A few years ago, it hit me. I was asked to lead a small-group discussion on digital ministry. It was fun for me to help the group imagine ways they could connect to their churches and communities beyond Sunday morning. After we were done, someone said to me, "I like the way you do your digital ministry." That surprised me because, even with all the digital work I do, I had never thought of myself as having a digital ministry--yes, I can be dense sometimes. In every church I’ve previously served, the congregation was able to support the digital ministry work I do as part of the broader ministry of the church. That meant I could freely offer daily devotional texts, emails, podcasts, teaching, and online resources without really thinking about the monthly costs behind them. Now, I've never wanted to sound like a radio fundraiser or a TV preacher trying to sell faith. But this new season is different. Every day, I send devotional text messages, write and record daily devotio...
After an embarrassing amount of Coke Zero and Snickers, I've finished two full semesters! Saint Paul School of Theology doesn't have a mascot. I'm thinking either The Open-Table Otters, The Fighting Footnotes, or The Already/Not Yetis. I had never participated in online classes before attending Saint Paul. I graduated before college before that was a thing, and my work at Perkins was on campus. Initially, I had more questions than I thought I would about how things would work. There were details that I worried I had wrong or misread. I did a lot of double and triple-checking to get started. Overall, it's been a good experience. Some professors take the online approach more loosely than others. But I've had a good mix so far. After the last couple of weeks, I'm tired of looking at a computer screen. Stay blessed...john