Feed on
Posts
Comments

Ah, I can hear the echos of Peter Gabriel… Well, not exactly but it is exciting when you are mentioned in a national magazine. Check out the article on Godcasting in BusinessWeek Online and discover that Wired Jesus for the “tech savvy Christian.”

Truth be told, the article was done back in May but I just discovered it recently. Cool none the less.

SPECIAL REPORT: PODCASTING
By Olga Kharif

Need a Lift? Try a Godcast
To get their message out, religious groups of all stripes are turning to podcasts with a spiritual bent — and finding lots of listeners

See Our Podcast Picks
A pleasant voice laced with humor recounts how he once concocted a Christmas story in which Star Wars robots C-3PO and R2-D2 visit Baby Jesus. Later in that same podcast — a seven-minute audio snippet designed for listening on iPods and other digital music players — Father Roderick Vonhogen compares hearing from a fellow Star Wars junkie to “getting a personal e-mail from the Pope himself.” Although he ends his monologue with “God Bless,” it’s the Star Wars theme song that triumphantly wraps up the program.
Advertisement

Clearly, Father Roderick, of the Archdiocese of Utrecht in the Netherlands, is not your typical Catholic priest, and his broadcast is no ordinary sermon. Even Vonhogen’s podcast home page eschews the ecclesiastical. It’s a play on the hip Apple (APPL ) ad, the one with a silhouette of a figure dancing to the music of an iPod, shown in contrasting white. Only, Vonhogen’s dancer also wears a priest’s white collar.

FRUITFUL AND MULTIPLYING. Welcome to the world of “Godcasting,” where religious and inspirational podcasts come from Presbyterians, Mormons, Jews, Buddhists and, yes, even pagans. Depending on your point of view, these programs may strike you as fun, convenient, or blasphemous. But they’re rarely boring.

Godcasts have multiplied faster than most other types of podcast programming and have emerged as one of the genre’s most popular. Vonhogen’s Catholic Insider program ranks as No. 3 — ahead of programs with streaming jazz, rock songs, or general news — on portal PodcastAlley.com, which lists 2,884 podcasts. And Catholic Insider keeps on moving up in the charts.

So are many of the other 171 religious and inspirational podcasts out there that bear such names as Wired Jesus Podcast (a program for tech-savvy Christians) and Outchurched. The latter features Ryan King and Dan Tripp, both of whom once aspired to the ministry but became disillusioned with the church. They created a blog and podcast aimed at one of the largest Christian demographics: people who have left the church. In one podcast, King and Tripp discuss why they stopped attending services. “Both of us wouldn’t care if the church died,” says Tripp.

And the Pagan Power Hour podcast includes information about casting magic spells and proper foods to cook for pagan holidays.

INTERNATIONAL REACH. Most religious organizations have no official position on Godcasting. “The church encourages the use of all forms of media to spread the Gospel message,” says Bill Ryan, a spokesman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Washington, D.C. (A call to the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the U.S. and Canada elicited, “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”)

Most Godcasts are more mainstream than the Pagan Power Hour. They’re typically produced by preachers looking to spread the word beyond their small congregations. About 1,900 people from as far as Belgium and Vietnam tune in to hear the Reverend Tim Hohm, whose Central Assembly of God in El Sobrante, Calif., has only 100 parishioners.

How does Holm explain his global appeal? “I am upbeat and inspirational,” he says. Each 15-minute RevTim show offers advice, such as how to keep one’s temper in the workplace or how to carve out more time to spend with the kids. The latter has turned into a challenge for Hohm now that he does podcasts in addition to performing his regular duties.

ASSEMBLING A NETWORK. The programming isn’t all talk. The Reverend John Butler, pastor at Beal Heights Presbyterian Church in Lawton, Okla., has channeled his lifelong passion for psalms (he has collected more than 5,000 of them) into his Psalmcast. Using a home-built PC and a headset from his son’s PlayStation 2 video-game console, Butler spins church music from choirs and bands from as far away as Ukraine and Australia — and he does it like a pro. Before the seminary, he worked as a DJ at a radio station, playing everything from country to gospel.

For those looking for a younger voice, 8-year-old Rachel Patchett, still not quite able to pronounce all of her R’s, plays a Christian song she selects then reads a Bible verse in her weekly podcast, Rachel’s Choice. Up to 1,500 fans tune in to each show, produced by her father and fellow Godcaster, Craig Patchett.

The elder Patchett is a powerhouse in the Godcasting world. A few months ago, he began assembling The GodCast Network, a portal offering 14 different religious podcasts, including RevTim and Rachel’s Choice. Patchett hopes his network will turn others on to Christianity, though he has scored no converts so far.

DOWNLOADABLE MEDITATION. While the converts may be hard to come by, money isn’t. Like a lot of religious programs, these podcasts often rely on the charity of listeners. Roy Harvey, who lives in Orlando, Fla., and runs the LamRim podcast for Buddhists, says he has received checks for as much as $500. So far, he has collected $750 — more than enough to keep his podcast going.

Once every few months, Harvey, a video-game producer, takes time off to travel and record important Buddhist religious leaders giving speeches, which account for most of his programming. Interested listeners also can download meditations but, Harvey admits, “they are just a lot of dead air.”

Kharif is a reporter for BusinessWeek Online in Portland, Ore.
Edited by Ira Sager

This was just too funny not to share. First off, I used to live in Naples, FL, not far from Charlotte Harbor where this happened. But secondly, as a pastor, the one thing you learn about worship services is that you are never really in control – the musicians are. Just keeps you honest to make sure that your sermons are meaningful, relevant, and to the point. Otherwise you may face a revolt like this. Then again, you may deserve it. 🙂

Church mayhem: Rogue choir, earlobe twisting
WBBH-TV

CHARLOTTE HARBOR — The pastor of a Charlotte Harbor church had 16 church members booted from a service after they allegedly refused to stop singing and let the clergyman preach.

Deputies were called at 10 a.m. Saturday by Pastor David Noel of the Seventh Day Adventist Church on Harborview Road.

Noel told a deputy he was instructed by regional church superiors to involve law enforcement to remove the rogue choir.

The deputy issued trespass warnings to the group, and all 16 left the church without incident.

The sheriff’s office got another call from the church shortly before noon when a parishioner wanted to file assault charges against Noel.

Edourd Pierrelus, 57, of Port Charlotte, said Noel got mad at him, hit him in the chest and twisted his earlobe during a church service a week earlier.

The man told the deputy the entire congregation of 25 witnessed the attack. Pierrelus said that because of the way the singing dispute was resolved, he now wanted to pursue charges of simple battery.

Deputies say the dispute is rooted in concerns about the handling of church funds. The members of the rogue choir told deputies they’d handle those concerns within the church.

© 2005 MSNBC.com

Here is the podcast that reflects primarily on the recent death of a teenager in my community and how Christians sometimes are completely unable to deal with tragedy. In light of the the emails I received, I decided to take a new turn in the podcast – a little more reflective than observational, more use of ambient music and other clips. Tragedy and death are universal but it is just aggravating that in important times in life and in the spiritual journey, not only are there those who refuse to converse in postmodern language, they refuse to admit that anything has changed since the 19th Century.

Let me know what you think about this one.

Download the podcast here.

Links:

Coverville – If you like creative takes on music, this is the place to be. Brian Ibbott hosts one of the very first podcasts ever done and it still is one of the best.

Take On Me by ADD Music – Love this cover. Haunting and simple. Not a whole lot of info on ADD on the web page but a lot of good podsafe music.

Mad World by Gary Jules and Michael Andrews from the Donnie Darko Soundtrack

Background Music:

This One or That One? by The Six Parts Seven

A Crappy Day

You know, some days the sun shines here in NW Ohio but the day stinks anyway. Got word this morning that a senior at our local high school was killed in a car wreck – pulled out in front of a semi and killed instantly. Being a local pastor, I was called into the school to help the grief counseling team and being a band dad (I help transport the marching band instruments, do set up, etc…) and she was in the band, I spent time there. To make matters worse, we had a similar accident last year about the same time, and another girl was kllled. She was a member of our youth group, a senior, very active.

Needless to say, the school is stunned, and kids are asking all the usual questions: why did God “take” her, what if she hadn’t been driving along, I didn’t know her so should I feel sad,… you may know what I’m talking about. After a day of grief counseling and talking with my own son, I’m just a little drained and distracted from what I had planned for this weekend’s podcast.

I’m going to take a turn in our wanderings for the next podcast and do one aimed dealing with teenage loss and grief as a resource for our local kids. Not all are “church kids”, not all feel comfortable going to a pastor and asking weird questions, venting anger, questioning God. So I’m going to go that direction.

Bear with me our situation up here and I hope you find it helpful in deal with the grief you experience or try to help others with.

Do not fear – I’ll get back to our next postmodern community, a Christian postmodern community that I think you will find very interesting.

Was watching CSI Tonight and heard a cool version of the old Tears For Fears 80s hit Mad World. Turns out it was on the soundtrack for Donnie Darko, a sci fi flick I missed but seems to have done very well on DVD. Being an 80s music guy, I found a UK dual CD release of the soundtrack that is just a great collection with some of my old favs like Echo and the Bunny Men. If any of you have seen the movie, let me know what you think. I’ll look around for it.

Check out Michael Andrews version of Mad World. You have to download the whole album to get it off of Itunes but its worth it. Anyways, the words are still as good as nearly 20 years ago (ugh, has it been that long?).

Gary Jules – Mad World

All around me are familiar faces. Warn out places, warn out faces.
Bright and early for the daily races, going nowhere, going nowhere.
Their tears are filling up their glasses, no expression, no expression.
Hide my head I want to drown my sorrow, no tomrrow, no tomorrow.
I find it kind of funny, I find it kind of sad. The Dreams in which I’m dying are the best I’ve ever had.
I find it hard to tell you, I find it hard to take.
When people run in circles it’s a very very mad world…
mad world…
Children waiting for the day they feel good, happy birthday happy birthday.
And I feel the way that every child should, sit and listen, sit and listen.
Went to school school and I was very nervous, noone knew me, noone knew me.
Hello teacher what’s my lesson, look right through me, look right through me.
I find it kinda funny, I find it kinda sad. The dreams in which I’m dying are the best I’ve ever had.
I find it hard to tell you, I find it hard to take. When people run in circles it’s a very very mad world…
mad world…
enlarging your world…
mad world…

Too bad about the copyright police. I’d love to play it on the podcast.

I Told You So…

Okay, I said it awhile back and most of you have heard the comments that Katrina and Rita and God’s judgment on the sinful United States and wicked Gulf Coast.

Now it comes to you via a state senator from Alabama, the wrath of God on the Bayou country. Repent sinners and roll Tide, I guess.

Hooray for a loving God smacking us down with some tough love.

Senator says storms are punishment from God
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
THOMAS SPENCER
News staff writer

Hurricane Katrina and other storms that battered the Gulf Coast were God’s judgment of sin, according to state Sen. Hank Erwin, R-Montevallo.

“New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast have always been known for gambling, sin and wickedness,” Erwin wrote this week in a column he distributes to news outlets. “It is the kind of behavior that ultimately brings the judgment of God.”

After touring Gulfport and Biloxi, Miss., and Bayou La Batre, Erwin said he was awed and humbled by the power of the storm. But he wasn’t surprised.

“Warnings year after year by godly evangelists and preachers went unheeded. So why were we surprised when finally the hand of judgment fell?” Erwin wrote. “Sadly, innocents suffered along with the guilty. Sin always brings suffering to good people as well as the bad.”

William Willimon, bishop of the North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church, suggested another response from Christians to the disaster.

“I have no idea what sort of senator or politician Mr. Erwin is, but he’s sure no theologian,” Willimon said. “I’m certainly against gambling and its hold on state government in Mississippi, but I expect there is as much sin, of possibly a different order, in Montevallo as on the Gulf Coast. If God punished all of us for our sin, who could stand?

“Next week, 300 United Methodist clergy from north Alabama are spending a week working together to help folks in trouble on the Gulf Coast,” he added. “That seems to me a much more appropriate Christian response than that of the senator.”

Erwin, a former conservative talk-radio host and now a media consultant and senator, is not alone in seeing God’s wrath at work in the storms.

The al-Qaida in Iraq group hailed the hurricane deaths in America as the “wrath of God,” and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan suggested the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina was divine punishment for the violence America had inflicted on Iraq.

Televangelist Pat Robertson said Katrina might be linked to God’s judgment concerning legalized abortion, and some rabbis suggested Katrina was a retribution for supporting the Israeli pullout from Gaza.

Katrina caused flooding of the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, and Erwin said the Baptists knew they had put themselves on the front lines ministering in a sinful place that could be targeted. He said he didn’t think the hard-hit residents of the low-income lower 9th Ward were singled out for especially harsh punishment but were merely in the way, as were the shrimpers in the struggling fishing town of Bayou La Batre on the Alabama coast.

“If you are believer and read the Bible, you know sin has judgment,” Erwin said. “New Orleans has always been know for sin. … The wages of sin is death.”

Erwin said hurricanes are part of a pattern that was also in evidence in the Sept. 11 attacks. The increase in abortion, pornography and prostitution have caused God to remove an umbrella of protection from America, he said.

`Moving away from God’:

“America has been moving away from God,” Erwin said. “We all need to embrace godliness and church-going and good, godly living, and we can get divine protection for that point.

“The Lord is sending appeals to us,” said Erwin, a member of Shades Mountain Independent Church. “As harsh as it may sound, those hurricanes do say that God is real, and we have to realize sin has consequences.”

Twinkle Andress, executive director of the Alabama Republican Party, said she had not seen Erwin’s column. But she praised his performance as a senator.

“Obviously, I think Hank Erwin is a great senator and been a real leader,” she said.

Not responding directly to Erwin, Samford University professor of divinity Fisher Humphreys said Christians do believe God cares about sin.

“There is a standard about right and wrong conduct, and God is fully aware of whether our conduct measured up to the standard or not,” Humphreys said.

As to God’s control of events, different believers answer the question differently, Humphreys said.

“A God that is irrational and vindictive, and filled with anger – that understanding of God is not the understanding we find in Christ. We don’t believe in a God that is vindictive or cruel.”

Humphreys said there are various schools of thought. One is that God causes some things to happen and permits others; another is that God causes them and we don’t know why; yet another is that He causes things and we do know why; and another is that God causes things and we know He can bring good out of it.

Humphreys said it is obvious that as terrible as the storm was, good has flowed from it. “Look at the outpouring of compassion,” he said.

Humphreys said he would never deny the right of someone rescued off a rooftop to thank God for the rescue, even if that suggests God didn’t answer the prayers of others.

“I have no answer for that,” he said.

E-mail: tspencer@bhamnews.com

© 2005 The Birmingham News
© 2005 al.com All Rights Reserved.

I know, you all missed being serenaded by Dr. Evil. Yes, the last 3 minutes of the burning man podcast didn’t make it up. I just reloaded the full mp3, so if it doesn’t get picked up on ipodder or itunes, just go back to the direct link and download it. You can also use the link below

Sorry. Enjoy the ending and Dr. Evil.

Download the updated podcast here.

Thanks to everyone for the emails checking to see if I was okay. Wired Jesus is alive and well and so am I – down one week with a cold and a hacking cough, which makes for bad podcasting. Add to that being a Band Dad, soccer coach, and the congregation getting into the regular cycle of ministries and small groups – I just got too busy and distracted. I promise to do better and I’m inspired by so many of your emails.

This is the promised podcast on The Burning Man Community, which from what I have found may be one of the best examples of what postmodern community looks like and the ways in which the spiritual journey is being lived out. My voice is still a little rough but hope you will bear with me.

Download the podcast here.

Links

The Burning Man Web Page
Burning Man Artists and Art Community
Out To Change the World: Burning Man at 20 at the San Francisco Chronicle
Burning Spirit by Elliott Marshall on BeliefNet
A Pastor On the Playa
The Sounds of Burning Man – The sound clips on this podcast are from this site, actual audio from Burning Man.

Looks like podcasters react at the speed of the net and the many have put up links to give to the Red Cross and other charities. I have those up but I want to try and focus on providing opportunities for you to do more than money. Call it a pet peeve as a pastor – we often are very good at throwing money at a need and then use it to excuse ourselves of any real investment or contact with it. No doubt, the money is needed and many organizations make sure it is spent for the right needs. Sometimes it will vary – there usually an overhead cost for volunteers, so some percentage of your gift will go to administration, materials, etc… Usually most of the church charities will promise that 100% of your gifts will go to assistance, other groups may not necessarily do that. Check it out for yourself.

One group of charities I won’t be posting are groups that don’t have a proven track record for assistance, namely many of the charities and web pages that have popped up in the past week. Selling bracelets and shirts, promising to be “the” database to match the homeless with families or with relocation, etc… I’m certain some will emerge as legitmate and helpful, others will be scams.

I want to try and maintain a page that will have links where you can go and volunteer, where you can help with the rebuilding, where you can do more than write a check but help your journey merge with a community in need. If you are aware of groups that organize relief convoys, who are setting up soup kitchens, rebuilding homes and churches, etc…, please let me know and I’ll add them to the list. Even as vast as this disaster is, the time will come when the press moves, the interest shifts, but the need will continue for years. I know we are sending a truck down this week and hopefully will be able to send a work crew down to Mississippi or Alabama before the year is out, probably through Lutheran Disaster Relief. There will be other groups, religious and secular, who will be doing the same and I hope to post many of them here.

Please make use of the page, pass the word on, and let’s get to work.

Here are my reflections on Katrina and the age old question of if there is a God, why do things like this happen. My proposal at the end of the podcast is that if you know of ways beyond just giving money to help with the relief effort, send me the links. Rebuilding, equipment convoys and collections, etc… I’ll set up a page where I’ll post these for the long term for folks to access.

I also pose the idea to follow the example of bloggers and The Truth Laid Bare blog and do a podcast day of relief for the victims of Katrina. If you are a podcaster, let’s see if we can get other folks involved, maybe see if we can get Adam Curry to get the word out and make it happen. I’ll try and get a promo off to him tomorrow but let’s all see what we can make happen.

Download the podcast here.

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »