Commentary: Churches, please check your telephone manners
By Alice Smith*
My mother, Irene Massey, is making a move from condo-living to a senior adult facility, and as part of the paperwork involved, I spent several hours on the telephone recently trying to get some needed financial information. I was making the calls because she has trouble navigating phone systems and hearing what people say.
My mother is quite smart and alert and on top of things (she speeds through the daily crossword puzzle in the paper), and her physical problems are mostly related to some hearing loss and trouble walking because of an arthritic knee. She is moving to an independent living facility, but one that offers support services. It is a move she initiated and is ready for, and I believe she will enjoy the other residents and the many activities.
I totally understand her frustration about trying to get a human on the phone when you want some information that you are entitled to and should be able to obtain readily. Convoluted voice-mail systems have become so commonplace that there are Web sites that tell you what to do in specific companies in order to access a person.
But what I've encountered as editor of Wesleyan Christian Advocate, the newspaper of the North and South Georgia annual conferences, is that many churches (not all, by any means) have impersonal phone systems where it's difficult to get a person on the line. Of all the places in the world you would expect to make human contact and hear a friendly voice right from the start, it is a church.
I call a lot of churches in my job, and it's usually during regular office hours when a staff member is normally there. Often I am amazed at what I find (or hear). One church, upon answering, had two full minutes of recorded options (I timed it). There was a greeting, listing of office hours, a fax number, an emergency number, a chance to punch your party's extension or access a staff directory, a lengthy discourse on the church's ministries, an opportunity to hear a monthly devotion - and finally the option to press "0" to talk to a person.
And while I'm at it, I have two other pet peeves. One is calling a church, asking to speak to someone, being put through as if the person were there and then getting the person's voice mail. I so appreciate those who tell me upfront the person isn't in and then offer access to their voice mail, because it gives me the opportunity to ask when the person will be in or if there is someone else who can help me. When you're working on deadlines, this information is helpful.
My other pet peeve is when people e-mail me but my response back doesn't go through because I'm not on their approved list. Once I went on one of our conference Web sites to get information about a specific event, and when I e-mailed the contact name on the Web site, I received the message, "I now allow incoming messages only from senders I have approved beforehand." Why on earth would some give their e-mail address "for more information" and then refuse to receive the e-mails?
I understand and appreciate the conveniences that come with message machines and e-mail, but common courtesy never goes out of style. Particularly it's incumbent on churches--which should place the highest priority on human connection in an increasingly anonymous society--to evaluate how they answer their phones and the image they are presenting to their members and the world.
*Smith is editor of the Wesleyan Christian Advocate, the newspaper of the North and South Georgia annual conferences.
TNUMC Evangelism
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Foundation for Evangelism has new home, expanded vision
By Neill Caldwell*
LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (UMNS) - The newest building on the Lake Junaluska Assembly grounds is the home for the Foundation for Evangelism.
The foundation moved into its high-tech headquarters, valued at more than $2 million, in January. Its administration offices had been off campus in Waynesville for several years, but are now located in a prime spot beside the building site for Lake Junaluska's new Bethea Welcome Center.
The Foundation for Evangelism is an affiliate organization of the United Methodist Church's Board of Discipleship and was organized in 1949 by Harry Denman, a Methodist layperson who strongly believed in evangelism.
"Lake Junaluska was central to Harry Denman's ministry," says the Rev. Jerome Smith, who was director of communications for the foundation until this month. He will be taking a local church appointment. "The SEJ Archives and History Room houses the Denman collection (in the Harrell Center). The Foundation for Evangelism is a direct result of Harry's desire to promote evangelism."
Paul Ervin Jr. is the foundation's executive director, and retired Bishop Richard Looney serves as episcopal director. The staff includes about 20 full-time and contract employees at Lake Junaluska and seven more who are "embedded" in local congregations.
With a new home and a new newsletter, the foundation is expanding its reach into a number of areas beyond its more established programs, including an involvement with scholarships for students in the doctorate programs at Duke and Princeton universities, providing funding for youth workers, providing funding for campus ministry, and using the power of technology to expand evangelism and witness opportunities.
The foundation has developed computer software, "Web-Empowered Church," which seeks to empower churches to create effective Web sites. The software uses "open source" technology, which enables the user to create interactive communities on their Web site for exchanging information relating to things like prayer requests, sermons, education or daily devotions.
"We're working to help many ministries express themselves by providing resources and creating partnerships," Smith says. "We're focused on Christ-centered beliefs and fundamental Wesleyan teachings. What will evangelism mean in the 21st century? We define it as providing resources and education."
Smith says the foundation celebrates being at Lake Junaluska and what it means for Methodism.
"Lake Junaluska is a central place for Methodism, a place where a lot of programs were started," he says. "You might even say it's a small Methodist city. It has a historical role as a place for missions and retreats. But it's also in a unique position to play a fundamental role in the emerging church.
"This little man-made mountain lake is an oasis of faith amidst an ocean of storms."
*Caldwell is a freelance writer based in High Point, N.C.
By Neill Caldwell*
LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (UMNS) - The newest building on the Lake Junaluska Assembly grounds is the home for the Foundation for Evangelism.
The foundation moved into its high-tech headquarters, valued at more than $2 million, in January. Its administration offices had been off campus in Waynesville for several years, but are now located in a prime spot beside the building site for Lake Junaluska's new Bethea Welcome Center.
The Foundation for Evangelism is an affiliate organization of the United Methodist Church's Board of Discipleship and was organized in 1949 by Harry Denman, a Methodist layperson who strongly believed in evangelism.
"Lake Junaluska was central to Harry Denman's ministry," says the Rev. Jerome Smith, who was director of communications for the foundation until this month. He will be taking a local church appointment. "The SEJ Archives and History Room houses the Denman collection (in the Harrell Center). The Foundation for Evangelism is a direct result of Harry's desire to promote evangelism."
Paul Ervin Jr. is the foundation's executive director, and retired Bishop Richard Looney serves as episcopal director. The staff includes about 20 full-time and contract employees at Lake Junaluska and seven more who are "embedded" in local congregations.
With a new home and a new newsletter, the foundation is expanding its reach into a number of areas beyond its more established programs, including an involvement with scholarships for students in the doctorate programs at Duke and Princeton universities, providing funding for youth workers, providing funding for campus ministry, and using the power of technology to expand evangelism and witness opportunities.
The foundation has developed computer software, "Web-Empowered Church," which seeks to empower churches to create effective Web sites. The software uses "open source" technology, which enables the user to create interactive communities on their Web site for exchanging information relating to things like prayer requests, sermons, education or daily devotions.
"We're working to help many ministries express themselves by providing resources and creating partnerships," Smith says. "We're focused on Christ-centered beliefs and fundamental Wesleyan teachings. What will evangelism mean in the 21st century? We define it as providing resources and education."
Smith says the foundation celebrates being at Lake Junaluska and what it means for Methodism.
"Lake Junaluska is a central place for Methodism, a place where a lot of programs were started," he says. "You might even say it's a small Methodist city. It has a historical role as a place for missions and retreats. But it's also in a unique position to play a fundamental role in the emerging church.
"This little man-made mountain lake is an oasis of faith amidst an ocean of storms."
*Caldwell is a freelance writer based in High Point, N.C.
