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Mark Finley, director of the Office of
Global Evangelism located at the General Conference (GC) headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, is chairman of the Global
Internet Evangelism Network (GIEN). The GIEN was established by the GC Council on Evangelism and Witness in 2003 as an
entity to promote and develop Internet evangelism as a strategic methodology of evangelism within all levels of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church and its supporting ministries.
Pastor Finley, who is now speaker emeritus of
It Is Written Television, is better know as the television ministry’s former director and speaker. Originally founded
in 1956, It Is Written was the first religious telecast to broadcast in color. Finley and his wife have conducted over 100
evangelistic series that have spanned the globe, and his sermons have been translated into over 40 languages. As a pioneer in
satellite evangelism technology, Finley has reached millions through his satellite evangelistic campaigns, such as NET '95,
NET '96 and ACTS 2000. Hundreds of thousands were baptized as a result. A prolific writer, Finley has written over 60 books,
produced 16 video series and regularly contributes articles to numerous periodicals.
The GIEN holds an annual forum meeting to share strategies and plan for future initiatives. The first
forum was held at the General Conference headquarters in October, 2004. At that meeting Mark Finley conducted a profound
workshop on Principles of Internet Evangelism. His insightful presentation can be heard via streaming audio. Please do
listen to and enjoy Mark Finley's A Call To
Internet Evangelism (RealAudio©), courtesy of Sermons of Hope. The following notes are from the recording:

Mark Finley's internet evangelism analogy is
the growth of the Roman road system during the first century, interconnecting the then known world. The vast network of roads,
built for military and commerce, was key to the rapid spread of the gospel. Consider the following statistics:
The world
population is at 6.3 billion people.
3.2 Billion
have not heard the name of Christ.
A billion people are using the internet and growing every single day.
It is incredibly important that we take advantage of the rapidly
growing internet to reach the otherwise unreachable.
He offered several quotations relating to the internet:
Revelation 3:8 “I know thy works, I have set before thee an open door and
no man can shut it.” This open door is the internet in that governments cannot keep their people from logging onto the
internet, they can no longer keep the gospel away from their people.
I Corinthians 9:22 “To the weak became I as weak, that I may win the
weak: I am made all things to all men that I might by all means save some.” The church would be derelict in our duty to
the gospel if we bypassed the use of the internet. Profoundly convinced that the internet is a powerful means for evangelism.
Evangelism page 123 "Let every worker in the Master's vineyard, study,
plan, devise methods to reach the people where they are.
Evangelism page 70 “Men of varied gifts to be brought in to the work.
Mark Finley tells the story of how he was strongly advised against
doing satellite evangelism. He was warned that people won’t respond to an screen alter call, it will be a big flop for It Is
Written, a great embarrassment for your reputation and for It Is Written. That was 1995. Recently 200,000 people in Rwanda
watching their satellite evangelism series, at least 1 million across Africa, a great success. Millions and millions are
watching via satellite and tens of thousands are being baptized. Internet evangelism needs to do much the same, to reach
millions that the other media do not or cannot reach.
An article titled "Give Me That Online Religion", by Brenda
Brasher, about the future of the church and of Christianity. Computer based religion could become the dominant form of
religious experience in the next century.
Dean Craig has a small personal web based internet ministry. He
contacts in a day more than the greatest evangelists of the last 100 years could hope to meet in a lifetime.
Mark Finley offered several exciting non Adventist models of
internet evangelism:
TruthMedia.com is an evangelical site, based out of Canada,
serving 750,000 visitors per month. It is very intentionally evangelistic. 1400 accept Christ each month. Their sole intent is
to bring people to Jesus Christ. They follow up with a team of 450 volunteers, within 24 hours, for every person who accepts
Christ.
Everystudent.com has 160,000 student visitors per month visiting
the site. A Christian website based on the needs of students, offering information on eating disorders, sexuality, dating,
relationships, study tips. Features chat rooms with volunteer Christian students on hand to help students get involved for
Christ. Related to this, Mark Finley also talked about the Destiny Channel, for college/university students, which he was
invited to join while in Rumania.
Peggy’s Place is a down home chatty website for family, kids,
teens. Peggy is a house wife, with no money, no budget. She wrote to say, "I am the most thrilled woman because today I can
minister to 154 countries."
Andrew Careaga has a church of about 40 to 50 members and an
eMinistry website. He offers a book titled "eMinistry: Connecting with the Net Generation". His penetrating statement -- The
internet is a mission field, it takes missionary minded people to be effective. It takes people with a heart for God.
Mark Finley elaborated on seven things that we can do better with
the Internet:
1)
Cast a bigger net to meet peoples felt needs (what they think they need) and
their fundamental needs (instilled in us by God). Jesus met the physical needs of the people before meeting their
spiritual needs. Jesus asked -- What seek you? He used the What Seek You principal of evangelism. That is the key
principal of the gospel. Dream about your website and how you can broaden the base, for a larger net.
2) Blend comments with
content (e.g. blend in health and family topics). The genius of the web is interactivity, such as on line
chaplains, doctors on call and Christian monitored chat rooms. Where principals of health can be talked about and counseling
made available. People with careers, in their spare time on the internet studying the Bible with people.
3) Linking evangelism with
the web. Every live seminar having a corresponding web page, a follow up program to nurture new converts.
4) Develop lay volunteers.
It is a big challenge to develop a well qualified team. Too many are super legalistic or super liberal, or too quick to be
overbearing. Careful screening is vitally important.
5) Add audio appeals
and stories of lives changed by the gospel. Click here for Christie's audio testimony. We have not been using the power of
testimony on the web page. Bible lessons about the Sabbath, sharing about how we enjoy the Sabbath, starting Friday night. The
internet has a far greater capacity than we have ever imagined before.
6) Internet based church.
Examples of the Anglican Church and it's declining church attendance, setting up successful web based churches. Transforming
the way Anglicans do church. Churches in Europe doing similar web based church projects.
7) We need web based
ministries for former Seventh-day Adventists. |