Posts Tagged ‘engagement’

Merging the Tech Windows of a Biblical Expereince

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

I am fast to say that there are aspects of mobile/web/connected technologies that make sense towards engaging and being transformed by the Bible or other texts. But, the experience is always layered. There’s the device… the moment… the software… the text/audio… what window can I engage it in at that given that that will enable me to put my entire being in that Joshua 1:8 state?

And then I looked at this and smiled:

Now, this is a video demonstrating various technologies available and in use right now (XBox Kinect, Microsoft Surface, Windows 7 on a tablet, Windows Phone 7, email, IM, SMS, optical recognition technologies, etc.). But, it gets me excited because its not beyond anything that many of us have in our homes in whole or in part towards taking that “get in the Bible” experience and pushing it a bit more.

Let’s reframe the video a bit see what I mean:

  • You see in the beginning that small group IM/SMS session that’s going on? That could very easily be your small (cell) group and a conversation that’s happening amongst them.
  • The blueprint you see overlaid could be the entire Bible, or more specifically the sermon outline with some identifiers to Bible, commentaries, Wikipedia/Britannica, and web search entries that further expand the central them (the room being a theme, the rooms being the explorations of those themes)
  • Now, the key here is that there’s not a layer to the communication aspects. Some might be in the same room using an XBox Kinect to “see” the same experience, but others might be using voice only, mobiles, tablets, or some combination to engage the discussion.
  • Love that part where “Bill” takes us into the master bedroom. Can that be the “taking us into a tour of the temple?” Going a bit further than Glo Bible (a well done app experience I might add) of showing pictures, but we get a virtual room of the building and the people in that context.
  • That end result, changing the door handle and adding a lamp, what happens when we are in a room (world) and we add a door or light to the environment?

Several weeks ago, my aunt and I were talking about an iPad and I shifted the discussion to what she would think of as the perfect Bible app. She responded to something like this video and our reframing – a visual and audio tour through the world of the Bible, but it connects to the physical world so that you could get a literal learning of the text and more readily apply the lesson.

If you are a pastor or lesson leader, could you get along with merging things like this? If so, do you think some of this is possible right now with what you have on your desk, in your pocket, or even, in your family room?

video via istartedsomething

 

5 Further Ways to Define Mobile Ministry

Monday, December 20th, 2010

Photo of a Dictionary showing the word 'dictionary' via Kingdom of StyleAfter a number of conversations, further readings, and a excellent mobile ministry forum (report coming as soon as I slow down), there’s still this lingering feeling that the definition port forth here towards what is mobile ministry while not bad, just might not have gone far enough.

So, in the spirit of how this initiative is run, I want to put out a refreshed subset of that definition that I’ve been sitting on. It is one part just trying to get into a place of better understanding how to best apply a definition, but also lead towards developing and finding the research/case studies that support mobile ministry as an effective tool.

For a refresher, here’s the definition:

Mobile ministry is the skillful use and application of computer technology classified as mobile for the context of fulfilling the Christian (religious?) designation of forwarding the proclamation of the key ideals and history of the faith, following form to and innovating on top of cultural and faith traditions within applied contexts.

And here’s what I’ve been sitting on:

  • Mobile in missions: contextualizing Gospel messages; business as mission opportunities; technology in politics/global conversations
  • Mobile in Media: specifications around video/audio/text engagements; mobile applications alongside broadcast channels; mobile service development/infrastructure concerns
  • Mobile in discipleship/education: curriculum development; special education; educational explorations (OLPC-like initiatives)
  • Mobile Marketing/Analytics: SEO; security and access; local media channel development; mobile applications alongside and independent of broadcast channels
  • Spiritual implications of connected spaces: theological constraints/precedents; directions for educators/parents/local communities; psychological/cultural effects of mobile vs other personal/connected technology media elements
  • Mobile in Moment: use of connected services and applications; SMS/MMS; effects of and effects towards social and linear networks; personal use; theological constraints/precedents

So, in looking at mobile ministry as a tool, practice, or context, its becoming clear that how mobile is being defined determines its best application.

With that said, do you see any areas here where the Body is already equipped to move quickly into mobile? Or, do you see gaps that need to be addressed, before mobile ministry is regarded as wholly beneficial?