Archive for the ‘Mormon’ Category

Internet Helps Apostles Teach of Jesus Christ to all the World

March 3rd, 2008 by Richard K Miller | 3 Comments | Filed in Mormon, Online missionary work, The Church, Videos

If you're new here, read more about the More Good Foundation. We help members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormon church) share their beliefs on the Internet. Learn more about what Mormons believe or talk with Mormons at LDS.net.

Elder Russell M. Nelson recently discussed the Church’s new website about the Savior, JesusChrist.lds.org, in a short video clip on YouTube (embedded below.) He said the Internet is a medium which will help the Apostles fulfill their calling to preach the word of God throughout the entire world:

Our responsibility as Apostles is to teach of Jesus Christ to all the world. We have used the website [JesusChrist.lds.org] because that’s the way people get their information now a days. When the Lord called his Twelve Apostles, he called them to send them throughout the world and preach of him. Jesus Christ is our Savior and Redeemer. In those days they could talk to a few people, here and there. In our time, we’ve had radio, television and now we have the Internet. The Internet is a very excellent way of promoting the word of God. We have confidence in this medium. We know it will appeal to a lot of people. We take seriously the responsibility that we have.

Elder Nelson then quoted the Apostle Paul’s words to the Ephesians — Ephesians 2:19-20
and Ephesians 4:11-13 — and said the website is to help promote a unity of understanding.

So that’s why we have this website. We are to promote unity in our understanding of our faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God. The Lord has revealed more in this day and age than He has ever before. We’re the recipients of that knowledge and we’re happy to share it with others. We’ve done it through this website and we’ve employed not only the written word but visual text and some video clips. This should be a great aid to the members of the Church. They can identify segments of this that will be of particular appeal to their family or friends or relatives and just forward it.

We may have a different understanding of Jesus because he personally appeared to the Prophet Joseph Smith and he taught the Prophet Joseph Smith and so those revelations are very important. There’s only one Jesus Christ and our understanding of him is very rich and we’re very anxious to share that with all human beings.

We’ve written previously about using the Internet to fulfill the three-fold mission of the Church and suggested some ways members can be involved in proclaiming the Gospel online. Elder Nelson’s comments reveal an even larger vision for the use of this technology. I think we can begin to see how the truth of the Lord will actually and realistically “penetrate every continent, visit every clime, sweep every country, and sound in every ear.”

Video:

Source: New Web Site Focuses on Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ

See also: The Wentworth Letter

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Link to the Church’s new website about the Savior

February 28th, 2008 by Richard K Miller | 6 Comments | Filed in Announcements, Mormon, Online missionary work, The Church

This week the Church launched JesusChrist.lds.org, a new website entirely about the Savior Jesus Christ.

The following “badges” can be used on your own blog or website to link to the site. This is a great way to share teachings of the Savior with your readers and visitors.

To use an image from the left, copy the HTML code on the right to your own blog or website:

Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God
Jesus Christ, the Son of God

Source: Link to JesusChrist.lds.org

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Share the Gospel online with LDS.net and Facebook

February 12th, 2008 by Richard K Miller | 3 Comments | Filed in Announcements, Facebook, Mormon, Online missionary work, Testimonies

The More Good Foundation recently launched LDS.net, a social network for Church members to share their Mormon beliefs online. Features include blogs, forums, videos, photos, testimonies, news, and chat.

We intended for LDS.net to be like a fishbowl, allowing persons of other faiths to “peer in” and passively observe what Mormons think, believe, and say. But the result has been even better: several non-Mormons have signed up and are actively participating in conversations about the Church. LDS.net currently has 9,907 users.

LDS.net isn’t intended to compete with top social networks like Facebook and MySpace. They’re far more established and powerful. But if you want a place to share the Gospel online, alongside other Church members, LDS.net is a safe place.

You can also share the Gospel on Facebook. Most Church members on Facebook have both Mormon and non-Mormon friends. By simply being yourself online, non-Mormons will get a feel for what you do on Sundays, where you were for 18-24 months, where you were married, and other aspects of your faith.

In a BYU devotional, Gerrit Gong asked, “Would you feel comfortable showing your profile in Sunday School-or on the big screen at this devotional?” We believe many Church members would. Today we’re launching a new version of our Facebook Application — The LDS App. Our Facebook application allows Facebook users to share their testimony, favorite scriptures, and news from the Church directly on their profile page. Over 20,000 Facebook users have added the LDS App and hundreds are using it to share their testimonies of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

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Succession of prophets fuels interest in the Church

January 28th, 2008 by Richard K Miller | 5 Comments | Filed in Mormon, Online missionary work, The Church

Our beloved prophet President Gordon B. Hinckley passed away last night at 7 PM. Since then, we’ve seen a flood of online interest in him, his successor Thomas S. Monson, how leadership and priesthood succession works in the Church, who current members of the Twelve are, and many other questions.

In the coming days, members of the Church have a great opportunity to answer these questions. If you have a blog, it would be helpful to write something on what President Hinckley’s service meant to you, your thoughts on President Monson, your understanding of how priesthood succession works, and related topics. It would also be helpful if you link to additional information like these:

Gordon B. Hinckley (Mormonwiki.com)
Gordon B. Hinckley (Lightplanet.com)
Thomas S. Monson (newsroom.lds.org)
Thomas S. Monson (Mormonwiki.com)
Thomas S. Monson (Lightplanet.com)

You might also participate in forums like Yahoo Answers or our own LDS.net.

If you have a Web cam or digital camera, you might record your thoughts on President Hinckley and post it to YouTube.

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Elder Ballard Encourages Use of Internet to Share the Gospel

December 15th, 2007 by Richard K Miller | 10 Comments | Filed in Ideas, Member missionary work, Mormon, Online missionary work, Podcasting, Technology, The Church, Videos

Today Elder Ballard spoke at the BYU-Hawaii graduation and urged graduates to use the Internet to share the Gospel. He mentioned blogging, podcasts, Facebook, video-sharing sites, and “people using … search engines to hunt for topics about the Church.” Here are selected portions:

The emergence of New Media is facilitating a world-wide conversation on almost every subject including religion, and nearly everyone can participate.

Conversations will continue whether or not we choose to participate in them. But we cannot stand on the sidelines while others, including our critics, attempt to define what the Church teaches.

The challenge is that there are too many people participating in conversation about the Church for our Church personnel to converse with and respond to individually. We cannot answer every question, satisfy every inquiry, and respond to every inaccuracy that exists. …some who seek answers want them to come directly from a member of the Church, like each one of you.

May I ask that you join the conversation by participating on the Internet, particularly the New Media, to share the gospel and to explain in simple and clear terms the message of the Restoration. Most of you already know that if you have access to the Internet you can start a blog in minutes and begin sharing what you know to be true. You can download videos from Church and other appropriate sites, including Newsroom at LDS.org, and send them to your friends. You can write to media sites on the Internet that report on the Church, and voice your views as to the accuracy of the reports.

Others have recorded and posted their testimonies of the Restoration, the teachings of the Book of Mormon, and other gospel subjects on popular video-sharing sites. You, too, can tell your story to nonmembers in this way.

Use stories and words that they will understand.

Elder Ballard also cited the Indy Books blog, where Bookslinger chronicles his daily missionary work.

I think this will prove to be a landmark talk.

Full transcript: Using New Media to Support the Work of the Church

Press release: Apostle Urges Students to Use New Media

(Thanks to several people who sent me this.)

Virtual Missions

November 9th, 2007 by Richard K Miller | No Comments | Filed in Member missionary work, Mormon, Online missionary work, The Church

There were powerful ideas in the Church Newsroom’s recent podcast about the Truth Restored campaign. Elder Quentin L. Cook and Scott Swofford envision a future in which the Internet is used for finding, and missionaries teach and baptize.

The newly redesigned Mormon.org includes a chat feature which connects interested parties with “missionaries and trainers at the Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah.” Brother Swofford said, “A number of baptisms have resulted.”

We previously mentioned that a virtual world like Second Life could be an avenue for sharing the Gospel. Having had some success with the chat feature, it seems the Church may even consider a “virtual mission”:

“We hope to continue to expand both the hours and the scope of that [chat] program to include perhaps a virtual mission at some point where missionaries who might be disqualified for other health-related or other issues can continue to serve as a virtual missionary.” (Scott Swofford)

The Internet to find, Missionaries to teach

November 2nd, 2007 by Richard K Miller | 1 Comment | Filed in Member missionary work, Mormon, Online missionary work, The Church

In a recent Church Newsroom podcast, Scott Swofford, Media Director of the Missionary Department, said new media and the Internet should be used to find people for the full-time missionaries to teach:

“There’s no way missionaries can do what they do now and shoulder the burden of finding. We’re going to have to do the finding using new media. And then, because new media can’t baptize, teach, convert, and testify, we’re going to have to feed that funnel, the product of that funnel, to the missionaries so they can do what they do best. Wouldn’t it be great if my grandson goes…on his mission…and gets to just teach nonstop because media and the Internet have finally picked up their rightful role and are funneling people who want to know.” (Emphasis added.)

Elder Quentin L. Cook said many people will prefer to learn about the Church through the Internet:

“There are a lot of people today who would like to know more about our faith but they are concerned about having their privacy invaded. They want to look at things in their own time and in their own way. They do not want to feel like they have any pressure…. We feel that the Internet and the privacy that it affords people is a wonderful way to do that…. There are a lot of people who are just not going to call a number…. But they will go to the Internet and look into it and we think that’s happening on a significant scale.” (Emphasis added.)

Faithful Church members who share their beliefs online accelerate the Internet’s “rightful role” in finding people for the missionaries to teach.

Source: “Truth Restored” Campaign [mp3]

Favorite Songs About Jesus Christ

October 23rd, 2007 by Karen Merkley | 13 Comments | Filed in Mormon

Hi friends~

As Richard mentioned recently, The More Good Foundation is in the collaborative process of creating Christ.org–a new, comprehensive website about the ministry, life, and teachings of Jesus  Christ.  It’s magnificent to comtemplate. 

As part of the website, we’d like to create music videos related to various aspects of Christ’s life, teachings, and ministry.  We’re currently in the process of selecting the most loved songs and/or hymns about the Savior–including those by artists of other faiths.  We’re currently considering the following:

Amazing Grace
How Great Thou Art
I Believe in Christ
I Need Thee Every Hour
I Know That My Redeemer Lives
Abide with Me; ‘Tis Eventide
El Shaddai by Amy Grant
Never a Better Hero by Kenneth Cope
His Hands by Kenneth Cope
I Can Only Imagine by MercyMe
This is the Christ (lyrics by James E. Faust)

We value your input. What are your personal favorites?  What would you add to the list?  We invite you to send this out to friends and let us know their top selections as well.

Thank you, kindly, in advance, for your time. We look forward to hearing from you. 

Karen

Mormons on Facebook

October 22nd, 2007 by Richard K Miller | 1 Comment | Filed in Cool Sites, Mormon

Facebook now allows advertisers to discover the size of specific demographic audiences. By doing a few searches related to the Church, I was able to get an idea of the number of Mormons on Facebook. (See image below.)

The number of people in the U.S. who listed a Church-owned university as their college*:

  • 20,660 - Brigham Young University
  • 9,300 - Brigham Young University-Idaho
  • 1,200 - Brigham Young University-Hawaii

*A small percentage of BYU students are not Mormons, and I think this figure only includes students. The BYU network, which includes alumni and faculty, has 37,395 people.

The number of people, by country, who listed “The Book of Mormon” as an interest:

  • 11,880 - United States (1 in every 1,679 Americans on Facebook)
  • 700 - Canada (1 in 10,516)
  • 140 - United Kingdom (1 in 45,768)
  • 40 - Australia (1 in 37,458)

These interests are, of course, self-selected and don’t reflect the actual number of Mormons on Facebook. I personally have several Mormon friends who do not list The Book of Mormon as an interest or did not attend a Church-owned university. Though Facebook users can specify a religion, Facebook does not allow advertisers to see demographics by religion.

Other interests listed by people in the U.S.:

  • 696,120 - The Bible
  • 281,380 - God
  • 46,160 - Spending time with my family
  • 38,940 - Religion
  • 26,420 - Going to Church
  • 18,000 - Jesus Christ

The #1 website about Jesus Christ

October 22nd, 2007 by Richard K Miller | 11 Comments | Filed in Announcements, Cool Sites, Foundation, Mormon

The More Good Foundation is pleased to announce a partnership with Dr. Richard Holzapfel to create the #1 website about Jesus Christ at Christ.org. (In the meantime, we are redirecting traffic to Mormon.org.)

Dr. Holzapfel is a BYU professor of Church History and Doctrine and a prolific author. We are very excited and honored to work with him.

Christ.org will include top articles, music, and videos on the life, death, resurrection, and mission of the Savior Jesus Christ. It will be well documented, well designed, and translated into over a dozen languages. We hope it will bring everyone who visits it closer to Christ.

Question for Commenters: What resources or features should the top website on Jesus Christ include?