services for those individuals and ministries who are looking to trim their environmental footprint while adding innovation and accessibility to their ministry endeavors.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Looking to utilize some of the concepts and features talked about at Mobile Ministry Magazine?

Image: Inner-Linked logo

Visit Inner-Linked to explore our available consulting and training service offerings.

Verse of the Day

Engage

Image: MMM Veritcal Banner with QR Code and MS Tag

Ministry Partners

Links

Image: YesuMulungi Image: Covenant Eyes Image: Global Media Outreach Image: Digital Disciples Image: Visual Story Network Church Tech Today BibleTech Conference Mobile Evangelism Wiki OliveTree Laridian GMPSoft Church IT RoundTable digital.leadnet.org/ eBible.com! Zondervan Mobile Palm Addict Earthcomber calendar graphic for Internet Evangelism Day Holiness Heartbeat with Justin Singleton The Foolish Galatian