Why Your Church Shouldn’t Have a Blog
The church in America is feeling the same economic pinch that everyone else is, and in the new year many churches will be looking for new ways to attract people to their fellowships without spending a lot of money to do it. One option that many will investigate is redesigning their home landing page in a blog format. Instead of having a static landing page, the local church will now have a constant stream of updated information and photos that users can access and be edified by 24-7, 365 days of the year.
Sounds great, right? I love blogs and blogging! Hmmm…maybe not so much. While I do think that a blog could be a great ministry asset, for most churches I find them to be more of a hurt than a help. There are two main pitfalls in blogging and Web 2.0 that many small to mid-size churches fall into, and unless these pitfalls are specifically addressed, your church’s blog could hurt your online ministry more than promote it.
Diamonds last forever, and so does the internet. Once something is posted online, it never really ceases to exist. Those of us who’ve been blogging for a while know this to be the case. Many of us have posted something to our blog in a fit of rage or misplaced concern that has gotten us into a deep pile of trouble. Even after we take down the offensive or inaccurate post, it still exists in thousands of search engine results, and our rant will cost us significant reputation points.
If your pastor, for example, posts a humorous entry about life on other planets, rest assured it will be discovered and mischaracterized by opponents of your ministry. You’ll have people chatting online about your ministry as if it were a cult who worship’s Fox Mulder, all because of some innocent satirical words. Words in the blogosphere must be measured with an excrucitating amount of detail, because they are eternal.
A dead blog draws no flies. We’ve all seen hundreds of abandoned blogs littering the sides of the information super highway. Blogging is a lot of work, and most people who start a blog simply don’t have time to keep it up. While dead personal or business blogs are bad, dead church blogs are even worse. When a person takes a look at your church’s blog and it hasn’t been updated in six months, the viewer’s immediate assumption is that the organization behind the blog is dead. Chances are, that viewer will never return to your site, much less visit your church.
I’ve found that most pastors are just too busy to keep up with the demands of a blog, and their good intentions in starting a blog fall prey to more pressing demands for their time. A church blog is an extreme commitment, and without the proper set-up and delegation, it can become a real anvil around the ministry’s neck.
Maybe your church should have a blog after all. I think that a blog can be a powerful ministry tool, and I do think that more churches should employ this technique in their site design, so I’m not really arguing that you should stick to your old, outdated static ministry page. What I am saying is that if you do decide to walk the path of Web 2.0, you must be aware of the demands this decision will place on your time and attention. Please don’t just throw up a blog and forget about it, because it can be a dangerous and hurtful tool if you do not use it effectively.
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December 30th, 2008 at 12:41 pm
Thanks for your post. It reminded me as the keeper of the webpage here at my church that I need to stay on top of things. While I agree with the first two pitfalls you mentioned about a blog, that it lasts for ever, and if not updated then they will not attract people… those two things can be said about all of our church websites no matter what form they take. We do use a blog but we use it to distribute our e-news, which are clips from our monthly magazine and our weekly news updates. Now.. off to work on our website…
December 30th, 2008 at 3:43 pm
Excellent points. Whenever I set up a church with a new website, it comes with the ability to blog. I can’t remember how many times I told them the exact points you just mentioned. Blogs are tough to do right but the reward of doing it well can have HUGE results…even for mid to smaller size churches.
December 31st, 2008 at 11:08 am
Good post.
I would add one thing—if a pastor or church wants to have a blog; they should be extremely clear what that blog is intended for. And then stick with it.
If it is to post announcements (as Russell Martin gave an example)—then indicate that. If to have the Pastor give a brief devotional—then do so.
On a number of occasions, though, I have seen Pastors write blogs, inviting all and everyone to reply, INCLUDING skeptics. And on these occasions, when we skeptics reply, the Pastor finds they are overwhelmed. They didn’t really expect us to be reply in the fashion in which we did.
I have watched more than one Pastor’s blog shut down, go away, disappear and/or remove all comments, thanks to skeptic’s interventions.
Be careful what you blog for—you may get it! *grin*