Have you ever heard of Guy Reid?
Well, now you have.
Last night I watch a video on his woodcarving skills, and the longer I watched, the more I was amazed:
[Read more…] about Guy Reid: Incredible, Life Like Woodcarving [Video]
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Eric Dye
Have you ever heard of Guy Reid?
Well, now you have.
Last night I watch a video on his woodcarving skills, and the longer I watched, the more I was amazed:
[Read more…] about Guy Reid: Incredible, Life Like Woodcarving [Video]
by Eric Dye
Did you know that mobile Internet use will eclipse desktop use by the end of the year?
The time for a responsive website is now!
This is one of the many reasons ChurchMag is working on a redesign and new look—having your website responsive is very important!
Fortunately, making your website responsive can be as easy as using a responsive WordPress theme:
It’s official: there really is an app for everything.
Heartpoints is an iPhone-only app designed to help a person track the good and bad things they do. Personally, I don’t think that using Hearthpoints is spiritually healthy, but…let me go ahead and review it as fairly as I can.
In the end, I just might surprised you with a bit of positivity—but just a bit. That said, I’m going to divide this review into two parts:
by Jeremy Smith
There is a great web application out there that can help you automate all of the little annoying things that you have to do in your day to day computing life. The service is called IFTTT (stands for “IF This Then That”) that has partnerships with several different online and mobile software companies to make your life easier. We want to show you how to use this service to tweet your blog article automatically right after you post it.
by Jeremy Smith
Sometimes this camera can be very intimidating to be in front of when you have done so much from behind the camera. My personal setup is a Canon T3i with a RODE shotgun microphone.
“Relevant” and “authentic” are two phrases that I am honestly growing weary of hearing. Not because I don’t find value in these ideas as they relate to the Church, but more so because in their over-use, it seems their meanings are losing their original intent. Making the church “relevant” has become an excuse for catering to a specific demographic. The desire to be “authentic” has become an incentive to join in with and adopt the characteristics of the “relevant” Church, potentially losing one’s individuality.
This humble opinion is based on real-life events I have witnessed and experienced.
Making things more palatable does make them easier to understand, but it can also diminish the strength of the original meaning. Hymns have been on my mind a lot lately. I feasted on them as a youngster, but I do see how a generation not exposed to the King James Bible would find them irrelevant: