A place to fire the imaginations and the passions of Christian web masters, organizations, and churches with a vision for the web and cyberminstry. Read more about CWM
Hello. Sean Buscay here; from Christian-web-masters.com.
For awhile now I have been leaning towards passing on the ministry of Christian Web Masters.com and the forums.
I've let it linger in limbo for way too long. The forums are still fairly active, but not as they used to be.
Our forum leaders are great. Many have been here for years. I strongly considered giving the CWM site to a team of its current leaders.
However, after much prayer, I have come to think the whole site needs some one or two to lead the community in a new and fresher direction. Read the full post.
Yes! Finally Clear Well Written about Building a Professional Website with Drupal
Following a link from http://drupal.org/planet I came across the excellent series by IBM developers about developing a profession website using open source technology. In fact, the series focuses on using Drupal as the core.
The professionalism in the process used to redesign the website and the detail with which these articles are written make this series a must read for anyone interested in community websites.
Some items to highlight include:
Earlier this week CWM community member bunced recommended Church123 from within the CWM forum thread topic: EZ to build site, nice layout: which web host would you recommend for
What interested me was the statement by bunced that Church123 is:
"very powerful, and a professional company with a good customer service record and a nice product".
I have to say that after checking out Church123 for myself, I absolutely agree with bunced.
I signed up for a free 30 day trial account and here is what I saw:
In my communications with Gordon, from Church123, regarding my comments about how easy is is to use their system, here is part of what Gordon said:
Our system is not crammed with as many features as some CMS's. We've concentrated on getting the core functionality really, really good. Our strengths are certainly ease of use and support (we genuinely care). In truth if you stick lots of features in the CMS then churches will think they should use them and they litter their sites with all sorts of widgets that actually distract visitors from the reason they came to the site. I go to a church of about 100 people, our site is clean and information rich (it was used as an example by the World Web Evangelism Day). On average we get two new visitors through the doors on a Sunday directly because of our website.
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I just came across this great post from back in April by Dean over at Heal Your Church Web Site about Software as a Service for Church Websites .
It is worth a read and your consideration if you are involved with any Christian Website for an organization. Here is a small snippet to entice you over to read the post:
...SaaS helps keep this highly mobile, suburbanly sprawled congregation together by facilitating both paid and lay staff in terms of communications, sharing materials and schedule management. In other words, the problems solved by FBCF’s use of the CCM go well past that of simple website content ‘manglement.’
Most of the following statistics are taken directly from various resources found at the Pew Internet and American Life Project
Matthew 9
Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness.
When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.
On a typical day:
Work to discover the role of the Church and the Internet
In order to do this, we will educate ourselves about the Internet:
Matthew 5:13-15
You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavor, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men.
You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house.
There are four components involved in being salt and light on the internet.
The following material is adapted as bullet points from research done between June and July in 2006. The research was conducted in preparation for a presentation given to pastors and clergy during a symposium in the July of the same year.
Hello CWM Community.
Okay, I have been reading various material about Myspace . I want to know what our community, and others think about it.
For those who are "enthusiasts" and use myspace, please tell me:
What people generally do while on the site.
Please note: I want to hear from both enthusiasts and critics. Friendly, thought provoking points and counter points are welcome and encouraged.
Please answer the Myspace Thread in the forums.
In Christ,
Sean Buscay
PayPal Donations provides Christian Websites, Churches, and Non-profits with a simple low cost solution for accepting secure online donations. With PayPal Donations your ministry’s members and donors may easily donate from your website using their credit card or bank account on PayPal’s secure server. The advantages to using PayPal’s Online Donations for your Christian Website are similar to those discussed for NetworkforGood.org.
PayPal’s Basic Online Donations includes the following advantages for your Christian organization:
When using PayPal Subscriptions, your members and donors may:
One very nice feature of PayPal donations is that your Christian organization could setup donation links which may be included within emails to your members.
Unlike, NetworkforGood.org, PayPal does not require your Christian organization to be an exempt nonprofit registered with the United States IRS.
One only needs a PayPal account in order to get started receiving online donations and your Christian website can begin receiving online donations in less than five minutes.
PayPal provides the following seven step overview on their website:
From my experience, the “Donations” link in step three is sometimes hard to find. Donation buttons may be generated in the same place you find your PayPal button factory. Also look for the donations link in the copy on the “Merchant Services” page, once logged in.
In order to remain on target with the mission and vision of CWM, those of us on staff must continue to ask ourselves, “What Makes Christian-Web-Masters.com any different from other Website Design and Development Sites and Forums?”
Many of the articles and tutorials on CWM, and many of the discussions held on the Christian Web Master Forums, cover the same topics found on other popular webmaster sites. In fact, those sites like SitePoint.com and AListApart.com have a level of participation and meet “excellence” standards that CWM continues to strive towards.
In discussing new articles to be posted on Christian-web-masters.com, CWM staff member Luke (iLuke) recently explained to another staff member:
The purpose here isn't to compete with sites like SitePoint or pixel2life -- the major focus would be substantially different (even if the content is hugely overlapping). Coming from a Christian perspective, and with the ability to interact in a Christian environment will be what sets this apart. It is not an easy thing to present the basics of HTML from a Christian perspective (there simply isn't a great deal of content there), however, having the ability to discuss the basics of HTML within a Christian community because of a basic article that you read would offer real advantages to a new webmaster.
I also just came across this post from CWM member tjsingleton on his In Awe of Him Ministry site:
Where can you find caring people who enjoy helping others and love Christ? Christian-Web-Masters (CWM) hands down. There are people from all over the world willing to share with you web tips, encourage you to keep it up, and make sure your site doesn't look tacky. (You should have seen my previous design. Just kidding.) Javascript, PHP, Photoshop, SEO and more. It all can be found at CWM and even more.
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