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Agency proposes expanding United Methodist ad campaign


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Thu, 12 Jun 2003 14:05:23 -0500

June 12, 2003 News media contact: Tim Tanton7(615)742-54707Nashville, Tenn. 
10-71B{321}

By Nancye Willis*

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - The success of the United Methodist Church's U.S.
television campaign has led the denomination's communications officials to
propose expanding the program beginning in 2005. 

United Methodist Communications launched the effort, "Igniting Ministry," in
2001 to raise awareness of the denomination through a series of national
cable television commercials. The expansion, if approved by the church's top
legislative body next year, would include ads designed to appeal to young
people as well as people outside the United States.
 
"We believe Igniting Ministry has been a significant factor in bringing
people to our churches," said the Rev. Larry Hollon, UMCom's top executive.
"In the past two years, we've heard many amazing stories of how the ads'
messages have touched hearts and caused them to seek fellowship in our
churches."  

UMCom will ask the denomination's 2004 General Conference for $10.25 million
annually in 2005-08 to continue and expand Igniting Ministry. General
Conference, which gathers every four years, will meet next May in Pittsburgh.
The 2000 assembly, meeting in Cleveland, approved nearly $20 million in total
funding for the campaign's first four years.

Since Igniting Ministry's debut, more than 92 million people have seen the
denomination's "open hearts, open minds, open doors" messages, according to
UMCom officials, citing statistics provided by the agency's advertising
agency. Building on that platform, the agency wants to expand Igniting
Ministry to reach more unchurched people more often, both in the United
States and beyond.
 
Under the plan, Igniting Ministry's core television element in the United
States would continue and expand, Hollon said. "To keep awareness of United
Methodism and interest in visiting a congregation high and steady year-round,
we want to augment Igniting Ministry's established three annual Lenten,
back-to-school and Advent ad placements with 22 additional weeks of ads on
cable news networks." 

Local training in welcoming and hospitality and the number of matching grants
would increase. To date, a total of  $3 million in grants has been awarded to
enable local church campaigns that supplement the national advertising. 

In addition, the youth and global components are being planned because "we
believe people of all ages and all over the world want to hear stories of
hope, healing and redemption and a clear voice of affirmation and
acceptance," Hollon said.

A need to reach 14- to 18-year-olds is dictated by the relatively small
number of active youth among United Methodists, a phenomenon shared by many
mainline denominations, he said. An Igniting Ministry youth component would
be aimed at "getting youth to enter into a United Methodist youth ministry
and giving them a reason to stay," he added.

The youth component would be a grass-roots effort including coordinated local
church resources and advertising materials instead of a national television
campaign.

Additionally, Hollon said, "a global component would involve four
partnerships between United Methodists in the United States, Africa, Europe
and Asia to establish a media presence." Church leaders in various areas
would collaboratively determine the nature of each of four partnerships and
choose appropriate, specific supportive communications linkages and training.

"For U.S. partnerships, Igniting Ministry would create and place cable and
broadcast TV spots; for partnerships outside the United States, we will
collaborate with the people in those areas to produce appropriate
communications systems," Hollon said.  

"The church is able to develop messages to communicate life-changing,
life-affirming stories," he said. "In these partnerships, we will develop
this capacity further." 

About 1.5 million of the denomination's members live outside the United
States, where church growth, particularly in Africa, has driven the
membership figures above 10 million, according to a recent report from the
church's Council of Bishops. Official denominational statistics show that
2001 average weekly worship attendance was at more than 3.5 million, the
highest in five years.

The Rev. Steve Horswill-Johnston, a staff executive at UMCom, leads the
Igniting Ministry effort. Complete information on the expansion proposal is
available at http://www.seespotrunagain.org. 
# # #
*Willis is editor of the Public Information Team at United Methodist
Communications in Nashville, Tenn.

 
 

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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