Archive for the ‘Sharing the Gospel’ Category

Success Stories About LDS.net

LDS.net is a network set up by the More Good Foundation as a place where members can blog, chat, share testimonies, and participate in groups and forums.

A lot of good things are happening on LDS.net. See the LDS.net blog for a description of 4 people who have been baptized because of LDS.net and other investigators who are learning about the Church.

If you want to learn more about how to participate in things like LDS.net, see the More Good Foundation Web site or the LDS Online site.

LDS Online Has 52 Members

A few days ago, I blogged about creating social network called LDS Online at LDSonline.ning.com.

It’s been up for only 3 days and already has 52 members, 7 forums, and 3 groups.

LDS Online is Launched!

I have launched a social network called LDS Online at LDSonline.ning.com. (Ning is an online service that lets you create, customize, and share your own social network easily and for free.)

LDS Online is intended to be a community of Latter-day Saints where they can share ideas and collaborate on how to best provide accurate and positive information about the Church on blogs and Web sites. It is intended to be a resource for people who want to respond to Elder M. Russell Ballard’s challenge to participate in a gospel discussion online.

It is not intended to compete with either of these two great sites, but to be complimentary to them:

  • LDS.net is the premier LDS site for blogging, chatting, sharing testimonies, and participating in groups and forums. LDS Online is the place to help you learn how to do these activities, and also to provide some resources to get you started. It also lets you collaborate with others in forums and discussion threads so you can learn to do these activities more effectively.
  • The More Good Foundation Web site is a great resource with ideas to help you share testimony online. LDS Online has a similar purpose, but provides forums, groups, and discussion threads you can use to share ideas and collaborate with others so you can learn to participate online more effectively.

I invite you to participate with us at LDSonline.ning.com.

LDS Online is not owned by or affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Elder Ballard Urges Participation in Internet Conversations

On April 19, 2008, Elder M. Russell Ballard gave a speech at the Brigham Young University Management Society in Washington, D.C. Most of his speech was about using the Internet to share information about the Church. He said that many people go to the Internet to find information about the Church and they find a lot of misinformation and outright falsehoods.

Elder M. Russell Ballard

Let me quote several paragraphs from his speech:

“Gradually, accurate and positive information is rising to the top of lists generated by various search engines. Those seeking information are more likely to encounter accurate information today than at any time since the Internet began, even though we still have a long way to go.

“So let me pose a question. What are you prepared to do about it? If you are a member of the Church, what is your responsibility during this period of unusual attention and debate? Interest has continued at a high level and probably will for some time. If a national conversation is going on about the Church, are you going to be an active participant or a silent observer?

“Church leaders must not be reluctant to participate in public discussion. Where appropriate, we will engage with the media whether it’s the traditional, mainstream media or the new media of the Internet. But Church leaders can’t do it all, especially at the grass-roots, community level. While we do speak authoritatively for the Church, we look to our responsible and faithful members to engage personally with blogs, to write thoughtful, online letters to news organizations, and to act in other ways to correct the record with their own opinions.

“However, I emphasize that it is not always about correcting misinformation. Sometimes it is about getting solid information and ideas out there in the first place. Share your experiences – those from your own life – that show how your values and your faith intersect. It doesn’t matter whether that’s face to face with another person, or whether you do it by participating from your own blog or contributing to someone else’s blog. The most important thing is that you let people know that you are a Latter-day Saint, and that your behavior and attitude always reflect the high standards of the Church and what is expected as a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ. Of course, you will be speaking as an individual member and not as an official representative of the Church.

“Clearly, in this context I am not talking about declaring your testimony of faith in the traditional sense. Naturally, you can and should do that where the setting is appropriate and the audience is receptive, such as a church meeting. Rather, I am talking about taking part in everyday conversations in an unforced way, where your values and your religious beliefs will arise naturally. No one likes to have religion thrust down their throats. Instead, allow people to see how your beliefs lift and shape your life for the better. How does the gospel help you as a parent engage with your teens? How do your values encourage you to participate in civic affairs? How has your experience as a home or visiting teacher enlarged your compassion or care for the sick and needy? How has your Church life helped you to avoid such things as pornography and immorality? How have family councils or home evenings helped you resolve differences of opinion with members of your family? How has your experience in speaking in church helped you address large public groups? Where did you learn to respect and not to criticize other faiths? And so on.”

Elder Ballard concluded by saying “We should join the conversations on the Internet or anywhere else where we can clarify the great purpose of God in restoring to the earth the fullness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ through the Prophet Joseph Smith.”

You can read the entire transcript of Elder Ballard’s speech at the Brigham Young University Management Society in Washington, D.C. on the Church’s Newsroom site.

You may also be interested in reading two other recent talks by Elder Ballard on this topic:

Elder Ballard Urges BYU-Idaho Graduates to Make Their Influence Felt Online

More than 1,400 Brigham Young University-Idaho graduates were urged to make their influence felt in the digital world in an address given by Elder M. Russell Ballard, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, at winter commencement exercises held Friday, April 11.

“Your experience here is not the end of your quest for knowledge,” Elder Ballard told the graduates. “We are blessed as Latter-day Saints to view the acquisition of knowledge from an eternal perspective… Of all the things you have learned at this institution and during your life so far, the most important is that you know the gospel of Jesus Christ has been restored to the earth through the Prophet Joseph Smith and you know that the Church is true. Your knowledge and testimony of this will always be your foundation and your polar star throughout your life.”

Elder Ballard told the graduates their strength and knowledge is needed in a world torn between good and evil. The evidence of this battle is apparent in popular media, including the Internet. “While there is so very much good, informative information on the Internet, one of Satan’s most seductive efforts is the increasingly present pornography appearing in all kinds of media,” he said.

Along with the terrible effects of pornography, the Internet and other media are often used to spread falsehoods, Elder Ballard said. “Every month there are 60 billion searches for information on the Internet. Many are seeking information about the Church; and while some are finding the truth, others find anti-Mormon sites that mislead them and defame the Church,” Elder Ballard said.

With all the falsehoods and misconceptions about the Church found online, Elder Ballard urged the graduates to use their knowledge and testimony of the gospel to influence seekers of truth. “Today I want to encourage you to reach out to others in the world to help change the perception and even the hearts of millions of our Heavenly Father’s children by correcting misunderstandings by sharing with them the message of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ,” he said.

Elder Ballard suggested that graduates join in conversations on the Internet to share the gospel and to explain the message of the Restoration in simple, clear terms. As they participate in these new media, Elder Ballard continued, the graduates should remember first and foremost that they are followers of the Savior Jesus Christ.

Read the entire BYU-Idaho News Release

Religious Teaching Straight to Your iPod

There is an interesting article in today’s USA Today about religious podcasts.

  • “…podcast technology is opening the doors to a wider variety of religious teaching than ever before, available on demand and delivered automatically to the computers of a growing number of Americans hungry for spirituality.”
  • Even small churches can use podcasts to reach large audiences. More than 1 million sermons are accessed monthly from SermonAudio.com, a site that small churches can use to distribute their sermons. The site is now branching out to allow people to access their sermon library of nearly 170,000 sermons by iPhones and iPods.
  • “A survey last year by the Pew Internet & American Life Project found that more people used the Internet to look for religious and spiritual information than to download music, participate in online auctions or visit adult websites.”
  • GodTube, a Christian alternative to YouTube, has about 2 million users a month. It plans to launch a program that will allow churches to set up their own social networking home pages and post slide shows and audio.
  • Experts expect that the easy access to religious teaching from podcasts probably won’t keep people from church, just as TV and radio didn’t hurt church attendance.
  • In some cases, a good podcast might be better than a traditional passive church experience. If a person goes to church and passively listens to a talking head give a sermon, then leaves, a podcast experience might be more engaging.
  • WorshipIdeas offers tips for contemporary church worship leaders.

Keeping Wikipedia Entries Accurate

I am often asked whether individuals should update entries about the Church on Wikipedia, or if the Church will take care of it.

Wikipedia is written collaboratively by volunteers from all around the world. It is not intended that an entry about the Church be written and updated only by the Church. In fact, Wikipedia will only accept a certain amount of updates by the official organization that relates to an entry.

We encourage everyone to routinely review entries for accuracy and update them as individuals.

Special Magazine Issue on the Savior Featured on New Web Page

A computer-animated video featuring the March 2008 special issue of the Ensign and Liahona is now available on the new Web page SpecialMagazine.lds.org.

The video testifies of the Savior Jesus Christ and visually outlines the contents of the March 2008 magazine issue, which is focused exclusively on Christ. It describes the messages and testimonies included in the magazine and emphasizes the central position of Jesus Christ. The video can be linked to or downloaded and e-mailed to those who may be interested in the message or in obtaining a copy of the magazine for themselves.

SpecialMagazine.lds.org provides information on accessing the magazine or its contents in several different ways. To obtain the special issue, visitors can download the issue in PDF format, order a copy or subscription at ldscatalog.com, or visit the Web site JesusChrist.lds.org, which includes the full text of many of the articles from the magazine.

After this initial focus on the March 2008 special magazine issue, we will use SpecialMagazine.lds.org to highlight the other special issues of the magazines.

Supporting the Church Online

BYU NewsNet has published a great article with ideas on sharing the gospel online. It also mentions the great work of the More Good Foundation.

Elder Nelson Talks About New Web Site JesusChrist.lds.org

Read the Newsroom story about the new Church Web site JesusChrist.lds.org.

But sure to watch the video by Elder Russell M. Nelson explaining why we are using the Internet today to spread the message of the Gospel.

Recognizing the New Web Site About Jesus Christ

The Church’s new Web site about the Savior Jesus Christ has been recognized at Best Web Gallery, which is an inspirational gallery site that features quality Web sites (Quality Design = Visual + Technical + Creativity).

If you would like to link to the Church’s new Web site from your blog or Web site, there are some attractive images (and code) you can use at lds.net. Two examples are below. This is a great way to share teachings of the Savior with your readers and visitors.

Jesus Christ, the Son of God

Jesus Christ, the Son of God

Religious Affiliations in America

The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life just released an extensive new survey about religious affiliations of the American public and explores the shifts taking place in the U.S. religious landscape. There are some cool interactive maps on that site. It was also summarized in a USA Today story.

Here are a few interesting facts:

  • Mormonism is one of the strongest religions in the West.
  • Mormons share the tradition of Black Protestants with large young families.
  • Mormons also have one of the highest percentages of women members.
  • Mormons have a higher percentage of Black members than American Catholics and mainstream Protestant churches.
  • Mormons top the middle class income range (50-75K) and are in no way richer than other religious affiliates.
  • Mormons have the highest level of post secondary education with over 32% attending at least some college.
  • Mormons have the highest level of married status (next to Hindus) and the lowest % of “never married.”
  • Mormons have the lowest percentage of families with no children and the highest percentage of families with 4 or more children.

New Web Site on the Savior Jesus Christ

See the new Web site about the Lord Jesus Christ and His essential role in our lives. JesusChrist.lds.org is the newest Web site sponsored by the Church.

Jesus Christ, Son of God JesusChrist.lds.org

Using the words of latter-day prophets and apostles as its foundation, the site focuses solely on the life, teachings, and mission of the Savior and how we can come unto Him and invite others to do the same. In addition to the teachings of Church leaders, the site provides links to the scriptures, additional articles, and multimedia presentations.

We invite you to share this information with your friends and to link to the site from your personal blogs and Web sites.

Fastest-Growing Churches In America

The two fastest-growing churches in the United States and Canada are Jehovah’s Witnesses and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, according to the National Council of Churches’ 2008 Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches.

Although Jehovah’s Witnesses currently rank 25th in size with over 1.06 million members, they reported a 2.25 percent increase in membership in a year. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints grew 1.56 percent and is listed as the fourth largest “church.”

The following are the largest 25 churches in the US and Canada (ranked by membership):

1. The Catholic Church – 67,515,016
2. Southern Baptist Convention – 16,306,246
3. The United Methodist Church – 7,995,456
4. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – 5,779,316
5. The Church of God in Christ – 5,499,875
6. National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc. – 5,000,000
7. Evangelical Lutheran Church in America – 4,774,203
8. National Baptist Convention of America, Inc. – 3,500,000
9. Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) – 3,025,740
10. Assemblies of God – 2,836,174
11. African Methodist Episcopal Church – 2,500,000
12. National Missionary Baptist Convention of America – 2,500,000
13. Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc. – 2,500,000
14. The Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS) – 2,417,997
15. Episcopal Church – 2,154,572
16. Churches of Christ – 1,639,495
17. Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America – 1,500,000
18. Pentecostal Assemblies of the World, Inc. – 1,500,000
19. The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church – 1,443,405
20. American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A. – 1,371,278
21. United Church of Christ – 1,218,541
22. Baptist Bible Fellowship International – 1,200,000
23. Christian Churches and Churches of Christ – 1,071,616
24. The Orthodox Church in America – 1,064,000
25. Jehovah’s Witnesses – 1,069,530

Read more at The Christian Post.

March 2008 Issue of the Ensign and Liahona on Jesus Christ

The March 2008 issue of the Liahona and Ensign is focused entirely on the Lord Jesus Christ. In this issue, General Authorities teach vital doctrines about the Savior, and members from around the world share testimonies of the power of the Atonement in their lives.

This issue was created specifically to help readers better understand Jesus Christ, receive a witness of His divinity, and feel a desire to follow Him. It will also give members an opportunity to share with others restored truths about the Savior.

march_2008_liahona_savior_jesus_christ.jpg

Until June 30, 2008, special pricing is available within the United States and Canada for those who want to purchase extra magazines to share. The price is U.S. $33 for a box of 30 magazines. (At this bulk rate, magazines may be ordered only in boxes of 30.) Smaller quantities and copies ordered after June 30, 2008, will cost $1.50 per copy, shipping included.

Please share copies of this magazine with less-active members and those not of our faith. You can order copies online.

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