Pastor puts faith in Internet outreach
Online ministry reaches beyond his flock
By TOM HEINEN
theinen@journalsentinel.com
Posted: Oct. 12, 2007
Competing against Rusty the narcoleptic dog, comedian Judson Laipply's evolution-of-dance routine and enough other video vignettes to stretch from here to eternity, Milwaukee Pastor Mark Jeske's earnestness seems a bit of an odd fit for YouTube.
Pastor Mark Jeske
Photo/Karen Sherlock
Time of Grace producer Dwayne Gates and technician Sean Floeter (right) film Pastor Mark Jeske of St. Marcus Lutheran Church in Milwaukee. Through Time of Grace and YouTube, Jeske likes the potential to reach unchurched people.
On the Web
For more information and all of Pastor Mark Jeske's YouTube videos, go to timeofgrace.org and click on "Updates" at the top of the page.
www.timeofgrace.org
Watch the Videos
To see "Baby Got Book" and other popular GodTube videos, go to www.GodTube.com, click on "Videos" and then "Most Viewed."
It's not exactly the kind of digital neighborhood where one would expect to find a conservative Lutheran evangelist hanging out, offering two- or three-minute video messages of faith and hope.
But then, normality is a moving target these days.
Inspired by the immense popularity of YouTube, which Google recently bought for $1.65 billion, Christian entrepreneurs launched GodTube in August. It offers online chats by topic and free sharing of amateur videos, church videos, music videos and movie trailers. It was the fastest-growing Web site in the United States that month and claims more than 3 million unique views each month.
GodTube's most popular video, of a girl reciting Psalm 23, has tallied almost 4 million views.
Its next most-viewed video, with nearly 380,000 views, is "Baby Got Book," a faith-oriented spoof of "Baby Got Back," Sir Mix-A-Lot's 1992 hit in praise of women with big derrieres. Only in this case, instead of talking about booty, the song opens with a woman exclaiming in a Valley girl voice, "Oh, my, goodness, Becky! Look at her Bible. It is so big. She looks like one of those preacher guys' girlfriends."
[GJ - The video of white guys trying to be rappers, almost impossible to watch, reminds me of a Black stand-up routine. The comic said, "Everyone wants to walk like us, dress like us, sing like us, dance like us. Everyone wants to be Black until the police arrive." Apparently none of the young Black men at Jeske's parish wanted to be in the video. Good for them.
One line is that the huge Bible "makes me so horney." The white guy starts the phrase and it is finished with a close-up of a white female. Did anyone notice that the most viewed video is one of a girl reading Psalm 23? The Word of God is effective.]
Jeske, pastor of St. Marcus Lutheran Church near N. Palmer St. and E. North Ave., doesn't draw even a fraction of those views, but he is a multimedia kind of guy who reaches far beyond his church's central-city neighborhood. In addition to the YouTube videos, his Time of Grace ministry offers an Internet blog, podcasts, daily e-mail devotionals and streaming video and audio from its Web site. The ministry mails more than 10,000 booklets or magazines monthly and, as a cornerstone, records weekly, 30-minute Bible-study messages by Jeske in front of his congregation for broadcast.
That television ministry, already in nearly 20 U.S. markets, has expanded within the last two weeks to become available across the U.S. and around the world on cable television and satellite-dish systems over the Daystar Television Network.
"My passion is to connect people with Jesus in a way that makes sense to them on their turf, in their home, on their computer, wherever they like to receive religious information, without the stress and fear of having to cross a threshold and enter a room full of strangers," Jeske said.
Most of his half-dozen YouTube videos have drawn about 60 views apiece, with one on "real hope" getting about 400 views. They are a small part of his efforts, but others have found that this medium - YouTube streams more than 100 million videos a day - packs the potential of a mustard seed.
YouTube videos with Wisconsin roots include:
• Senior Pastor Mel Lawrenz of Elmbrook Church in Waukesha County impersonating Johnny Cash and singing "Ring of Fire" at a congregational meeting. That's garnered almost 5,200 views.
• Children at an Elmbrook camp clapping and dancing to the song "We're All in this Together," from "High School Musical" (about 785 views).
• A performance by the award-winning Sanctus Real band at Fox River Christian Church in Waukesha (more than 10,570 views).
By comparison, Laipply's gyrating demonstration of the evolution of American dance styles, widely cited as the most-viewed video on YouTube, has more than 60 million views.
Pastors using traditional broadcast models are mainly symbolic on YouTube, said Lynn Clark, director of the University of Denver's Estlow International Center for Journalism and New Media.
"It seems to me that a thing like 'Baby Got Book' has more legs, in the sense that it really fits with the YouTube sensibility, because it's all about the pass-along, tripping onto something, (thinking) 'Oh, you've got to see this,' and you forward it to 40 of your friends."
At Time of Grace, Jeske likes YouTube's potential to reach unchurched people. With the average U.S. church attracting fewer than 90 adults on a typical weekend, according to Barna Group research, Internet and broadcast audiences that are small by commercial standards can still greatly leverage a pastor's impact.
That was part of the idea in 2001 when a group of businessmen who worship at Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran churches gathered $500,000 in start-up money in hopes of making Jeske the nation's most visible spokesman for conservative Lutheranism. Six years later, the private nonprofit ministry has grown from one employee to five and cites at least 200,000 viewers a week.
Jeske's Time of Grace program airs in the Milwaukee area at 8 a.m. Sundays on WVTV-TV (Channel 18) and draws about 15,000 viewers in southeastern Wisconsin.
"Americans, in spite of the shame brought to my tribe, the televangelists, by some real boneheads . . . still really want to receive religious information through mass media," Jeske said. "And so I would like to be there to . . . help people enjoy getting into Bible study, just find the fun of it, and really enjoy a relationship with God, one that's not based on fear and guilt, but one that's based on really enjoying the love that God has for people."
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Time of Grace information from Daily Kos:
Eight laymen and a Milwaukee pastor have launched an independent weekly television broadcast here with the goal of offering Lutheran programming to 95% of the households in the United States within five years.
....
Bolstered by a business plan and start-up funding of nearly $500,000, the non-profit organization hopes to make Jeske the nation's most visible spokesman for conservative Lutheranism.
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Jeske's church is 60% white and 40% African-American.
"We just had the look of a universal place, and they liked that," said Jeske, 49.
....
Time of Grace Ministry is incorporated in Virginia. Both the idea and its implementation have come from the laymen, and officials of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, or WELS, have encouraged them.
Other board members include: Tom Baxter, Television Division chief of the U.S. Army Visual Information Center at the Pentagon; John E. Bauer, longtime chief academic officer of Wisconsin Lutheran College and current vice president for academic affairs; Steve Boettcher, president of Boettcher Productions, a five-time Emmy-winning television production firm in Hartland.
Also, Cliff Buelow, of the Milwaukee law firm of Davis & Kuelthau; Bruce Eberle, president of Eberle Communications Group, a national fund-raising firm in McLean, Va.; Arvid Schwartz of Green Isle, Minn., a farmer, former corporate treasurer, and chairman of the Wisconsin Lutheran College board; and John C. Zimdars, president of The Zimdars Co., Inc., a life insurance consulting firm in Madison.
All belong to the theologically conservative WELS, which is based in Wauwatosa. WELS has more than 400,000 members and is the nation's third-largest Lutheran denomination.
The idea for the ministry came from Eberle, who sits on the Wisconsin Lutheran College board with Jeske, Buelow, Raabe, Schwartz and Zimdars.
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