Many of the resources on this site have particular relevance to effective communication in a cross-cultural setting. Here are a selection of pages:
| MISSION | |
| Contextualization | How to present the Gospel in terms that people understand |
| Locality outreach teams | Using a website to enhance effectiveness |
| Lack of web evangelism | Why don't mission agencies do web evangelism - usually? |
| Shame cultures | Reaching people in shame cultures |
| Other religions | What they believe, differences compared to Gospel |
| The Engel Scale | Plus other communication models |
| Communication models | Thinking God's thoughts after Him |
| Teaching IT and web skills | A powerful means of outreach, even church-planting |
| Computer tips | Particularly for missionaries |
| CDs videos & DVDs | Using them for evangelism in cross-cultural settings |
| Free evangelistic literature | Papers in 4 languages for the non-Western world |
| Free evangelistic literature | Papers in two dialects for the Fula/Fulani people |
| Take 'ex' from ex-missionary | Two women's stories - producing evangelistic literature back home |
| English and TEFL | Teaching English, TEFL, easy-English links and sources of literature and Bibles |
| Post-modernism | How it affects our presentation of the Gospel |
| Editing guidelines | Example of some editing guidelines used in preparation of evangelistic literature |
| Open letter | Letter for missionary executives on Web Evangelism |
| Main mission-links page | Range of cross-cultural mission links |
| Online evangelism | The importance of web evangelism to mission organizations |
| Chat Rooms | A way that missionaries - or anyone - can share the Gospel in a national chat room |
| Bollywood films evangelism | A major outreach opportunity to India |
| Felt needs | The biblical strategy that unlocks closed minds |
Please link to our mission gateway page if it is appropriate to your site, or syndicate it directly into your own site with a customized introduction.
The sitemap displays every page at a glance.
"Before I arrived in [Asian country] as a missionary, I went online to the city I was sent to. It is a mixed Christian-Muslim regional center in a very remote part of the country. I then read the daily paper online, emailed the mayor and local officials, joined a local discussion group, got informed and made friends. When I arrived, a number of people whom I had met online invited me out to dinner and my ministry started as soon as I arrived. I also managed to join the email group of the then Vice-President (now President) and made a few constructive comments – so when I had problems with my visa, I just sent an email and it was soon fixed! I reckon that I saved between six months to two years of ministry time by making a wide range of high-level friends before I arrived and "starting fast and well-informed". Sure, only 1% of people there were online, but that 1% were the leaders and they boosted my ministry so it became effective. Church-planters can use the Internet to network their way to success."
One-stop total mission resource site proposal
There are thousands of Christian mission-related websites or individual pages on specific topics. In addition there are thousands more useful secular pages relating
to ethnography, culture, geography, linguistics, translation, communication, politics, medicine, health, development, software support, and much else.
Material which would once take days to track down in reference libraries is now available in a few seconds – if only you know where to look. Of course, Google has become a remarkable search tool. But there is no one-stop website where all these different pages can be brought together within in a single site. There are many excellent sites which achieve part of this function – and some are listed above. Some site have attempted to be in part an entry point for the full range of mission and secular sites.
But the task of researching and maintaining such an overall database would be too much for one person. This is why Yahoo as a directory is no longer a detailed resource for the Web – they found that a limited number of paid editors could not achieve the global coverage needed. The definitive directory now is The Open Director Project (ODP/DMoz) which provides directory listings for many other search engines as well as Google. The strength of ODP is its vast army of 7000 volunteer editors. Each looks after one or a small number of individual sections within the directory which relate to their own experience. They vet and accept new submissions, and add choices of their own where appropriate.
I would therefore like to propose a pan-mission directory website similar in style to ODP. The following observations and properties might apply:
|
FREE AND SIMPLE: Syndicate this page's content into your site • Insert this page's text directly into your own website. then copy/paste (CTRL+C/CTRL+V) this Javascript code into your own page: help | example. (Please DO NOT copy the actual text of this page onto your own site: reasons.) Other options for re-use. • Or please link to this page • Add a Bulletin subscribe form to your site. |
Latest Bulletin: |
| ? Explore & discuss |
|
© May 2008 Web Evangelism Guide Contact us Sitemap Privacy About us Meaning of life
|
|
|