|
Mar. 15, 2010:
Building off of the momentum from 2009, the media arm of
Campus Crusade for Christ says it is poised to touch
even more lives throughout 2010.
“We believe that God has given us the technology and the
strategy,” says Allan Beeber, the Orlando director of
Global Media Outreach, and “as more and more believers
get involved, we think it’s possible to see
the Great
Commission fulfilled, five to ten times over in ten
years.”
What Global Media Outreach really needs now, however,
are workers who will reap the harvest.
Last year, 66 million people reportedly visited one or
more of GMO’s 100-plus websites to search for
information online about Jesus and the hope he brings.
Of that, more than ten million indicated a decision to
follow Christ and nearly two million initiated
discipleship and requested more information about Jesus
and Christianity through GMO’s 4,000 online
missionaries.
“GMO’s Web sites allow online spiritual seekers to
directly knock on the ‘electronic’ front doors of
participating volunteers, who can guide them in their
faith,” the ministry reports.
Notably, however, as more and more people gain access to
the internet and visit GMO sites requesting for more
information, more and more “mature” believers are needed
to respond.
“Google tells us that every day, two million people are
making spiritually-related searches on the internet,”
says Beeber. “Of those two million people every day, we
are now reaching 300,000 a day … and they are
communicating with us.”
To meet the demand, GMO says it needs at least 10,000
online missionaries – more than double how many it
currently has.
And so it’s encouraging believers everywhere to join the
effort by devoting even just 15 minutes of their day to
helping respond to the e-mail inquiries received – 80 to
90 percent of which reportedly are sent from outside of
the United States.
“There are so many believers who have really wanted to
share their faith, but they didn’t know who was open,
they aren’t quick on their feet, and they just didn’t
know how to do it. Well, this gives them the opportunity
every day to be part of the harvest,” says Beeber.
Last year, to get more churchgoers involved in their Web
effort, GMO launched “GmoAlwaysReady,” an online
missions program available to all churches.
It is also recruiting volunteers one at a time through
its main website, www.globalmediaoutreach.com, with
applications available in English, French, Portuguese,
and Spanish.
Still, even with the ministry's current efforts, the
demand is outgrowing the supply.
Since its inception in 2004, GMO has seen the number of
people indicating a decision for Christ grow
exponentially from 21,066 people annually to more than
ten million people in 2009. The internet ministry had
originally projected around five million decisions for
2009.
So far, the ministry has not publicly announced a
projection for 2010. But based on current trends, it
could be over 30 million.
“It is so exciting just to realize that we may be closer
than we have ever realized to fulfilling the Great
Commission,” says Beeber. “It’s an exciting time to be
alive.”
Presently, Christians participating in the ministry
typically spend only a few minutes a day responding to
emails and hold another full-time job. Volunteers come
from a wide range of professional backgrounds -
including business executives, housewives, students,
truck drivers, and others - and are often recruited from
evangelical churches and recommended by their pastors.
GMO English-language websites include
WhoisJesus-Really.com,
GodLovestheWorld.com,
4StepstoGod.com, and
GrowinginChrist.com, among many others. Kenneth Chan,
Christian Post Correspondent.
|