This is one of the very few articles I can remember seeing about the use of
technology in churches

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Is Jesus the next killer app?

By Greg Sandoval
http://news.com.com/Is+Jesus+the+next+killer+app/2100-1025_3-6066157.html

Story last modified Fri Apr 28 07:20:05 PDT 2006

LAS VEGAS--Tech companies are getting religion.

Companies such as Sony, Panasonic, Avid and Hitachi are helping churches
spread the gospel as part of an effort to cash in on an exploding market
known as "house of worship technology."

In recent years, members of the clergy have begun competing with MTV, video
games and the Internet by jazzing up sermons with image magnification
systems and large-screen video displays, a la Apple Computer's Steve Jobs at
a product launch. The trend has evolved, and churches now are Webcasting to
distant parishioners with sophisticated multicamera operations and pumping
up the volume inside worship areas with state-of-the-art sound systems.

"It's like going to a rock concert," says Patrick Teagarden, one of the
growing number of sound-and-video technicians whose main customers are
churches. "It's a fact: Media helps make it easier for people to pay
attention."

An illustration of the market's growing clout came this week at the National
Association of Broadcasters 2006 electronic media conference. For the first
time, NAB dedicated an exhibit area to tech and consumer electronics
companies that are catering to churches.

The titles of some of the conference sessions included "Radio Frequency
Interference & The Church Sound System," "Worship Software to Expand Your
Media Presentation" and "Microphones & Religious Applications."

Information on the size of the market is hard to come by, but the U.S. has
more than 300,000 churches, synagogues and mosques, according to
"Congregations in America," a book by author Mark Chaves. While most can
count only a few hundred members, a few churches can boast congregations
that top 25,000.

Perhaps America's best example of the tech-savvy house of worship is the
Houston-based Lakewood Church, which last year recorded a weekly attendance
of 30,000. Pastor Joel Osteen needed the Compaq Center, a former basketball
arena that was once home of the National Basketball Association's Houston
Rockets, to serve as his chapel.

Osteen employs three massive video-display screens to project his image to
people sitting in the nosebleed seats. Illuminating the walls and the giant
globe spinning behind Osteen's pulpit are Altman Micro Strips, strip lights
that use a range of tungsten halogen lamps to create different lighting
effects.

Lakewood is also planning a migration to HDTV and recently bought eight
high-definition cameras from Sony. The dollar value on Lakewood's video and
production facilities is about $4 million, according to CIOinsight.com.

At Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Ill., the technology
budget is $1 million a year out of a total annual budget of $27 million,
CIOinsight.com reported.

This kind of spending attracts disciples.

"There's not one major electronics manufacturer who isn't trying to target
this space," said Dan Stark, who operates Stark Raving Solutions, a company
that specializes in outfitting churches with the latest in audio and video
technology.

But for the tech and electronics industries, which haven't shied away from
using sex to sell products, marketing takes a different tone with churches.

"Let's face it, we've all experienced the occasional sleeper on Sunday
morning," says an Internet advertisement from Audio Visual Mart, an online
media tools store. "But it doesn't have to be that way. Technology can
inspire your congregation in new ways."

Peavey Electronics, a Meridian, Miss.-based maker of musical instruments and
sound equipment, has created a new line of products called the Sanctuary
Series.
"This has allowed even small churches to go high tech."
--Patrick Teagarden, sound-and-video technician

To get started wiring a church, all a pastor or minister need do is call one
of the growing number of technicians who specialize in worship technology.
Teagarden told a group of other church techies that he can rig a sanctuary
with three lower-end cameras, a video switcher (a device that receives a
video feed from multiple cameras and selects which images an audience sees)
and a Focus Firestore FS-4 DV disk recorder, which lets a videographer
record directly to disk.

Teagarden's price is between $25,000 and $30,000, he said.

This kind of set up would let a church record, edit and distribute a sermon
via DVDs, the Internet or TV within a couple of hours, Teagarden said.

"Churches have wanted to get their hands on this technology for years," said
Teagarden, managing director of Sharing His Light Productions. "In the past
it was too expensive, but in the past few years, prices have dropped. This
has allowed even small churches to go high tech."

So how does a church benefit from this kind of gear?

Sometimes special lighting and sound can turn a larger venue into an
intimate setting, said technicians. Mostly, it helps a preacher communicate
with his congregation.

Scott Anthony, the technology director at Cross Timbers Community Church in
Argyle, Texas, said his pastor, Toby Slough, will illustrate a sermon about
the biblical character Joseph being in prison by videotaping himself at the
local jail. Those churches with video display screens often use clips from
movies to make their point, said Anthony.

"We live in a media-driven world," he said.

With most churches in the country averaging less than a thousand members,
Cross Timbers congregation numbers more than 4,000 only four years after its
founding.

Says Anthony: "This is how people, especially young people, are accustomed
to hearing a message." 


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