Sharing Faith Online: The Attitude We Need to Succeed

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internet-evangelization

The other day I ran across an interview with a Protestant guy named Nathan Bingham.

I loved what he had to say about sharing faith online.

It seems weird to have to qualify his name with “Protestant.” It feels like it shouldn’t matter, but it does.

Anyway, we should all have this attitude in our ministries, classes, and online dealings.

Rich opportunities online

Protestants have this awesome sense of mission that I often find lacking in Catholics. There’s this evangelical sense of urgency because there are people who don’t know Jesus Christ.

I love that. I want to have more of that myself.

Nathan said we should approach our spreading the gospel online with a sense of stewardship because “no generation before us had such rich opportunities.” I think he’s right.

“There is a lost and dying world out in the Twittersphere,” Nathan says, “that need to hear about Jesus and the good news of the gospel. We can be light in a dark, albeit digital, world.”

Online spiritual leadership

He quotes Albert Mohler in something I’ve thought about for a long time, online spiritual leadership:

“If the leader is not leading in the digital world, his leadership is, by definition, limited to those who also ignore or neglect that world, and that population is shrinking every minute. The clock is ticking.”

The Internet is, what Fr. Robert Barron has termed, the “Digital Areopagus.”

People from all walks of life coming together to share opinions and sometimes come away with new ones. The Internet gives the power to reach out to the margins, to penetrate into places ordinary Christians can’t easily go.

If Catholic parishes and Church leaders are not extending their reach online (and they’re not), they’re leaving a lot on the table. Ideas are being exchanged online. Conversations are happening. If we’re not online they’re happening without us.

The Digital Areopagus is not waiting to start until we arrive. Someone else will fill the gap.

The other thing is the culture has become hostile to personal faith-sharing, and most people are very hesitant to bring up their faith in their public lives.

So then what happens? Church talk only happens at church among church people. And, Church worker types like me only interact with church people.

Local internet gospel outreach

If we’re only talking to ourselves, are we really saying anything at all? Of course, ongoing faith formation is essential, but then it must spread outward or it stagnates and dies.

I think local parishes should start working harder to do internet outreach.

Not just having a website, but a real online presence. They could blog and do social media with the idea of attracting local people to the parish, people who don’t know Christ but are searching. Or, perhaps people who don’t know what they’re looking for but want something more.

That was me before I converted. My initial draw toward Catholicism came from traditional media but it was the information I found on the internet that answered a lot of questions and led me to contact a priest.

We’re still a long way off from this–light years–but wouldn’t be great if you could search “Jesus Christ” on Google and get a Catholic site instead of Wikipedia and the Mormons?

About the author 

Marc Cardaronella

I'm passionate about the most effective ways to transmit the Catholic Faith and spread the Gospel to the world. Join me? You can find me on Facebook, Twitter for the catechetical ramblings of the day.

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  1. Hey Marc, good points here. In addition to greater online presence from Church organizations and priests and bishops and religious, I’ve been wondering lately if parishes could do more to educate the laity about online faith sharing. Imagine if workshops were held in parish halls to coach parishioners on creating a faith blog! I’ve found that blogging has helped initiate discussions on the faith with friends and family members. Maybe we should all be doing it? What if even half of all passionate Catholics shared their personal testimony on their social channels?

    Anyways, I’ve been meaning to blog about this, thanks for jarring some thoughts loose!

    1. That is a totally interesting idea. I’ve been thinking of something similar that might be a little bit easier…getting lay people in a parish contributing on a parish group blog. They could blog about the faith but also lots of other things that pertain to daily life as Catholics in a particular city. You could have the workshops to teach them how to blog and write for the web. But essentially, the website maintenance would be left to someone else and writers could just write. What do you think of that? Of course, that doesn’t preclude lots of other individual blogs.

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