Book Excerpt 
		
		NetCasters: Weaving the Nets 
		
		By Craig von Buseck 
                  CBN.com Contributing Writer  
                
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  This is an excerpt from NetCasters: Using the Internet to Make Fishers of Men by Craig von Buseck (B & H Publishers)  
              Chapter Three: Weaving the Nets: Building Your Internet Presence 
              The Time magazine 2006 Person of the Year was you—the  individual. The Internet made this possible.  
                              In declaring every person the Person of the Year in 2006, Time was recognizing a basic, fundamental shift in the state of communication,  information, and ideas in this new millennium—and this was all made possible by  the advent of the Internet—and more recently Web 2.0. 
              The editors of Time said this to justify  their controversial selection of the 2006 Person of the Year: 
              Look at 2006 through a different lens and you’ll see  another story, one that isn’t about conflict or great men. It’s a story about  community and collaboration on a scale never seen before. . . . It’s about the  many wresting power from the few and helping one another for nothing and how  that will not only change the world, but also change the way the world changes. 
                The new Web is a very different thing. It’s a tool for  bringing together the small contributions of millions of people and making them  matter. Silicon Valley consultants call it Web 2.0, as if it were a new version  of some old software. But it’s really a revolution. [1] 
              Today the Internet is about relationships and  communication—information, while still important, is secondary.  
              Definition of Internet Evangelism 
              To understand effective Internet evangelism, we first need to  define what it is. Tony Whittaker is a leading NetCaster based in the United  Kingdom who edits the monthly Web Evangelism Bulletin. He is also the driving  force behind the annual Internet Evangelism Day, cosponsored by the U.S.-based  Internet Evangelism Network (IEN). I asked him to describe what he believes to  be effective outreach on the Web. 
              “Effective Internet evangelism almost always is  one-on-one because a person reading a page is, of course, always one  person. And so a writer should always be writing as if to one person, not  preaching as if to a congregation. The gifts needed for a Web writer are those  of a journalist, not a preacher. A preacher has a captive audience who has  already decided to attend church, or another church-like event. A Web writer  has no captive audience, since they can click away within seconds if they do  not like the page. He or she must know how to write enticingly and keep the reader  going down the page. 
              “Any conception of Web  evangelism as some sort of magical broadcast effect that reaches people  automatically is, of course, misplaced, just as TV broadcasting does not  either. People actually have to decide to tune in for TV or click on a link,  for the Web, and then decide to stick around. 
              “This concern about ‘real’  evangelism only being face-to-face evangelism is certainly something I come  across. I guess some answers to this concern would be that most actual  conversions I ever read about online usually result from a considerable time of  e-mail (or similar) discussion and mentoring. Although I am sure it happens  that people read something and come to faith immediately, just as they may when  receiving a tract or watching something on TV, in practice these things are  only one link in a chain, and ongoing contact with a real, praying, person is  actually the way it happens most of the time, just as in the non-Web world.” 
              Web evangelists, or NetCasters, have found ways in which an Internet-based  relationship is both different and less deep than a face-to-face relationship.  There is, on the other side, that sense of being able to ask and discuss with  someone online things you would perhaps find hard or impossible to talk through  face-to-face.  
              “For many people, face-to-face evangelism is not an option,”  Whittaker explains. “Only if every person in the world had a good relationship  with someone they knew as a Christian, or were likely to frequently meet a  known Christian in a setting where they could share their faith, would other  methods of evangelism not be needed. In many countries, the chances of ever  meeting an evangelical are slim—Eastern Europe, Japan, or the Middle East, for  example. Therefore Web evangelism becomes even more strategic in these places.” 
              The 99 to 1 Problem 
              Millions of Christians around the world are now on the Internet  every day. As I have pointed out, globally, approximately 1.7 billion people  are logging onto the Web on an ongoing basis. [2] The world is flocking  to the Internet and digital media outlets. The Web is now the new electronic  meeting place, especially for people age thirty and under. 
                              The problem is that, just as in the real world, Christians and  non-Christians are barely talking to each other online. While it seems that  everyone is on the Web, there is a major disconnect between the majority of  Bible-believing Christians and the rest of the online subculture.  
              Tony Whittaker has named this  phenomenon the “99 percent rule since Christian Web sites are created for other  Christians, while only 1 percent of Christian Web sites are designed to  evangelize the lost. [3]  
              We can see this same rule reflected in Christian book and music  publishing as well; an examination of titles and videos reveals that the vast  majority of material, in terms of language, content, and worldview, is produced  entirely for Christians. The lack of truly evangelistic Web sites in the  English language (let alone other languages) is a tremendous problem facing the  church today. The vast majority of Web sites with Christian content are  targeted to a Christian audience for the purpose of information or  discipleship. 
              In order for the NetCaster to overcome this 99 to 1 problem, he  or she must first recognize the importance of stepping out of his or her  comfort zones and into something that might be new and different. And they must  have a thorough understanding of what the Internet is and what methods are  effective in catching the attention of the masses and directing them to Christ. 
            That chasm between those who need to know Jesus as their Savior  and those who are actually doing Internet evangelism is very wide indeed. But  people around the world are going online every day seeking truth. There is an  incredible opportunity for evangelism and discipleship on the Internet.  
              “God is behind Internet evangelism in a very real and powerful  way,” says NetCaster John Edmiston. “People do their secret thinking on the  Internet, and because of that people explore things on the Web—such as who  Jesus Christ is—that they can’t or won’t explore in public.” [4] 
              Walt Wilson, founder and chairman of Global Media Outreach,  agrees that the Internet provides a golden opportunity to reach the nations for  Christ. “You and I are the first generation to hold the technology to reach every  person with the gospel and to accomplish the task of the Great Commission. What  is our strategy to tell people about Jesus?” he challenges. “Will we act on  what we believe?” [5]  
              In order to harness the power  of the Internet for evangelism, the NetCaster must have a firm understanding of  the current state of digital technology, and also a sense of where the Internet  is going from here. 
              Internet and Modern Communication 
              The Internet is rapidly evolving—constantly reinventing itself.  Convergence, community, collaboration, and interactivity are the words that  best describe the direction the Internet is taking in this new millennium. In  his groundbreaking book Wikinomics, futurist and  Internet analyst Don Tapscott, along with Anthony D. Williams, shares the results  of a $9 million research project that investigated how collaboration through  Internet communities is creating an explosion in innovation, communication,  creativity, and mankind’s overall knowledge. 
              “From the Internet’s inception its creators envisioned a  universal substrate linking all mankind and its artifacts in a seamless,  interconnected Web of knowledge,” Tapscott and Williams observe. “This was the  World Wide Web’s great promise: an Alexandrian library of all past and present  information and a platform for collaboration to unite communities of all  stripes in any conceivable act of creative enterprise. 
              “The Internet is becoming a giant computer that everyone can  program, providing a global infrastructure for creativity, participation,  sharing, and self-organization. . . . The new Web is fundamentally different in  both its architecture and applications. . . . Whether people are creating,  sharing, or socializing, the new Web is principally about participating rather  than about passively receiving information. 
              “The bottom line is this: The immutable, standalone Web site is  dead. Say hello to a Web that increasingly looks like a library full of chatty  components that interact and talk to one another. . . . This makes it very easy  to build new Web services out of the existing components by mashing them  together in fresh combinations.” [6] 
              This “new Web” that Tapscott  and Williams describe has come to be known as Web 2.0. The thrilling news for  the NetCaster is that most people who receive Christ online come to the point  of praying a prayer of salvation through one-on-one relationships that are  built naturally. These kinds of personal relationships and conversations have  exploded in growth through the advent of Web 2.0—and all the interactivity it  encourages.  
              The Emergence of Web 2.0 
              Web 2.0 represents the convergence of a number of elements that  make up the modern Internet: broadband penetration, online video, and  communication tools like e-mail, chat, forums and message boards,  individualized content creation, social networking, microblogs, blogs, vlogs,  mobile digital devices, and podcasting. This phenomenon presents a plethora of  opportunities for the Internet evangelist to connect with seekers and point  them to Jesus. 
                              Web 2.0 can also be applied to changes in the ways software  developers and end users view the Web. According to Tim O’Reilly, “Chief among  those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get  better the more people use them. This is what I’ve elsewhere called ‘harnessing  collective intelligence.’” [7] 
              Author Rex Miller thinks tools like these present ministries with  a huge opportunity for reaching the next generation. “Web 2.0 represents a new  revolution on the Internet—open participation,” he says. “It also provides a  wonderful model for change and creates a critical mass that I hope unleashes an  iGeneration revolution.” [8] 
              Kevin Hendricks wrote of the phenomenon, “The simplest way to  understand Web 2.0 is that it has given power to the people. While Web 1.0 was  all about passive surfing, Web 2.0 is about letting everyone contribute—whether  that contribution is written opinion (blogs), feedback (comments), video  (YouTube), photos (Flickr), connection and community building  (MySpace/Facebook/LinkedIn), or knowledge (Wikipedia). 
              “More than technology or community, Web 2.0 is about a new frame  of mind,” Hendrick’s explains. “Less is more; design matters; it’s OK to start  small; mistakes happen; do it cheap; anyone can do it; and share. Web 2.0 is  about decentralizing power and information and putting it in the hands of  amateurs. And it’s OK if they get something wrong or it’s not as good as  professionals would do it, simply because the sheer volume of information  available makes up for a few deficiencies.” [9] 
              Web 2.0 and NetCasting 
              Evangelism on the Web occurs as a result of relationships, and  relationships online happen in large measure as a result of Web 2.0—this second  generation of Web-based communities and hosted services, including social  networking sites, and wikis (collaborative information sharing sites) that are  intended to allow collaboration, syndication, communication, and sharing  between users. [10] 
              So what does the emergence of these global online conversations  mean for evangelism on the Web? In a word: everything. 
              Jesse Carey, a social media strategist, explains  the importance of Web 2.0 in building relationships online and how someone can  take these concepts and incorporate them into a strategy for Web evangelism.  “We always want the readers to engage with the content. With some traditional  forms of media, whether it’s print, radio, or television, it’s on the terms of  the media outlet. You have to tune in at a certain time. You have to have the  right channel. You have to subscribe to the magazine. It’s all on the outlet’s  terms. The Web 2.0 thing started with putting media in the user’s terms. They  can take the podcast with them wherever they go. It’s the same with Web sites. 
              “The outgrowth is people taking ownership of the content. And  that’s when you start seeing user submitted content and people being able to  interact with it. So in terms of using that for evangelism, on a basic level,  it enables users to comment and contact other users, or to contact the author  with more questions. And if that’s not practical, if there are too many users,  have a comment area where they can have a small community forum to discuss the  ideas. If they have questions, or if they have comments, or ideas that they  want to put into the conversation, enable that. 
              “That helps them, not only to engage and take ownership of the  content, but from an evangelism perspective to get any answers that they’re  looking for and kind of dig deeper with the issues.” 
              So in light of this Web 2.0 revolution, it’s a mistake to create  an evangelistic Web site with the idea that it will be merely “tracts on a  screen.” Such an approach is simply not in keeping with what the Internet has  become. Instead, we must understand the Web’s nature as a communication medium,  recognizing that people viewing the information placed on the Internet—whether  it be text, audio, video, graphics, or photos—beg to have conversations about  it.  
              Once we see the Internet as a modern-day forum for ideas and  relationships, then we must learn how to work with its inherent strengths and  either avoid or understand and use its weaknesses. When we do this, we will  begin to harness and use the staggering opportunities that await the NetCaster  online. 
              Interactive and Two-way 
              Tony Whittaker explains that one of the greatest attractions of  Web 2.0 is this interactivity. “The user controls completely what Web pages  appear on his or her monitor. Each person will have a unique route of personal  choice through any Web site, and across billions of Web pages around the world.  The two-way nature of the Web means that the user is no longer a passive  recipient. When you listen to radio, the experience is one-way—unless you can  phone in or write a letter. But the Web makes it easy for users to express  opinions and interact with Webmasters by e-mail or instant messenger, and  discuss a site with other users by bulletin board, blog response form, or chat  room. At last, “my opinion counts.”  
              “People want to be players, not just spectators, part of the  action, not on the sidelines,” writes Charles Leadbeater in his book We-Think. [11]  Just as a newspaper aims to build loyalty among its readers, a Web site can  generate a sense of community—the feeling that users can identify with the  site. Successful sites understand how to create welcoming interactivity. 
              Relationship and connection are at the heart of the Internet—and  of Internet evangelism. “Before the Web, a person’s circle of relationships was  usually initiated by face-to-face contact, and then sustained by personal  meetings, letters, or phone,” Tony Whittaker explains. “Naturally, there tended  to be a geographic limitation to a circle of relationships. But with the Web,  relationships can be initiated and maintained online, and physical location is  no longer an issue. Using the Web, people can also maintain, at least at a  limited level, a much wider range of relationships. 
              “Relationships are, of course, a key to evangelism. Very few  people become Christians merely by hearing or reading a proclamation of the  gospel. Analyze a range of testimonies, including Web-mediated stories, and in  almost every case, you find that an ongoing relationship with a praying  Christian played a key role. 
              “So effective online evangelism needs to be relational.” [12] 
              Johnnie Gnanamanickam is the Manager of Internet Development in  the Digital Media Department at the Christian Broadcasting Network. Commenting  on the monumental changes occurring on the Internet today as a result of the  Web 2.0 revolution, he observes, “I think God had this planned all the  way—because if you look at what’s happening on the Internet with Web 2.0 and  social networking, basically, it now becomes possible to replicate kingdom work  on the Internet. We used to have it where we could push content to people on  the Internet, which was great. You were preaching a message and getting it out  there. But when you get to discipleship, it has to be relationships. It has to  be two-way communication. You cannot have a one-way communication going on to  make disciples. 
              “You cannot have a machine relating to someone and making a  disciple. You have to have relationships built over time. Web 2.0 and social  networking make that possible. You have the opportunity now to actually build a  church on the Internet because these are real people talking to one another,”  Gnanamanickam explains. “You have real relationships that can be built over  time and taken from one stage to another. You can actually really talk a person  through to salvation.” 
              The Web 2.0 transition from content to community is a vitally  important shift for those involved in Internet evangelism, says writer and  NetCaster Jim Watkins. “I think at first we were just slapping content up there  without any real idea of creating community or creating relationships. With  books and magazines you don’t have a lot of back and forth. Now there is  interaction. In my e-mail newsletter I’m trying to build up that relationship.  So I think it’s gone more from content to community.” 
              Internet evangelists now recognize that conversations lead to  relationships and relationships lead to conversions. It’s no longer enough to  simply post content on a Web site and hope people will find it, read it, and  come to Christ. With the advent of Web 2.0, Internet evangelists are now  fostering communication through rich, interactive Web sites that utilize  various types of content to attract and inform the user, then encourage them to  enter into conversations with other seekers, and with other believers, with the  goal of praying a prayer of salvation. 
              The Future of the Media and Internet Evangelism 
            As interactivity explodes with the  growth of Web 2.0 evangelistic sites, Walt Wilson of Global Media Outreach  believes the need will be for shorter content online with sixty-second audio  and sixty-second video cuts being the norm. While ministries should stay  current on technology, Christians need to do a better job leveraging the  technology that is already available because, “we haven’t really even started  using the full potential of the Internet for effective gospel presentation.”  
                              Wilson made the following  recommendations for individuals and ministries interested in evangelism online: 
              
                -                 Focus on things that think, such as mobile digital devices and  cell phones. 
 
                - Become an expert on search and search engines for search engine  optimization.
 
                - Become familiar with convergence among different forms of  technology and communication.
 
                - Stay in the mainstream. Ministry can’t lag behind technologically  as it has in the past.
 
                - Learn how to tell the story of Christ in sixty seconds.
 
                - Become an expert in podcasting. [13]
 
               
              The Internet is constantly changing, and  NetCasters need to keep up with these developments if they are to be effective.  If you’re on a social network, what new applications are rolling out? What  opportunities are there to use them to evangelize? What new technologies and  software applications are around the bend that will make it possible for me to  more effectively reach people with the gospel? 
              A  review and understanding of some of these major trends can help the NetCaster  anticipate and prepare for shifts in the Internet audience, and then position  their ministry to take advantage of those trends. Digital media blogger  Haydn Shaughnessy provides a foreshadowing of what he sees as the  direction of the media and Internet in the coming years: 
              
                - personal syndication of content
 
                - IPTV: television over Internet networks
 
                - personal television and citizen television
 
                - citizen media, online newspapers, and magazines from user  content 
 
                - user referrals of articles from other sources 
 
                - social bookmarking to save and categorize a personal collection of  bookmarks and share them with others
 
                - corporate and political television: running a television channel  is going to become a must-do for those types of organizations 
 
                - new search engines: strong on content that evolves when people  codiscover and recommend audiovisual content
 
                - live performance
 
                - wikis: a Web site that allows users to add and edit content  collectively 
 
                - games and virtuality: massively multiplayer online games  
 
                - classifieds: Craigslist has demonstrated the appeal and  effectiveness of online classifieds
 
                - online movies: both professional and amateur 
 
                - portals: a site that the owner positions as an entrance to other  sites on the Internet, typically with search engines, free e-mail, chat rooms,  and other services
 
                - online magazines: CBN.com and ChristianityToday.com are examples  of strong online magazines in the Christian space 
 
                - mixed media: using a print, photography, video mélange to  create a new way of telling stories [12]
 
               
              All of these innovations—and more—are making the Internet a very  inviting place to be today. And the democratic marketplace of the Internet will  determine what will be the next Facebook, MySpace, or YouTube. The wise Web  evangelist will do well to stay in touch with these changing trends and design  his or her outreach accordingly.  
              The encouragement is that Web tools are reasonably priced and  access to your target market is nearly unlimited. The real question today for  ministries and individual evangelists is not whether you have a Web presence,  but how much of a Web presence do you need to be as effective as possible?  
              Building Your NetCaster Ministry 
            So once you know how the Internet works,  you can begin to design and build your Web outreach. 
              “Start with what you think you want to  try to accomplish and then pick the tools,” Web designer and marketer Alex  Demeshkin advises. “Don’t start by saying, ‘Everybody’s doing mobile, or video,  or whatever.’ Don’t start with technology. The Internet is just a tool. It’s  the basic human nature and principles of connecting with people, being  relevant, knowing who you are talking to—who they are, what their background  is, what their cultural frame of reference is—that is what matters. Then you  use the tools to accomplish this.” 
              When building a Web site for an existing  ministry, you need to know the goal and objectives of that organization. Is it  an existing brick-and-mortar church with a large congregation and you want to  develop a strong Internet presence? What kind of Web outreach you build depends  on your vision and available resources.  
              “Building an effective Web outreach is  very time-intensive,” Demeshkin explains. “There is a lot of trial and error.  There is a lot of experimenting and saying, ‘OK, this didn’t work. Let’s try  something else.’ 
              “But when you know what you want to do,  and you say, ‘This is who I am trying to reach, and this is what I’m trying to  do,’ then you look at bringing in a person that is familiar with that  technology.” 
              Demeshkin explains that the biggest  problem in designing an effective Web site of any kind is an intersection of  marketing and technology. “That is a hard combination that makes it really  difficult to nail down. Sit down and put a few heads together and look at the  toolbox that you have—e-mail marketing, video, mobile, Web site, flash video,  cat text messaging, databases—then you pick the tools that are appropriate for  what you’re trying to do.” 
              The  basic technological investment a beginning Internet evangelist needs to start  entirely depends on what he’s trying to accomplish. Someone can set up a blog  using a system such as Blogger in about a minute. Other content management  system (CMS) tools can help the NetCaster build Web sites or church sites  without any technical ability, though a solid understanding how Web sites work  is required. 
              Google, Yahoo, Network Solutions, and  many others, offer free Web sites. Web service providers such as 1and1.com  offer a CMS design system, inexpensive domain registration, and hosting for  minimal cost.  
              Some of the things to consider when  designing your Web outreach include: 
              What is God calling you to do? 
                              What are your resources (money, talent, technology, time,  helpers/volunteers, etc.)? 
                              How much server space do you have—and what methods can you use  with the amount of server space available to you? 
                              Who is your target audience? What are their cultural, religious,  political, socioeconomic, age, and gender distinctives? 
              How does your calling match the needs of your target audience? 
              What tools/methods will work to reach your target audience online? 
              What platform or platforms will you employ to cast your net? 
              Once you have answered these questions,  you can begin to design your outreach through your Web site, Facebook, MySpace,  mobile phone, YouTube, Second Life, My.CBN.com, Tangle, MyPraize, MeetFish, or  whatever avenue the Lord directs you to use. 
              Within these various types of Web sites  and digital platforms, you will need to also decide what types of content and  tools you will offer, including: 
              
                - text articles
 
                - short video clips, or clips linked from YouTube or Tangle
 
                - chat or instant messaging
 
                - message boards and forums
 
                - social networking functionality—being an incarnational presence on  the Web
 
                - e-mail
 
                - photo sharing
 
                - blogs and vlogs (video blogs)
 
                - news and current events
 
                - in-depth discipleship training materials
 
                - cultural commentary
 
                - testimony creation and syndication
 
                - children and adult animation
 
                - church-related tools and functionality
 
                - online mentoring
 
                - classified ads
 
                - online dating service (like eHarmony)
 
                - Skype (Internet telephone and video)
 
                - online radio
 
               
              Or you could use the tools already  available through Facebook, Second Life, MySpace, My.CBN.com, or another social  networking site. These are only some of the leading tools used by NetCasters  around the world. The list of possible content choices and methods for  evangelism is as endless as your creativity, energy, and resources can stretch. 
              Some of the other practical  considerations a NetCaster needs to be aware of when launching an outreach  include: 
              
                - submitting yourself under the covering of a local church or  mature Christian ministry;
 
                - balancing family, work, ministry, and other commitments in life;
 
                - counting the spiritual costs, including time in prayer, sacrifices  of other things in life that you may want to do;
 
                - developing a statement of faith and doctrine;
 
                - assembling your prayer covering and scheduling regular times of  prayer, both individually and as a team;
 
                - learning apologetics and Web evangelism techniques and tools;
 
                - creating an Internet evangelism strategy master plan; 
 
                - incorporating as a not-for-profit and tax-exempt ministry, or as a  for-profit business entity;
 
                - recruiting of volunteers or hiring a professional staff—including  knowledge of labor laws, tax laws, and other human resource issues;
 
                - budgetary considerations, sustainability issues, fund-raising,  marketing, and promotional endeavors; 
 
                - training your fishermen—in ministry outreach, communication  techniques, technological skills, financial accounting, marketing campaigns,  and public relations.                
 
               
              In developing your ministry strategy,  the wise NetCaster must also consider: 
              How often will you update your site? 
              Will you respond to e-mail personally? 
              How will your message boards be designed and monitored? 
              What Bible translations will be used and quoted from? 
              How will you respond to emergency calls, instant messages,  e-mails, etc.—especially if someone is threatening suicide? 
              How many chat sessions will a volunteer or employee be responding  to at one time? 
              Since the Internet goes to the world, how will you respond to  incoming messages in other languages? Or what languages will you translate your  content into? Will you provide a translation tool? 
              Tony Whittaker has developed a self-assessment tool to help  churches design their Web sites to reach out to seekers  (www.internetevangelismday.com/church-site-design.php). While Whittaker  encourages Christians to be sharing their faith online, he cautions against  becoming too religious in design and presentation.  
              “Sometimes, a site is so totally, irredeemably religious in style  and appearance that I think I could not begin to try to comment, and that their  Webmaster would not begin to comprehend what I was saying anyway. Such sites  will, perhaps, succeed in ministering to very churchy people, and so fulfill  some sort of role. But, oh dear . . .” 
              John Edmiston is quick to remind the NetCaster that much of the  world outside of the United States and Europe is not on broadband, and so Web  sites aimed at these groups need to be designed with this in mind. “If you want  to reach the nations outside the U.S. and the megacities of the world, the best  way to do Internet ministry right now is to set up a Web page with a clickable  form at the end for responses. Design it in HTML to deal with low bandwidth.  Where we are right now, still the bulk of the world is on dial-up.” But he  points out that broadband is rapidly increasing. 
                              The Internet represents a convergence of media in one delivery  mechanism—including video, print, telephone, video games, e-mail, social  networks, linear online television, audio, and video phone—the list of  potential goes on and on. Internet evangelists must consider which of these  tools to use, while at the same time harnessing the energy of exploding social  networks to connect with searching souls all over the world. 
              Flipping the Switch 
              The future of Internet evangelism will be made possible by the  building of relationships through ongoing conversations—as a result of the Web  2.0 phenomenon. This development is critical to the growth of online ministry.  
                              Particularly in countries that have had state-controlled media  monopolies, this democratic element of the Internet will be  revolutionary—socially, politically, and religiously. The freedom of expression  and thought made possible by the World Wide Web will give the Internet  evangelist a tremendous opportunity to reach millions who were once held in  ideological and religious prison. The consequences of this new freedom of  thought will most likely redraw the global map, religiously speaking, in this  century—and it may redraw maps in ways we cannot predict. 
              With the emergence of the Web 2.0 phenomenon, people around the globe  are connecting online and having conversations about life and its meaning. As  the scope and application of Web 2.0 tools grow, only time will tell just how  far the arm of the kingdom can reach.  
              “There are ways of doing church that no one has thought of yet,”  says Pastor and NetCaster Mark Batterson of National Community Church in  Washington, D.C. “That’s the thing that gets us up early and keeps us up late.” [15] 
              Wake up, fishermen; it’s time to cast your nets! In the next  chapter we will examine some of the more fruitful methods being used by Web  evangelists to reach the lost on the Internet today. 
               Order your copy of NetCasters: Using the Internet to Make Fishers of Men 
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               Craig 
                von Buseck is  Ministries Director for CBN.com. He represents CBN on the Executive Committee of the Internet Evangelism Network (IEN).  
                
		
		  
 
 
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