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    <title>Hybrid Ministry - Episodes Tagged with “Pastors”</title>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2022 04:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
    <description>Hybrid Ministry is complicated and hard. Or is it? 
How do pastors and youth pastors create a vibrant extension, not replacement, of what's already happening during their weekly church services? To cater in a digital ministry way to an online focused ministry audience. Reaching Millennials, Gen Z and even Gen Alpha is going to require us to rethink some of the ways we do church.
Follow along on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@clasonnick
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    <itunes:subtitle>Digital Discipleship made easy</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Nick Clason</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Hybrid Ministry is complicated and hard. Or is it? 
How do pastors and youth pastors create a vibrant extension, not replacement, of what's already happening during their weekly church services? To cater in a digital ministry way to an online focused ministry audience. Reaching Millennials, Gen Z and even Gen Alpha is going to require us to rethink some of the ways we do church.
Follow along on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@clasonnick
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    <itunes:keywords>Digital, Online Church, Hybrid Ministry, Church, Meta, Gen Z, Millennials, Digital Marketing, Church Marketing, Youth Ministry, Student Ministry, Nick Clason, Digital Ministry, Church Social Media, Youth Ministry Social Media, YouTube for Church, YouTube for Youth Ministry, TikTok for Churches, TikTok for Youth Ministry, Instagram for Churches, Instagram for Youth Ministry, Facebook for Church, Facebook for Youth Ministry, Cell Phone Usage at Church</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Nick Clason</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>nickclason@hybridministry.xyz</itunes:email>
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  <title>Episode 018: The Do's, Don'ts and lessons learned from launching a YouTube channel for your church in 2022</title>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2022 04:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Nick Clason</author>
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  <itunes:episode>018</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>The Do's, Don'ts and lessons learned from launching a YouTube channel for your church in 2022</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Nick Clason</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this Episode Nick explains and explores his experience with YouTube. What he learned from launching a YouTube channel during COVID, and his new recommendation for churches and ministry leaders for delivering useful content online for Gen Z and Gen Alpha and beyond!</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>22:09</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>SUMMARY
In this Episode Nick explains and explores his experience with YouTube. What he learned from launching a YouTube channel during COVID, and his new recommendation for churches and ministry leaders for delivering useful content online for Gen Z and Gen Alpha and beyond.
Follow us on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry
Or get FREE transcripts at http://www.hybridministry.xyz
Or find more written content like this from Nick at http://www.myyouthmin.com
TIMECODES
00:00-00:36 - Intro
00:36-07:22 - The lessons I've learned from starting a YouTube channel during COVID
07:22-10:31 - Why start with YouTube?
10:31-13:13 - How to get indexed in searches on YouTube
13:13-16:26 - Ministry Implications
16:26-20:36 - YouTube Best Practices
20:36-22:09 - Outro
TRANSCRIPT
Nick Clason (00:00):
What is up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. I am Nick Clason, your host, and  today I wanted to talk about YouTube, and I actually wanted to talk about why I think it is useful for churches to quit live streaming  their sermons. Now, hear me out. Hear me out.  Before I dive into all that, let me  just get a couple of things  off the  bat here said. So first and foremost, I wanna talk about YouTube. I  don't like to talk about things on this show that I don't have a lot of experience with. And so today is an exception because I have almost zero experience with YouTube.  And so for you to understand why and why and the history and everything like that, I just want to give a quick overview. So the church that I most recently served at,  not where I am now, but where I most recently before here served at, had a  almost 600 YouTube subscriber channel  and  over 300 or something like that, videos published on it.   
Nick Clason (01:22):
The reason for that being that we started our YouTube channel and our YouTube show,  the first day of Covid. And so our YouTube channel and strategy was primarily a digital version of what we would    do if we were in the room.  So we would think,  let's do a game. And in our defense,  I think what we did game wise and announcement wise and host wise  was  a little more YouTube  centric than just simply   throwing a camera in the back of the room and us pretending  there were students there. But instead we were doing it a live stream. So  what I mean by that is we built a studio and instead of  a game,  a screen game or something, we would do a segment. And it was almost like competition or challenge based.  So I mean, if you think  Mr. Beast or any of those  big YouTubers, it was   things like that. 
Nick Clason (02:27):
So we were trying to think outside the box and trying to morph and do student ministry in a YouTube sort of way.   One of the things that I think   shot us in the foot was, first of all, we  did it in a pinch. So we did it immediately and we pivoted very fast. And what we did and what we created, I personally was very proud of.  But all that being said, once Covid began to   run its course and things were   over and opening a little bit more,  people were  looking for an in-person experience.  And so what we were producing online was really no longer  fulfilling the need that it needed to. So it probably needed an adjustment, and we started to   make those adjustments.  And what I mean by that is       once Covid was over and kids were not stuck in their room, they're probably not that interested in our little segment or our little trivia game   that we're playing or whatever on the screen.     
Nick Clason (03:29):
But I do think that we had tons of formidable and useful spiritual content sermons, messages, whatever and whatnot that  were totally useful. The problem was we did it in a full, long form show, so to speak. And so just  youth group games and announcements and worship and all those things led into the message. And so you didn't get to the message until about 16 minutes   on the    actual  YouTube thing.   Typically the shows  around 30 minutes or so. And so it was about half stuff and  half a message.   You get it If you're programming  in the room,  it's exactly what you would think as far as  format wise, okay?  And all of that. I was at a multi-site megachurch. All of that was handled by a creative team, a video editor, an audio producer,  our    tech department handled that, handled, uploading, posting, making it live, all those things. 
Nick Clason (04:29):
And so I helped produce the content. I helped think through some of the philosophy and the strategy of it, but I was not boots on the ground in the weeds, hands on with   doing,  posting all the YouTube content and growing the channel. And in a lot of ways, the 600 something subs subscribers  were a response to what happened during Covid, right? Everyone was subscribing to YouTube channels. Everyone that called our church home, parents, students alike, they subscribing to our channel. All right? So now fast forward to where I am now, and I'm at a little bit smaller church.  We got a team of three, but we have   around the same student count, or slightly more than the campus that I was at. And so      we have a pretty  frequent schedule Sunday, Wednesday, Sunday, Wednesday. So every  three days,  there's something that we need to be thinking for, planning for, and prepping for.  
Nick Clason (05:26):
Not to mention, the entire team of where I'm at is completely brand new. And so we are basically building something from the ground up.  There was some stuff in place before and whatever and whatnot. But the reality is  we're starting from the ground up. One of the things that we're starting from the ground up,       we're continuing on with  the Wednesday meeting times, Sunday meeting times, but we're launching and fleshing out a completely digital strategy.  And so with all that being said, I wanna just give that caveat to  this is   my experience with YouTube.  I have been very involved in the production of YouTube content. I've learned a lot of things, some dos and don'ts and whatevers and whatnots.  But also we are at the church of, we are  gonna be changing our name here in January. And so I actually secured the YouTube channel for our future name of our student ministry, which is still  a secret  to a lot of people.  
Nick Clason (06:28):
So  because of that, I have not started posting things to YouTube. What I have started doing is I have started   beta testing our YouTube strategy more on a video filming and editing side of things.  Is this a sustainable and scalable process that I can continue to implement beyond   on a week to week type basis?  And so I've been practicing some things, and so I think I feel pretty good about the workflow and rhythm to be able to pull some of these things off.  And so  I'm excited about launching a YouTube  channel and account in   January knowing that I'll be able to replicate what I've   been doing.  So  that's sort  the background and the history of at least my personal experience with YouTube.  So why start with YouTube? Alright, I think YouTube is,   is actually a really unique social media platform. It's the only one of its kind in the category of  Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter,   YouTube is owned by Google, and it's the only social media platform  in that category  of those   kind of core FI four or five  that is owned by Google. 
Nick Clason (07:52):
So you got Google, you got Meta, and then you got TikTok, who's sort of like the  third player, the  owner there in that, right? You've probably heard this before,  but YouTube is actually widely considered by many to be the second largest search engine in the world behind only Google. Some if you get real nitty gritty with it, some actually say it's not the second largest, it's the third largest because Google Images is technically larger.  Bottom line, all three, Google search, Google images and YouTube are owned by the same parent company, Google. And regardless of that, right? YouTube is a search engine. And so  who among us has not installed a light fixture from the help of a friendly person who posted a YouTube tutorial on   YouTube for us to watch and consume and use, Okay? And because it's a search engine, I think it's actually a pretty strategic advantage that can be used by us as pastors and ministry leaders. 
Nick Clason (08:55):
Because if you think about it, when  you search for a video, right? Search  more  how to or think how to     fix, how to answer, how to do this, how to navigate this.   So,  or challenge us to think  YouTubers rather than pastors or speakers. And I think that was one of our number one Achilles heels in  where I was before. We   were thinking  YouTubers in a lot of ways,  but  in our,  for example, and I'll get to this in a minute, but in our titling and in our thumbnails,   we were treating this as   series,   the series Jesus series, Part three, March 1st.   That's not a compelling, in captivating title for our audience who is with us every week and just wants to get on there and watch something on demand that may be helpful. But to someone who's gonna organically come across our YouTube content, that doesn't explain anything about what's in the video.  
Nick Clason (09:59):
So why is live streaming problematic particularly?  And   full disclosure, I'm a student pastor. And so if you're watching this in   a senior pastor and your church has good cameras, good audio equipment, good lighting to fully embrace a live streaming  strategy, then by all means continue to do that. But if you're a youth pastor,  I would not necessarily recommend building the gear, the switcher, the infrastructure  of    live streaming. All right, So let's talk about watch times. Cause this plays into it. According to a backlink.dot com,  they surveyed and  looked at 1.3 million YouTube videos to try and better understand the YouTube search feature and algorithm. What they determined was that longer videos significantly outperform shorter videos. And the average length of a first page YouTube video  that's beneficial and helpful is 14 minutes and 50 seconds. All right? So you need to understand that the way that YouTube indexes and  categorizes their videos is a combination of two things. 
Nick Clason (11:15):
Overall, watch time paired with average percentage viewed. And so it turns out that videos in the 14 to 16 minute range actually index really well. In fact, those are the highest ones on search. There are other factors of things that help increase watch times,   such as the  hook or the intro. All right, So let's just think in the land of sermon delivering a sermon, Okay? I want you to just rank these two scenarios. Scenario number one. Hey everybody, welcome back. Real quick before I dive into tonight's message, I wanna remind you about the Churchwide Bake sales. It's coming up on Sunday, and if you want to earn money toward the mission trip, it is required that you be in attendance. If for some reason you can't make it, just be sure to talk to me afterwards. All right? Now, last week when we were in part  three of our series, Jesus, we were reminded that Jesus was bonded together with his disciples because of their love. 
Nick Clason (12:14):
And so tonight, what I wanna focus on in part four is what happens after the  death burial and then ultimately resurrection of Jesus, right? That's scenario number one. That's you preaching to your congregation, your students, the people that call your church home. Let's talk about scenario number two. Hey, what if you could win a million dollars? What if I told you that the message of Jesus is actually one that supersedes and rises far above the benefits of winning millions and millions of dollars?  Do you see how one at least has the intention of a hook? I don't know if it's good or not, right? That's why I say in fairness, I'm not a YouTube sivan or expert, but I want you, I wanna challenge you to think like a YouTuber.  And so where one is taking care of housekeeping in your student ministry, what's going on the bake sale?  The second one is actually  thinking about YouTube first.  It's creating a hook. So what are some implications for ministry? Well, first of all, a 30 to 45 minute sermon where the speaker is presenting  primarily to a room full of people  versus  not really looking or paying attention to the camera. It's just there. Capturing them, doesn't act, Doesn't exactly right. Speak YouTube's preferred language.  Think about it, in a live room environment anyway, messages between the length of 10 to 25 minutes seem to have become a pretty optimal length for student ministries who gather in person.  
Nick Clason (13:51):
And I also think that if you  take your  YouTube  or if you take your message content that you're going to already naturally deliver into a room, what I'm gonna actually propose here is that instead of capturing you delivering live to your room, I'm gonna propose that you prefill your content. And what happens is when you prefill your content, number one, you can create and craft a hook that is specific in particular for YouTube. Secondly, you can shave the time down to fit into that 14 to 16 minute window. Even if you go longer in the room, aim for that 14 to 16 minute window. And third, it gives you the opportunity to practice your message before you get up there and deliver it to a  live room full of teenagers or parishioners or congregation members.  And so that's one of the things that we've been doing.  
Nick Clason (14:58):
We teach live every single Wednesday night, but during that week, after I'm done with my prep, I sit down, I put up a camera and iFilm my message. Then I do a little bit of post production, I add a sound bed behind it. I do some flying in graphics, lower thirds  slides, and I put those on the screen as well. And that's gonna be our strategy for YouTube. Why? Number one, it's gonna let us do a YouTube first messaging.  We're not gonna bury it behind a bunch of other elements. We're gonna go with the message first.  If YouTube is in fact a search engine and kids are out there searching for answers to their faith, then let's give them the answers to their faith. And they might not care about our church announcements. They might not care about the worship, but what they do want is they want answers. 
Nick Clason (15:45):
So answer the question, tell them what you're gonna talk about with the hook right up front at the very beginning of the video. And that for me is one of the hardest shifts, is moving from holding my ace content up my sleeve until the very end, waiting for the message to climax, but instead giving a teaser and a preview  at the very beginning of the message. That's a shift. YouTubers do that really well. Pastors build to their ultimate conclusion, and so they try to create this mystery around what's gonna come. But the reality is on YouTube, if you don't hook them right off the bat immediately, then they are gone and on to the next thing.  And so think like a YouTuber. Let's talk through some other YouTube best practices. Like I said,  make sure your titling is  something that a YouTuber would search for  as opposed to Jesus Week three, Mark 14, one through 10. 
Nick Clason (16:39):
That's not as captivating a title as Is hell a real place dealing with crippling anxiety or is rest even possible?  You see the difference between those two. Think YouTube, think search engine, think click bait, think controversial type titles that help your video perform better because it's a search engine. The meta description  or the  title, the description of the video, those things all play a huge role in the YouTube ranking. So make sure you spend a little bit of time thinking through and crafting some good compelling descriptions. And then you can also link to things on your church's website or social media, or maybe even some products in the description of your video.  Also include tags. YouTube gives you a spot to do that.  So include keywords from your videos or tags that relate back to the  topic. All three of those factors, title, description, tags, all play a role in the searchability of your YouTube content. 
Nick Clason (17:33):
Also, your thumbnail plays  plays a role.  Go look at Mr. Beast. He's like number one, YouTuber in the world. Go look at his thumbnails on his YouTube channel  and just get some photos with a decent iPhone, maybe a Google Pixel phone to take some halfway decent portrait shots. Throw some catchy text over it  using maybe something like PowerPoint Canva, or if you have more skill Photoshop  and use different catchy thumbnails to try on your videos.  You can also then use a free tool like trends.google.com to look up your searchable words  and compare things.  AB testing.   If you wanted to use the word fear versus the word anxiety, put those into trends.google.com. And you'll notice that anxiety has a higher search level. So use that.   
Nick Clason (18:25):
And then also comments and shares  and people embedding your videos are all things that are gonna help index it better in the YouTube algorithm. So ask for things like comments, ask for things like shares, and then on the embedding feature,  try to embed your YouTube videos onto your  church website onto your, And so then your website is hosting your YouTube video  and embedding it already helps index it better. So you already have a platform that people are going to.  So use that. That's a feature that's already built in and that can help you get going. All right, what if you're just starting? What    starting  gear do you need, right? Listen, if you're gonna go budget friendly,  get  a   nice  smartphone, right? I just gotta Google Pixel,  the latest iPhone have some great things. One of the main things for filming is you need a separate microphone, Okay? 
Nick Clason (19:24):
So you can get, just go on  Amazon, do a quick search for a shotgun microphone with your style of phone connection that's needed. You can get something for under a hundred bucks. You can also get a lapel, a wireless lapel  lighting. Natural lighting is great. Some ring lights can help. Do the trick. Get a tripod that you can stick your phone on.  If you want a more professional rig, then listen. Just go to YouTube, search best YouTube starter set for gear,  and you'll find something. I love everything that Brady Sheer from Pro Church Tools has to say  just about anything in the church digital space.  And in fact, I think  the day I'm recording this, he yesterday just trapped a video on his favorite camera gear. So go  copy that if you got the budget to do it  and make it happen. And  then you're just gonna have to do things like  edit, and you're gonna figure out  you wanna use iMovie, Da Vinci, Resolve Adobe Final Cut Pro. 
Nick Clason (20:20):
Again, budget for some of those are cheaper,  like iMovie and Da Vinci Resolve are free. More expensive options are the Adobe Suite or Final Cut Pro. You're just gonna have to see what you have and what's available out there. But listen, my recommendation, again, like I said, get on YouTube. Treat it like a search engine. Get out there. Put your message,  the message of hope that you have about Jesus. Create a YouTube channel. Prefill your content  or film it after you deliver it. If you want it to be a little bit more polished and you've   a little bit more familiar with it,  and just  start posting some stuff out there, right? Try some things.  Follow some of these best practices. You may not go viral overnight. I can't promise that,  but these are some of the best practices out there on YouTube. And so simply following them is just gonna give you the best chance to be discovered.  
Nick Clason (21:12):
And that's the goal.  We want students, teenagers, or people wrestling with faith to come across the content that we have to offer, and hopefully give them something that's helpful. And this is just a way to expand your impact and your reach as a youth pastor, as a regular pastor  in 2022 and beyond. Hey, I hope you guys found this episode helpful. If you did get, Man, leave us a rating or a review.  We are on iTunes, Spotify, all the major  podcast platforms, hybrid ministry. We're also on Twitter at hybrid ministry. We have full transcripts of everything.  We provide this to y'all at hybridministry.xyz Come check us out there and we will talk to you guys. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>YouTube, Sermons, Live Stream, Ministry, Youth Ministry, Student Ministry, Church, Preaching, Pastors, Meta Church, Church Service, Worship, Discipleship, Outreach, Evangelism</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this Episode Nick explains and explores his experience with YouTube. What he learned from launching a YouTube channel during COVID, and his new recommendation for churches and ministry leaders for delivering useful content online for Gen Z and Gen Alpha and beyond.</p>

<p>Follow us on Twitter <a href="http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry</a><br>
Or get FREE transcripts at <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://www.hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Or find more written content like this from Nick at <a href="http://www.myyouthmin.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.myyouthmin.com</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-00:36 - Intro<br>
00:36-07:22 - The lessons I&#39;ve learned from starting a YouTube channel during COVID<br>
07:22-10:31 - Why start with YouTube?<br>
10:31-13:13 - How to get indexed in searches on YouTube<br>
13:13-16:26 - Ministry Implications<br>
16:26-20:36 - YouTube Best Practices<br>
20:36-22:09 - Outro</p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What is up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. I am Nick Clason, your host, and  today I wanted to talk about YouTube, and I actually wanted to talk about why I think it is useful for churches to quit live streaming  their sermons. Now, hear me out. Hear me out.  Before I dive into all that, let me  just get a couple of things  off the  bat here said. So first and foremost, I wanna talk about YouTube. I  don&#39;t like to talk about things on this show that I don&#39;t have a lot of experience with. And so today is an exception because I have almost zero experience with YouTube.  And so for you to understand why and why and the history and everything like that, I just want to give a quick overview. So the church that I most recently served at,  not where I am now, but where I most recently before here served at, had a  almost 600 YouTube subscriber channel  and  over 300 or something like that, videos published on it.   </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:22):<br>
The reason for that being that we started our YouTube channel and our YouTube show,  the first day of Covid. And so our YouTube channel and strategy was primarily a digital version of what we would    do if we were in the room.  So we would think,  let&#39;s do a game. And in our defense,  I think what we did game wise and announcement wise and host wise  was  a little more YouTube  centric than just simply   throwing a camera in the back of the room and us pretending  there were students there. But instead we were doing it a live stream. So  what I mean by that is we built a studio and instead of  a game,  a screen game or something, we would do a segment. And it was almost like competition or challenge based.  So I mean, if you think  Mr. Beast or any of those  big YouTubers, it was   things like that. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (02:27):<br>
So we were trying to think outside the box and trying to morph and do student ministry in a YouTube sort of way.   One of the things that I think   shot us in the foot was, first of all, we  did it in a pinch. So we did it immediately and we pivoted very fast. And what we did and what we created, I personally was very proud of.  But all that being said, once Covid began to   run its course and things were   over and opening a little bit more,  people were  looking for an in-person experience.  And so what we were producing online was really no longer  fulfilling the need that it needed to. So it probably needed an adjustment, and we started to   make those adjustments.  And what I mean by that is       once Covid was over and kids were not stuck in their room, they&#39;re probably not that interested in our little segment or our little trivia game   that we&#39;re playing or whatever on the screen.     </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:29):<br>
But I do think that we had tons of formidable and useful spiritual content sermons, messages, whatever and whatnot that  were totally useful. The problem was we did it in a full, long form show, so to speak. And so just  youth group games and announcements and worship and all those things led into the message. And so you didn&#39;t get to the message until about 16 minutes   on the    actual  YouTube thing.   Typically the shows  around 30 minutes or so. And so it was about half stuff and  half a message.   You get it If you&#39;re programming  in the room,  it&#39;s exactly what you would think as far as  format wise, okay?  And all of that. I was at a multi-site megachurch. All of that was handled by a creative team, a video editor, an audio producer,  our    tech department handled that, handled, uploading, posting, making it live, all those things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:29):<br>
And so I helped produce the content. I helped think through some of the philosophy and the strategy of it, but I was not boots on the ground in the weeds, hands on with   doing,  posting all the YouTube content and growing the channel. And in a lot of ways, the 600 something subs subscribers  were a response to what happened during Covid, right? Everyone was subscribing to YouTube channels. Everyone that called our church home, parents, students alike, they subscribing to our channel. All right? So now fast forward to where I am now, and I&#39;m at a little bit smaller church.  We got a team of three, but we have   around the same student count, or slightly more than the campus that I was at. And so      we have a pretty  frequent schedule Sunday, Wednesday, Sunday, Wednesday. So every  three days,  there&#39;s something that we need to be thinking for, planning for, and prepping for.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:26):<br>
Not to mention, the entire team of where I&#39;m at is completely brand new. And so we are basically building something from the ground up.  There was some stuff in place before and whatever and whatnot. But the reality is  we&#39;re starting from the ground up. One of the things that we&#39;re starting from the ground up,       we&#39;re continuing on with  the Wednesday meeting times, Sunday meeting times, but we&#39;re launching and fleshing out a completely digital strategy.  And so with all that being said, I wanna just give that caveat to  this is   my experience with YouTube.  I have been very involved in the production of YouTube content. I&#39;ve learned a lot of things, some dos and don&#39;ts and whatevers and whatnots.  But also we are at the church of, we are  gonna be changing our name here in January. And so I actually secured the YouTube channel for our future name of our student ministry, which is still  a secret  to a lot of people.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (06:28):<br>
So  because of that, I have not started posting things to YouTube. What I have started doing is I have started   beta testing our YouTube strategy more on a video filming and editing side of things.  Is this a sustainable and scalable process that I can continue to implement beyond   on a week to week type basis?  And so I&#39;ve been practicing some things, and so I think I feel pretty good about the workflow and rhythm to be able to pull some of these things off.  And so  I&#39;m excited about launching a YouTube  channel and account in   January knowing that I&#39;ll be able to replicate what I&#39;ve   been doing.  So  that&#39;s sort  the background and the history of at least my personal experience with YouTube.  So why start with YouTube? Alright, I think YouTube is,   is actually a really unique social media platform. It&#39;s the only one of its kind in the category of  Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter,   YouTube is owned by Google, and it&#39;s the only social media platform  in that category  of those   kind of core FI four or five  that is owned by Google. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (07:52):<br>
So you got Google, you got Meta, and then you got TikTok, who&#39;s sort of like the  third player, the  owner there in that, right? You&#39;ve probably heard this before,  but YouTube is actually widely considered by many to be the second largest search engine in the world behind only Google. Some if you get real nitty gritty with it, some actually say it&#39;s not the second largest, it&#39;s the third largest because Google Images is technically larger.  Bottom line, all three, Google search, Google images and YouTube are owned by the same parent company, Google. And regardless of that, right? YouTube is a search engine. And so  who among us has not installed a light fixture from the help of a friendly person who posted a YouTube tutorial on   YouTube for us to watch and consume and use, Okay? And because it&#39;s a search engine, I think it&#39;s actually a pretty strategic advantage that can be used by us as pastors and ministry leaders. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (08:55):<br>
Because if you think about it, when  you search for a video, right? Search  more  how to or think how to     fix, how to answer, how to do this, how to navigate this.   So,  or challenge us to think  YouTubers rather than pastors or speakers. And I think that was one of our number one Achilles heels in  where I was before. We   were thinking  YouTubers in a lot of ways,  but  in our,  for example, and I&#39;ll get to this in a minute, but in our titling and in our thumbnails,   we were treating this as   series,   the series Jesus series, Part three, March 1st.   That&#39;s not a compelling, in captivating title for our audience who is with us every week and just wants to get on there and watch something on demand that may be helpful. But to someone who&#39;s gonna organically come across our YouTube content, that doesn&#39;t explain anything about what&#39;s in the video.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:59):<br>
So why is live streaming problematic particularly?  And   full disclosure, I&#39;m a student pastor. And so if you&#39;re watching this in   a senior pastor and your church has good cameras, good audio equipment, good lighting to fully embrace a live streaming  strategy, then by all means continue to do that. But if you&#39;re a youth pastor,  I would not necessarily recommend building the gear, the switcher, the infrastructure  of    live streaming. All right, So let&#39;s talk about watch times. Cause this plays into it. According to a backlink.dot com,  they surveyed and  looked at 1.3 million YouTube videos to try and better understand the YouTube search feature and algorithm. What they determined was that longer videos significantly outperform shorter videos. And the average length of a first page YouTube video  that&#39;s beneficial and helpful is 14 minutes and 50 seconds. All right? So you need to understand that the way that YouTube indexes and  categorizes their videos is a combination of two things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (11:15):<br>
Overall, watch time paired with average percentage viewed. And so it turns out that videos in the 14 to 16 minute range actually index really well. In fact, those are the highest ones on search. There are other factors of things that help increase watch times,   such as the  hook or the intro. All right, So let&#39;s just think in the land of sermon delivering a sermon, Okay? I want you to just rank these two scenarios. Scenario number one. Hey everybody, welcome back. Real quick before I dive into tonight&#39;s message, I wanna remind you about the Churchwide Bake sales. It&#39;s coming up on Sunday, and if you want to earn money toward the mission trip, it is required that you be in attendance. If for some reason you can&#39;t make it, just be sure to talk to me afterwards. All right? Now, last week when we were in part  three of our series, Jesus, we were reminded that Jesus was bonded together with his disciples because of their love. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (12:14):<br>
And so tonight, what I wanna focus on in part four is what happens after the  death burial and then ultimately resurrection of Jesus, right? That&#39;s scenario number one. That&#39;s you preaching to your congregation, your students, the people that call your church home. Let&#39;s talk about scenario number two. Hey, what if you could win a million dollars? What if I told you that the message of Jesus is actually one that supersedes and rises far above the benefits of winning millions and millions of dollars?  Do you see how one at least has the intention of a hook? I don&#39;t know if it&#39;s good or not, right? That&#39;s why I say in fairness, I&#39;m not a YouTube sivan or expert, but I want you, I wanna challenge you to think like a YouTuber.  And so where one is taking care of housekeeping in your student ministry, what&#39;s going on the bake sale?  The second one is actually  thinking about YouTube first.  It&#39;s creating a hook. So what are some implications for ministry? Well, first of all, a 30 to 45 minute sermon where the speaker is presenting  primarily to a room full of people  versus  not really looking or paying attention to the camera. It&#39;s just there. Capturing them, doesn&#39;t act, Doesn&#39;t exactly right. Speak YouTube&#39;s preferred language.  Think about it, in a live room environment anyway, messages between the length of 10 to 25 minutes seem to have become a pretty optimal length for student ministries who gather in person.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:51):<br>
And I also think that if you  take your  YouTube  or if you take your message content that you&#39;re going to already naturally deliver into a room, what I&#39;m gonna actually propose here is that instead of capturing you delivering live to your room, I&#39;m gonna propose that you prefill your content. And what happens is when you prefill your content, number one, you can create and craft a hook that is specific in particular for YouTube. Secondly, you can shave the time down to fit into that 14 to 16 minute window. Even if you go longer in the room, aim for that 14 to 16 minute window. And third, it gives you the opportunity to practice your message before you get up there and deliver it to a  live room full of teenagers or parishioners or congregation members.  And so that&#39;s one of the things that we&#39;ve been doing.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:58):<br>
We teach live every single Wednesday night, but during that week, after I&#39;m done with my prep, I sit down, I put up a camera and iFilm my message. Then I do a little bit of post production, I add a sound bed behind it. I do some flying in graphics, lower thirds  slides, and I put those on the screen as well. And that&#39;s gonna be our strategy for YouTube. Why? Number one, it&#39;s gonna let us do a YouTube first messaging.  We&#39;re not gonna bury it behind a bunch of other elements. We&#39;re gonna go with the message first.  If YouTube is in fact a search engine and kids are out there searching for answers to their faith, then let&#39;s give them the answers to their faith. And they might not care about our church announcements. They might not care about the worship, but what they do want is they want answers. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:45):<br>
So answer the question, tell them what you&#39;re gonna talk about with the hook right up front at the very beginning of the video. And that for me is one of the hardest shifts, is moving from holding my ace content up my sleeve until the very end, waiting for the message to climax, but instead giving a teaser and a preview  at the very beginning of the message. That&#39;s a shift. YouTubers do that really well. Pastors build to their ultimate conclusion, and so they try to create this mystery around what&#39;s gonna come. But the reality is on YouTube, if you don&#39;t hook them right off the bat immediately, then they are gone and on to the next thing.  And so think like a YouTuber. Let&#39;s talk through some other YouTube best practices. Like I said,  make sure your titling is  something that a YouTuber would search for  as opposed to Jesus Week three, Mark 14, one through 10. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (16:39):<br>
That&#39;s not as captivating a title as Is hell a real place dealing with crippling anxiety or is rest even possible?  You see the difference between those two. Think YouTube, think search engine, think click bait, think controversial type titles that help your video perform better because it&#39;s a search engine. The meta description  or the  title, the description of the video, those things all play a huge role in the YouTube ranking. So make sure you spend a little bit of time thinking through and crafting some good compelling descriptions. And then you can also link to things on your church&#39;s website or social media, or maybe even some products in the description of your video.  Also include tags. YouTube gives you a spot to do that.  So include keywords from your videos or tags that relate back to the  topic. All three of those factors, title, description, tags, all play a role in the searchability of your YouTube content. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (17:33):<br>
Also, your thumbnail plays  plays a role.  Go look at Mr. Beast. He&#39;s like number one, YouTuber in the world. Go look at his thumbnails on his YouTube channel  and just get some photos with a decent iPhone, maybe a Google Pixel phone to take some halfway decent portrait shots. Throw some catchy text over it  using maybe something like PowerPoint Canva, or if you have more skill Photoshop  and use different catchy thumbnails to try on your videos.  You can also then use a free tool like trends.google.com to look up your searchable words  and compare things.  AB testing.   If you wanted to use the word fear versus the word anxiety, put those into trends.google.com. And you&#39;ll notice that anxiety has a higher search level. So use that.   </p>

<p>Nick Clason (18:25):<br>
And then also comments and shares  and people embedding your videos are all things that are gonna help index it better in the YouTube algorithm. So ask for things like comments, ask for things like shares, and then on the embedding feature,  try to embed your YouTube videos onto your  church website onto your, And so then your website is hosting your YouTube video  and embedding it already helps index it better. So you already have a platform that people are going to.  So use that. That&#39;s a feature that&#39;s already built in and that can help you get going. All right, what if you&#39;re just starting? What    starting  gear do you need, right? Listen, if you&#39;re gonna go budget friendly,  get  a   nice  smartphone, right? I just gotta Google Pixel,  the latest iPhone have some great things. One of the main things for filming is you need a separate microphone, Okay? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (19:24):<br>
So you can get, just go on  Amazon, do a quick search for a shotgun microphone with your style of phone connection that&#39;s needed. You can get something for under a hundred bucks. You can also get a lapel, a wireless lapel  lighting. Natural lighting is great. Some ring lights can help. Do the trick. Get a tripod that you can stick your phone on.  If you want a more professional rig, then listen. Just go to YouTube, search best YouTube starter set for gear,  and you&#39;ll find something. I love everything that Brady Sheer from Pro Church Tools has to say  just about anything in the church digital space.  And in fact, I think  the day I&#39;m recording this, he yesterday just trapped a video on his favorite camera gear. So go  copy that if you got the budget to do it  and make it happen. And  then you&#39;re just gonna have to do things like  edit, and you&#39;re gonna figure out  you wanna use iMovie, Da Vinci, Resolve Adobe Final Cut Pro. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (20:20):<br>
Again, budget for some of those are cheaper,  like iMovie and Da Vinci Resolve are free. More expensive options are the Adobe Suite or Final Cut Pro. You&#39;re just gonna have to see what you have and what&#39;s available out there. But listen, my recommendation, again, like I said, get on YouTube. Treat it like a search engine. Get out there. Put your message,  the message of hope that you have about Jesus. Create a YouTube channel. Prefill your content  or film it after you deliver it. If you want it to be a little bit more polished and you&#39;ve   a little bit more familiar with it,  and just  start posting some stuff out there, right? Try some things.  Follow some of these best practices. You may not go viral overnight. I can&#39;t promise that,  but these are some of the best practices out there on YouTube. And so simply following them is just gonna give you the best chance to be discovered.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:12):<br>
And that&#39;s the goal.  We want students, teenagers, or people wrestling with faith to come across the content that we have to offer, and hopefully give them something that&#39;s helpful. And this is just a way to expand your impact and your reach as a youth pastor, as a regular pastor  in 2022 and beyond. Hey, I hope you guys found this episode helpful. If you did get, Man, leave us a rating or a review.  We are on iTunes, Spotify, all the major  podcast platforms, hybrid ministry. We&#39;re also on Twitter at hybrid ministry. We have full transcripts of everything.  We provide this to y&#39;all at hybridministry.xyz Come check us out there and we will talk to you guys.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this Episode Nick explains and explores his experience with YouTube. What he learned from launching a YouTube channel during COVID, and his new recommendation for churches and ministry leaders for delivering useful content online for Gen Z and Gen Alpha and beyond.</p>

<p>Follow us on Twitter <a href="http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry</a><br>
Or get FREE transcripts at <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://www.hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Or find more written content like this from Nick at <a href="http://www.myyouthmin.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.myyouthmin.com</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-00:36 - Intro<br>
00:36-07:22 - The lessons I&#39;ve learned from starting a YouTube channel during COVID<br>
07:22-10:31 - Why start with YouTube?<br>
10:31-13:13 - How to get indexed in searches on YouTube<br>
13:13-16:26 - Ministry Implications<br>
16:26-20:36 - YouTube Best Practices<br>
20:36-22:09 - Outro</p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What is up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. I am Nick Clason, your host, and  today I wanted to talk about YouTube, and I actually wanted to talk about why I think it is useful for churches to quit live streaming  their sermons. Now, hear me out. Hear me out.  Before I dive into all that, let me  just get a couple of things  off the  bat here said. So first and foremost, I wanna talk about YouTube. I  don&#39;t like to talk about things on this show that I don&#39;t have a lot of experience with. And so today is an exception because I have almost zero experience with YouTube.  And so for you to understand why and why and the history and everything like that, I just want to give a quick overview. So the church that I most recently served at,  not where I am now, but where I most recently before here served at, had a  almost 600 YouTube subscriber channel  and  over 300 or something like that, videos published on it.   </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:22):<br>
The reason for that being that we started our YouTube channel and our YouTube show,  the first day of Covid. And so our YouTube channel and strategy was primarily a digital version of what we would    do if we were in the room.  So we would think,  let&#39;s do a game. And in our defense,  I think what we did game wise and announcement wise and host wise  was  a little more YouTube  centric than just simply   throwing a camera in the back of the room and us pretending  there were students there. But instead we were doing it a live stream. So  what I mean by that is we built a studio and instead of  a game,  a screen game or something, we would do a segment. And it was almost like competition or challenge based.  So I mean, if you think  Mr. Beast or any of those  big YouTubers, it was   things like that. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (02:27):<br>
So we were trying to think outside the box and trying to morph and do student ministry in a YouTube sort of way.   One of the things that I think   shot us in the foot was, first of all, we  did it in a pinch. So we did it immediately and we pivoted very fast. And what we did and what we created, I personally was very proud of.  But all that being said, once Covid began to   run its course and things were   over and opening a little bit more,  people were  looking for an in-person experience.  And so what we were producing online was really no longer  fulfilling the need that it needed to. So it probably needed an adjustment, and we started to   make those adjustments.  And what I mean by that is       once Covid was over and kids were not stuck in their room, they&#39;re probably not that interested in our little segment or our little trivia game   that we&#39;re playing or whatever on the screen.     </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:29):<br>
But I do think that we had tons of formidable and useful spiritual content sermons, messages, whatever and whatnot that  were totally useful. The problem was we did it in a full, long form show, so to speak. And so just  youth group games and announcements and worship and all those things led into the message. And so you didn&#39;t get to the message until about 16 minutes   on the    actual  YouTube thing.   Typically the shows  around 30 minutes or so. And so it was about half stuff and  half a message.   You get it If you&#39;re programming  in the room,  it&#39;s exactly what you would think as far as  format wise, okay?  And all of that. I was at a multi-site megachurch. All of that was handled by a creative team, a video editor, an audio producer,  our    tech department handled that, handled, uploading, posting, making it live, all those things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:29):<br>
And so I helped produce the content. I helped think through some of the philosophy and the strategy of it, but I was not boots on the ground in the weeds, hands on with   doing,  posting all the YouTube content and growing the channel. And in a lot of ways, the 600 something subs subscribers  were a response to what happened during Covid, right? Everyone was subscribing to YouTube channels. Everyone that called our church home, parents, students alike, they subscribing to our channel. All right? So now fast forward to where I am now, and I&#39;m at a little bit smaller church.  We got a team of three, but we have   around the same student count, or slightly more than the campus that I was at. And so      we have a pretty  frequent schedule Sunday, Wednesday, Sunday, Wednesday. So every  three days,  there&#39;s something that we need to be thinking for, planning for, and prepping for.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:26):<br>
Not to mention, the entire team of where I&#39;m at is completely brand new. And so we are basically building something from the ground up.  There was some stuff in place before and whatever and whatnot. But the reality is  we&#39;re starting from the ground up. One of the things that we&#39;re starting from the ground up,       we&#39;re continuing on with  the Wednesday meeting times, Sunday meeting times, but we&#39;re launching and fleshing out a completely digital strategy.  And so with all that being said, I wanna just give that caveat to  this is   my experience with YouTube.  I have been very involved in the production of YouTube content. I&#39;ve learned a lot of things, some dos and don&#39;ts and whatevers and whatnots.  But also we are at the church of, we are  gonna be changing our name here in January. And so I actually secured the YouTube channel for our future name of our student ministry, which is still  a secret  to a lot of people.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (06:28):<br>
So  because of that, I have not started posting things to YouTube. What I have started doing is I have started   beta testing our YouTube strategy more on a video filming and editing side of things.  Is this a sustainable and scalable process that I can continue to implement beyond   on a week to week type basis?  And so I&#39;ve been practicing some things, and so I think I feel pretty good about the workflow and rhythm to be able to pull some of these things off.  And so  I&#39;m excited about launching a YouTube  channel and account in   January knowing that I&#39;ll be able to replicate what I&#39;ve   been doing.  So  that&#39;s sort  the background and the history of at least my personal experience with YouTube.  So why start with YouTube? Alright, I think YouTube is,   is actually a really unique social media platform. It&#39;s the only one of its kind in the category of  Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter,   YouTube is owned by Google, and it&#39;s the only social media platform  in that category  of those   kind of core FI four or five  that is owned by Google. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (07:52):<br>
So you got Google, you got Meta, and then you got TikTok, who&#39;s sort of like the  third player, the  owner there in that, right? You&#39;ve probably heard this before,  but YouTube is actually widely considered by many to be the second largest search engine in the world behind only Google. Some if you get real nitty gritty with it, some actually say it&#39;s not the second largest, it&#39;s the third largest because Google Images is technically larger.  Bottom line, all three, Google search, Google images and YouTube are owned by the same parent company, Google. And regardless of that, right? YouTube is a search engine. And so  who among us has not installed a light fixture from the help of a friendly person who posted a YouTube tutorial on   YouTube for us to watch and consume and use, Okay? And because it&#39;s a search engine, I think it&#39;s actually a pretty strategic advantage that can be used by us as pastors and ministry leaders. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (08:55):<br>
Because if you think about it, when  you search for a video, right? Search  more  how to or think how to     fix, how to answer, how to do this, how to navigate this.   So,  or challenge us to think  YouTubers rather than pastors or speakers. And I think that was one of our number one Achilles heels in  where I was before. We   were thinking  YouTubers in a lot of ways,  but  in our,  for example, and I&#39;ll get to this in a minute, but in our titling and in our thumbnails,   we were treating this as   series,   the series Jesus series, Part three, March 1st.   That&#39;s not a compelling, in captivating title for our audience who is with us every week and just wants to get on there and watch something on demand that may be helpful. But to someone who&#39;s gonna organically come across our YouTube content, that doesn&#39;t explain anything about what&#39;s in the video.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:59):<br>
So why is live streaming problematic particularly?  And   full disclosure, I&#39;m a student pastor. And so if you&#39;re watching this in   a senior pastor and your church has good cameras, good audio equipment, good lighting to fully embrace a live streaming  strategy, then by all means continue to do that. But if you&#39;re a youth pastor,  I would not necessarily recommend building the gear, the switcher, the infrastructure  of    live streaming. All right, So let&#39;s talk about watch times. Cause this plays into it. According to a backlink.dot com,  they surveyed and  looked at 1.3 million YouTube videos to try and better understand the YouTube search feature and algorithm. What they determined was that longer videos significantly outperform shorter videos. And the average length of a first page YouTube video  that&#39;s beneficial and helpful is 14 minutes and 50 seconds. All right? So you need to understand that the way that YouTube indexes and  categorizes their videos is a combination of two things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (11:15):<br>
Overall, watch time paired with average percentage viewed. And so it turns out that videos in the 14 to 16 minute range actually index really well. In fact, those are the highest ones on search. There are other factors of things that help increase watch times,   such as the  hook or the intro. All right, So let&#39;s just think in the land of sermon delivering a sermon, Okay? I want you to just rank these two scenarios. Scenario number one. Hey everybody, welcome back. Real quick before I dive into tonight&#39;s message, I wanna remind you about the Churchwide Bake sales. It&#39;s coming up on Sunday, and if you want to earn money toward the mission trip, it is required that you be in attendance. If for some reason you can&#39;t make it, just be sure to talk to me afterwards. All right? Now, last week when we were in part  three of our series, Jesus, we were reminded that Jesus was bonded together with his disciples because of their love. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (12:14):<br>
And so tonight, what I wanna focus on in part four is what happens after the  death burial and then ultimately resurrection of Jesus, right? That&#39;s scenario number one. That&#39;s you preaching to your congregation, your students, the people that call your church home. Let&#39;s talk about scenario number two. Hey, what if you could win a million dollars? What if I told you that the message of Jesus is actually one that supersedes and rises far above the benefits of winning millions and millions of dollars?  Do you see how one at least has the intention of a hook? I don&#39;t know if it&#39;s good or not, right? That&#39;s why I say in fairness, I&#39;m not a YouTube sivan or expert, but I want you, I wanna challenge you to think like a YouTuber.  And so where one is taking care of housekeeping in your student ministry, what&#39;s going on the bake sale?  The second one is actually  thinking about YouTube first.  It&#39;s creating a hook. So what are some implications for ministry? Well, first of all, a 30 to 45 minute sermon where the speaker is presenting  primarily to a room full of people  versus  not really looking or paying attention to the camera. It&#39;s just there. Capturing them, doesn&#39;t act, Doesn&#39;t exactly right. Speak YouTube&#39;s preferred language.  Think about it, in a live room environment anyway, messages between the length of 10 to 25 minutes seem to have become a pretty optimal length for student ministries who gather in person.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:51):<br>
And I also think that if you  take your  YouTube  or if you take your message content that you&#39;re going to already naturally deliver into a room, what I&#39;m gonna actually propose here is that instead of capturing you delivering live to your room, I&#39;m gonna propose that you prefill your content. And what happens is when you prefill your content, number one, you can create and craft a hook that is specific in particular for YouTube. Secondly, you can shave the time down to fit into that 14 to 16 minute window. Even if you go longer in the room, aim for that 14 to 16 minute window. And third, it gives you the opportunity to practice your message before you get up there and deliver it to a  live room full of teenagers or parishioners or congregation members.  And so that&#39;s one of the things that we&#39;ve been doing.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:58):<br>
We teach live every single Wednesday night, but during that week, after I&#39;m done with my prep, I sit down, I put up a camera and iFilm my message. Then I do a little bit of post production, I add a sound bed behind it. I do some flying in graphics, lower thirds  slides, and I put those on the screen as well. And that&#39;s gonna be our strategy for YouTube. Why? Number one, it&#39;s gonna let us do a YouTube first messaging.  We&#39;re not gonna bury it behind a bunch of other elements. We&#39;re gonna go with the message first.  If YouTube is in fact a search engine and kids are out there searching for answers to their faith, then let&#39;s give them the answers to their faith. And they might not care about our church announcements. They might not care about the worship, but what they do want is they want answers. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:45):<br>
So answer the question, tell them what you&#39;re gonna talk about with the hook right up front at the very beginning of the video. And that for me is one of the hardest shifts, is moving from holding my ace content up my sleeve until the very end, waiting for the message to climax, but instead giving a teaser and a preview  at the very beginning of the message. That&#39;s a shift. YouTubers do that really well. Pastors build to their ultimate conclusion, and so they try to create this mystery around what&#39;s gonna come. But the reality is on YouTube, if you don&#39;t hook them right off the bat immediately, then they are gone and on to the next thing.  And so think like a YouTuber. Let&#39;s talk through some other YouTube best practices. Like I said,  make sure your titling is  something that a YouTuber would search for  as opposed to Jesus Week three, Mark 14, one through 10. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (16:39):<br>
That&#39;s not as captivating a title as Is hell a real place dealing with crippling anxiety or is rest even possible?  You see the difference between those two. Think YouTube, think search engine, think click bait, think controversial type titles that help your video perform better because it&#39;s a search engine. The meta description  or the  title, the description of the video, those things all play a huge role in the YouTube ranking. So make sure you spend a little bit of time thinking through and crafting some good compelling descriptions. And then you can also link to things on your church&#39;s website or social media, or maybe even some products in the description of your video.  Also include tags. YouTube gives you a spot to do that.  So include keywords from your videos or tags that relate back to the  topic. All three of those factors, title, description, tags, all play a role in the searchability of your YouTube content. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (17:33):<br>
Also, your thumbnail plays  plays a role.  Go look at Mr. Beast. He&#39;s like number one, YouTuber in the world. Go look at his thumbnails on his YouTube channel  and just get some photos with a decent iPhone, maybe a Google Pixel phone to take some halfway decent portrait shots. Throw some catchy text over it  using maybe something like PowerPoint Canva, or if you have more skill Photoshop  and use different catchy thumbnails to try on your videos.  You can also then use a free tool like trends.google.com to look up your searchable words  and compare things.  AB testing.   If you wanted to use the word fear versus the word anxiety, put those into trends.google.com. And you&#39;ll notice that anxiety has a higher search level. So use that.   </p>

<p>Nick Clason (18:25):<br>
And then also comments and shares  and people embedding your videos are all things that are gonna help index it better in the YouTube algorithm. So ask for things like comments, ask for things like shares, and then on the embedding feature,  try to embed your YouTube videos onto your  church website onto your, And so then your website is hosting your YouTube video  and embedding it already helps index it better. So you already have a platform that people are going to.  So use that. That&#39;s a feature that&#39;s already built in and that can help you get going. All right, what if you&#39;re just starting? What    starting  gear do you need, right? Listen, if you&#39;re gonna go budget friendly,  get  a   nice  smartphone, right? I just gotta Google Pixel,  the latest iPhone have some great things. One of the main things for filming is you need a separate microphone, Okay? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (19:24):<br>
So you can get, just go on  Amazon, do a quick search for a shotgun microphone with your style of phone connection that&#39;s needed. You can get something for under a hundred bucks. You can also get a lapel, a wireless lapel  lighting. Natural lighting is great. Some ring lights can help. Do the trick. Get a tripod that you can stick your phone on.  If you want a more professional rig, then listen. Just go to YouTube, search best YouTube starter set for gear,  and you&#39;ll find something. I love everything that Brady Sheer from Pro Church Tools has to say  just about anything in the church digital space.  And in fact, I think  the day I&#39;m recording this, he yesterday just trapped a video on his favorite camera gear. So go  copy that if you got the budget to do it  and make it happen. And  then you&#39;re just gonna have to do things like  edit, and you&#39;re gonna figure out  you wanna use iMovie, Da Vinci, Resolve Adobe Final Cut Pro. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (20:20):<br>
Again, budget for some of those are cheaper,  like iMovie and Da Vinci Resolve are free. More expensive options are the Adobe Suite or Final Cut Pro. You&#39;re just gonna have to see what you have and what&#39;s available out there. But listen, my recommendation, again, like I said, get on YouTube. Treat it like a search engine. Get out there. Put your message,  the message of hope that you have about Jesus. Create a YouTube channel. Prefill your content  or film it after you deliver it. If you want it to be a little bit more polished and you&#39;ve   a little bit more familiar with it,  and just  start posting some stuff out there, right? Try some things.  Follow some of these best practices. You may not go viral overnight. I can&#39;t promise that,  but these are some of the best practices out there on YouTube. And so simply following them is just gonna give you the best chance to be discovered.  </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:12):<br>
And that&#39;s the goal.  We want students, teenagers, or people wrestling with faith to come across the content that we have to offer, and hopefully give them something that&#39;s helpful. And this is just a way to expand your impact and your reach as a youth pastor, as a regular pastor  in 2022 and beyond. Hey, I hope you guys found this episode helpful. If you did get, Man, leave us a rating or a review.  We are on iTunes, Spotify, all the major  podcast platforms, hybrid ministry. We&#39;re also on Twitter at hybrid ministry. We have full transcripts of everything.  We provide this to y&#39;all at hybridministry.xyz Come check us out there and we will talk to you guys.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 016: Derry Prenkert on how the invention of the iPhone has radically changed how Pastors and ministry leaders accomplish the mission</title>
  <link>https://www.hybridministry.xyz/016</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 03 Nov 2022 04:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Nick Clason</author>
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  <itunes:episode>016</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Derry Prenkert on how the invention of the iPhone has radically changed how Pastors and ministry leaders accomplish the mission</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Nick Clason</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, Nick sits down with his friend, Derry Prenkert, a 20+ year youth ministry veteran. Derry shares about the monumental shift of the invention of the smart phone. How things were before, and how things have shifted, but most importantly, how we utilize this technology for our benefit and gain to reach more students for the mission of Jesus.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>43:52</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/e697b7b8-eaee-430b-9281-dfbd9f2d34d0/episodes/2/215e4582-7ca6-42f9-8267-734b0f4478d4/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>SUMMARY
In this episode, Nick sits down with his friend, Derry Prenkert, a 20+ year youth ministry veteran. Derry shares about the monumental shift of the invention of the smart phone. How things were before, and how things have shifted, but most importantly, how we utilize this technology for our benefit and gain to reach more students for the mission of Jesus.
Follow us on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry
Find all the resources you need from the podcast http://www.hybridministry.xyz
Follow Derry online: 
-TWITTER: https://twitter.com/derryprenkert
-INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/derryprenkert/
-PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/my-third-decade-in-youth-ministry/id1338273697
SHOWNOTES
Steve Job's introduction of the iPhone: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7qPAY9JqE4
Derry's Parenting Resource: https://www.downloadyouthministry.com/p/adolescence%2C-technology-and-parenting/training-3996.html
Johnny Mac's Stuff: https://yourhouseblend.com/jonnysblend
TIMECODES
00:00-03:30 Intro
03:30-10:53 The impact of the invention of the iPhone
10:53-14:30 What happened in ministry after the invention of the iPhone
14:30-23:20 How have you responded since then?
23:20-32:44 When do you ask phones to be put away?
32:44-41:23 How can we utilize technology now to further and advance God's mission?
41:23-43:38 Outro
TRANSCRIPT
Nick Clason (00:00):
What is up everybody? Welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. Uh, today we have our very first, uh, guest interview, uh, friend of mine Derry Pinker. He's located in, um, Amish town, Nape Indiana. Um, right now, uh, he worked at that church for over 20 years, and then he was at another church for just a couple years, super large church in, uh, Kentucky. So, um, excited to bring you Derry's conversation. Uh, he mentions a couple of different links. He talks about Steve Jobs' keynote, a resource that he has on download youth ministry and echo ministry. I'm gonna include all of those in the show notes, but without any further ado, let's just hop in so you can get to know Derry. 
Nick Clason (00:51):
All right, well, what's up Derry? Good to have you on the podcast. Welcome, man. 
Derry Prenkert (00:56):
Yeah, it's so good to be with you, Nick. Thanks for having me on. 
Nick Clason (00:58):
Yeah. So as we were talking a little bit before I hit record here, you have a podcast or did, or what would you define the, the existence of your podcast? Right Now?
Derry Prenkert (01:11):
The status of my third decade. It is, it has been on the longest hiatus ever. Um, yeah. And it is coming back. Um, it's tied to this whole world of the shift that I've, I've made from being in a local church to now serving pastors in the local church. Yeah. And I'm in a season of getting all the groundwork laid for that. I, uh, have every intention, every intention by, uh, early 2023 that it's gonna launch back out. And there are some, there are actually some things already recorded for it, so, so it hasn't completely gone away. There, there is, there is a future to it. 
Nick Clason (01:46):
That's good. Cuz it's still in my podcast catcher, so I'm not unsubscribing from, I just wanna let you know that it's still there. So, um, but back when I mowed the lawn when I worked two churches ago, I think I heard you, um, talk about like, uh, this really big shift in culture and you noticed that it was, uh, have to do with when the iPhone came into existence. Mm-hmm. , just give us a little bit, like give us your story, how long you've been, you know, doing youth ministry, um, and how you have a beneficial perspective of before technology and phones are a part of what we have to navigate and deal with. And then post, and then maybe we can just kind of chat about how we navigate that as, you know, people who are, uh, ministering to people, students, um, who are very much entrenched in this technology, like Lane and world. 
Derry Prenkert (02:42):
Yeah, absolutely. So, um, my story is somebody that started in youth ministry at 19 years old. I was just about to turn 20 and I started an internship and that was back in 1996. Mm-hmm. . Yeah, I'm old. Um, and so graduated from high school in 95, start in, in ministry in 96. And so I get 11 years of ministry. Um, and in those 11 years, uh, you know, cell phones, car phones were around when I started . Yeah. And cell phones were around when I finished college in 1999. But they were, they roamed the minute you got outside of about 10 miles from your house and you only use them in emergencies. And then, and then it moved into, you know, 2004, 2005, the razor flip. Flum was the coolest thing in the world is texting, kind of entered the picture mm-hmm. . Um, and then, you know, so I, but, but really it was 2007 when Steve Jobs holds up this, this phone. 
Derry Prenkert (03:36):
And it's actually interesting to go back and watch, I don't know if you've ever watched that keynote when he does it. No, I should, but, but he, he, he introduces it and is pretty prophetic, like the level of what he's talking about where technology is heading. Cause he said this is gonna revolutionize and change. And he says, he says, What would happen if we were to introduce a computer operating system, a phone and a iPod all in one thing. Yeah. And that's, that's the heartbeat of what they did. Um, and actually I, I do a technology thing with parents, uh, adolescents, technology and parenting. Mm-hmm. , uh, what I do is, I'll actually, it's, it's a fun little exercise cuz if you think about, you got, most parents of teenagers right now are, are there children of the eighties if they're really, if they've got younger, like their youngest kids are teenagers now, nineties or maybe early two thousands mm-hmm. . And so what I do is I'll put up on the screen different, like, what was the technology of our time. And so like, you know, in the eighties you got like VCRs and corded phones and, and a Walkman or a giant computer that has a green screen maybe. 
Nick Clason (04:41):
Yeah. I found the VCR yesterday in our building, so that was cool, 
Derry Prenkert (04:46):
Dude. And, and did you try playing anything? Cause it probably just ate the tape, right? 
Nick Clason (04:49):
Yeah, no, I was like, I don't, I don't even know if we would ever need this, but, Right. Yeah. Here it 
Derry Prenkert (04:53):
Is. Yeah. Yeah. It's, see the, in the eighties in technology, like everything got fixed by blowing on it. Um, so like the VHS tape wasn't working. You blew on it. The, the Nintendo cartridge. Yep. You blew in that and then blew in the box. Mm-hmm. . So that was, you know, eighties in the nineties, you have cell phones come, you got the Discman mm-hmm.  that I remember. I would, as the nineties I would run or exercise with a discman, but I had to be careful not to run too hard because the CD would skip Yeah. 
Nick Clason (05:17):
As I skipping. I 
Derry Prenkert (05:18):
Remember that. Yeah. Yeah. Um, and then, you know, early two thousands social media in MySpace shows up. Yep. But, you know, garins show up, Uhhuh, um, digital cameras are a big deal in another 2000 flat screen TVs. Right. So we walk through these different, different moments and I say in 2007, Steve Jobs holds up this, this little device. And everything I just said was around in those different decades now lives inside this single device. Mm. Interesting. It is your video games. It is your music, you know, it's your disc man, it's your VCR or your DVD player. It is your 
Nick Clason (05:53):
Computer, your calendar. Yeah. 
Derry Prenkert (05:55):
Yeah. It's everything. It's all there. And, and so for parents, it's just saying like, recognize how significant this shift is. And so for those of us in ministry, if we are in that age, it's important to recognize that for those of us that are, I I, a lot of youth pastors are maybe a little, um, younger than the parents that they have. Right. Remember, like, these are the parents you're working with that, that this shift has happened. It might be a little more native to you as a youth pastor if you're in your, your mid to early twenties mm-hmm. . But it's foreign. It's, it's, it's so different and, and it's, it's changed so much. Um, the two things to kind of say, when I look at youth culture, cuz that's where I spent a lot of my time Yeah. That I would say are huge, is, uh, one youth group in church. 
Derry Prenkert (06:40):
I was at a church that ha drew from multiple high schools. And pre 2007, we were the place to go to connect with friends. Hmm. Um, now we saw God move and we were, we were, we were unapologetic that that wasn't the, that wasn't the primary point. The primary point was to encounter a relationship with Jesus, to understand your call, to be a part of this kingdom work. But the appeal for my kids, I'm gonna drop names that nobody knows from Wawa c high school at Northwood High School. Mm-hmm.  and Goshan High School. Someone knows each other. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Um, uh, they can meet weekly at our place. Right. Uh, now with the institution of not only, you know, the, just the move of the cell phone with texting, but then once the iPhone came in, it wasn't just you, you could, you didn't have to go there to meet a place you could actually interact face to face, you know, through FaceTime, through, through, um, whatever it might be. 
Derry Prenkert (07:33):
Google Meet all do different stuff. You could, you could do that over the phone. So it became less important. The other thing that's super intriguing is, I don't know about Eich, but the greatest day of my life, uh, as a teenager was when I turned 16 in one month in my town, because that was the day I could get my driver's license. Yeah. And by getting my driver's license, that meant a whole new, uh, level of freedom, empowerment, and ownership. Like that driver's license was my ticket to independence. Yeah. I've noticed, um, a major change. I can't believe how many kids I interact with that are like 16, 17 and, you know, we're doing an event. They're like, Hey, can I get a ride? I'm like, You don't have your license yet. Yeah. No. And, and, and, and I I don't have like the scientific proof to this, just the conversation. 
Derry Prenkert (08:25):
Sure. It's, they're like, Why would I, why would I need it? Well, yeah, the big shift came like that that license was my way to get to my friends. Mm-hmm.  and my community. Now, this, this thing that we can hold in our hands is our ticket to interact. And so, so like one of the, I guess like the big implication that I would throw out that is huge is it it has radically transformed our connectivity mm-hmm. , um, even with the people right next to us. Yeah. Um, so I mean, so many other thoughts, but there's, those are just a couple things like that we recognize. Another way I say it is like we basically now are carrying around super computers in our pockets. Yeah. That, uh, it's, they are that we're, we have, we have excessive, uh, access to information. We are, we are constantly connected. Um, and it's like invasive, you know, it's not like it's, when's the last time I I I, you can answer this or the people are listening, When's the last time you actually turned off powered down your phone 
Nick Clason (09:26):
On your own? Well, mine's new, so never 
Derry Prenkert (09:29):
Yeah. . 
Nick Clason (09:30):
Right, 
Derry Prenkert (09:30):
Right. And it's, it's like impossible to, like, they've made it so it's hard to do. And so it's always there. Now, now I might sound like I'm interesting. Yeah. I'm negative on this. I do mourn more in some things because I'm old and I'm an old guy sitting saying, Get off my lawn kids. You know, a little bit. But, um, but those are some of the things that I think are big that have changed. And so, so just the way we go about ministry has to change with it. It is in my mind, we measure time on before and after like, events that come to mind in youth ministry world, most youth pastors that were around before Columbine mm-hmm.  and after Columbine, they know it changed the way you had to handle liabilities and safety 
Nick Clason (10:10):
Measures. Yeah. 
Derry Prenkert (10:11):
Mm-hmm.  pre nine 11. Post nine 11 as a, as a culture, our life shifted on how we view, uh, things pre covid, post covid. We're still learning that all. Yeah. I still could make the argument pre iPhone and post iPhone, pre smartphone and post iPhone could be, could be the most significant watershed cultural moment that we've experienced in the LA since World War ii. Yeah. 
Nick Clason (10:35):
I don't, one of, one of like, I, one of the guys I listen to a lot, his name, you know, Brady Shear mm-hmm. , he talks about this being the biggest communication shift that we've seen in 500 years. So he's referencing that being the printing press. Yeah. And now with all this digital stuff. So that's a great call. Let's go like, let's go there a little bit. You said, um, pre iPhone people would gather from multiple high schools to your church. Did you notice that stopping, um, after, did you notice attendance shifting or did you just notice that still happens but there's, there's now just an iPhone in everyone's pocket and that's changing how they're interacting. But things are still, still sort of the same. Like, what would you say was, uh, like a, an actual effect, right? Yeah. Of that attendance thing you're talking about. 
Derry Prenkert (11:25):
This is not scientific at all. It's very guttural and it's nature. Uh, and it's my experience, I would say it didn't, for some it stopped. But I would say the bigger thing is it got more sporadic. In fact, you we're just talking, I don't know, it would be fascinating. You know, they talk about how people are coming to church less often Right. Than they used to. That a regular attendant is, attender is considered once every month or once every three weeks. Right? Yep. I wonder how that correlates to the institution of like the, the actual cell phone and smartphone because Yeah, because that was the thing. Like pre pre smartphone, um, even kids from the same school, there was the chance to just, you know, we're not just going through in passing periods. We're gonna have a small group time. We're gonna have a pre hangout post hangout mm-hmm. 
Derry Prenkert (12:09):
 once a week. This is my guaranteed time. I'm gonna get time with my friends. Yeah. Um, and so it got more sporadic. Yeah. Uh, definitely. And, and that could be in part because they could have the community outside of the youth group. Um, but it still, that's why I would, I would still be a firm believer. There is a limitation to what you can accomplish over digital. I think anybody that truly had to walk through the PA pandemic and live completely on a screen would a hundred percent agree with me. You can't replace, um, interpersonal in person reaction Totally. With digital. But you can find more connection or, or you can find connection in the gaps through that. And so I think it got more, um, more sporadic, uh, in nature. And yes, they are showing up with them. And I mean, man, whew, how many conversations do I have? 
Derry Prenkert (12:58):
I had with parents and leaders on, We gotta, we gotta, we gotta like force kids to turn these off or tell 'em they can't have 'em at all. And then, and then the issue of parents talking about what age do I give my kid a phone? When do I not? Because not only are they carrying it around, I mean, it's just, it's just there. And so the amount of attention that was going down to it when they were around that, that I'd say kinda really hit in the two, like 2014 15 phrase when everybody got one. Mm-hmm. , uh, everybody had one. 
Nick Clason (13:28):
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, even my kids in first grade and his teacher sended stuff on his like e backpack and then his like e folder and he has like iPad time. Like, so my sort of thing is, while you may lament the loss of some of what was prefo and pre-technology, um, it's not going anywhere. And so, you know, cuz I, I'm with you sometimes I have leaders who are like, We just need to get rid of the phones, take 'em away from the kids. Like make sure that they, you know, only use paper bibles and that, you know, it's, it's wrong to read God's word on a screen type of thing. And that's, that's a high preference maybe mm-hmm. . And there may be some validity to some of those things, but the fact of the matter is like, why, You know, my argument is why are we discouraging a kid from reading the Bible if it's super accessible to them and in their pocket 24 hours a day? 
Nick Clason (14:25):
Um, you know, so, So what have you noticed or what are some of the things that you've done realizing like, we can't, we can't get ourselves away from these. They are everywhere. They're on all the time. They are our everything. Our day planner, our calendar and our social life in a lot of ways. You know, like what are some of the things that you've, you've tried to embrace as a youth pastor, um, to maybe leverage them or lean into them and then maybe what are some of the times that you've discouraged use of them? Because you're like the, the, you know, the re the result of what's gonna happen here physically is gonna be greater than what is happening if you're on your 
Derry Prenkert (15:02):
Phone. Yeah. It's great. Um, in the thing I do with parents, which total shameless plug, it's actually on D ym, you get it, download Youth Mystery 
Nick Clason (15:12):
And then you have an extra $4 in your pocket. Yeah, yeah, 
Derry Prenkert (15:15):
Yeah. From that roof. Yeah. It's called Adolescents Parenting and Technology. I use an illustration. I, and I, it's an illustration that, that hit me is our phones are a knife, um, and a knife, uh, can serve many purposes. Uh, a knife is, can be used to spread butter. It can be used to whittle wood to make, uh, amazing things. It can be, it can be, uh, used to, you know, cut through things that are hard to cut through. It also can be used to kill people. Um, it's really about what is happening with the person that has it in their hands. And a part of that is what's their intentions as well as what's their awareness of a knife. You know, I've got, you've got younger kids. Mm-hmm. , I had a six year old that early on, he just got us obsessed with our steak knives when he was three or four. 
Derry Prenkert (16:03):
And we had to like, put those things up high cuz he just, he didn't understand the danger involving those knives. Right. Um, and, and so, uh, so with that, like, with that illustration in mind and looking at it that way, I, I look at this thing, a knife is really, for the most part neutral. Unless it's this crazy butcher knife that is, for the most part, a knife is neutral. It's what you're doing with it in your hands. So then it becomes about making sure to check your motives as well as prepare the person that has it in their hands to use it in the right way and to know how to use it in the right way. And, um, I think in that, like, especially if we're talking to ministers and I, I would put this across the board, in fact mm-hmm. , I would argue that senior pastors teaching pastors should be coaching, uh, 50, 60 year olds how to utilize their phones wisely, even more so than those that are just growing up with it, a native part of their life. 
Derry Prenkert (17:03):
Hmm. Um, cuz I don't see a lot of students, uh, just making a fool of themselves on how they treat people on, on social media is, uh, as much as I see adults, uh, in what they're saying and everything else. So, so the, it's across the board. Like we have a responsibility to look at what does scripture say about, especially from a discipleship aspect of how we are to love our neighbors ourselves, and then how does it play out on this thing, you know? Mm-hmm. . So, so that would be, that would be a thing. So, um, so that's just, sorry, little rant there, but the knife and, and, and we, we have a responsibility to show them. Uh, I am a big fan Nick, of just intentionality in ministry overall. I think a lot of pastors, uh, I'm, I'm dedicating really, I feel like the second, second half of my life is I just want youth pastors and any pastors to be healthy in ministry. 
Derry Prenkert (17:53):
And a big part of that is guarding your own heart. Um, another part is just thinking clearly and strategically in Christ's focus and inten and intentionality in what you're doing is a big part of that. Um, and so I would, I would argue that anybody that is in charge of a program, uh, a ministry, uh, any regular ministry gathering, there should be a side to say, Okay, what's our philosophy in how phones play into this? Mm-hmm. . And it can take up a lot of different forms. Yeah. One is what's our, so we're gonna be teaching this series, How's it showing up on their phones? Mm-hmm. , are we gonna do digital notes that they can look at while they're in the room? Are we going to do follow up stuff through social media that's gonna create interaction? Um, you've done some great stuff on the importance of don't just use your social media of as a, as a billboard that uses this interactive place. 
Derry Prenkert (18:47):
You know, thinking through those things. Mm-hmm. , um, how are we going to actually handle the phones inside the space? What are, are, are, uh, uh, to what, what do we need to take into account if a middle school, I, I'm helping out in middle school right now, and I'm at a pretty conservative community mm-hmm.  where I'd say it's six through eight grade, I would say no more than half the kids are, are actually walking in with smartphones. Now I know some would go, That's ridiculous. Well, that's my community. Sure. So I need to be thinking through, um, that I, I have to have a path for the non phone user. Right. But also I need to be thinking through for the phone user to begin to show them now. Like, Hey, if you're gonna follow Jesus, that plays out in this thing. Yeah. 
Derry Prenkert (19:28):
So how do we do that? So what, what am I teaching? You know, when I get to the practical steps of my teaching, how am I intentionally saying, Hey, this is how this plays out on your phone. You know, that can be a part of it. Um, and then, and then I think, uh, there's just the overall, uh, idea of, I, I have kind of these categories I think through that I want to try to do inside the programming. And this is very youth ministry specific. I want to have times where, uh, where they have it and it's on, but they're encouraged to put it to, to the side mm-hmm.  and not access it at all. Because, because we need to be able to do that in real life at times. Mm-hmm. , you know mm-hmm. . And so small groups, a lot of times, I don't know if you have this some, sometimes they'll do like the basket or, or, or things to say, Hey, it's here. 
Derry Prenkert (20:14):
Or just even stack them in the middle of the room like, it's here, but we're not gonna use Oh yeah. Use that right now. Yeah. And, um, or it's just even a, Hey, let's put this in our pockets. Just hang tight with me for a little bit. Um, then there's then there's times where it's like off or not there at all. And we can talk about that one a little bit more. Probably it'd be a good one of, of, Hey, this is a no cell phone situation. Yeah. I think that's very debatable on how much we're often, but there's times where it's important to just, I mean, uh, solitude, simplicity, um, making sure that we're not controlled by things all apart of following Jesus. But then most importantly is we're gonna have times where we use this thing in a redemptive manner. Yeah. Um, we're gonna find ways. 
Derry Prenkert (20:57):
So, so we are closing out and we've talked about, uh, the importance of praying for others and what ha you know, maybe we're doing a series on prayer and it's about praying for others. And, and what we say is, Okay, here's what we're gonna do right now. If you have a phone, I want you to pull it out and I'm just gonna ask the Lord to speak to us, to give you a name right now as somebody you could pray for. Hmm. And, and now I want you to pull out your phone and I want you to text them, not not, not text them that you are praying for them, actually text out what your prayer for them is. Hmm. Or when you walk out the room tonight, I want you to use that little voice memo thing. I did this this morning. Uh, I got a friend who just started first day in ministry today. I, I did a voice memo to him that was just solely my prayer and that was it. Like, here's my prayer for you today as you started on ministry. Yeah. That's cool. So, so finding ways to use it, redemptively. So again, I kind of went different, but use it redemptively. Find ways to put it to the side, find ways to turn it off or not have it there at all. And do all of that intentionally. 
Nick Clason (21:51):
Yeah. I mean, a lot, a lot of what we say on here is that digital and physical, uh, both are important, but they're both categorically different. And so that's why I do think there is value in things that are strictly physical only. I think, like you said, we learned a lot of things about ourselves and people during covid when what was physical could not be completely replicated digitally. Yeah. Um, and vice versa. Right. And that's, that's the thing too, is like, I think the vice versa piece is like, there are some digital things that are digital only, like mm-hmm.  me. Like you can do message recaps and, and things like that where you're calling back to what you did, um, throughout the week. Like on things like social media where people are not physically gathering in your room on a Tuesday morning, or they can be reading a u version plan on their own when they wake up on Thursday afternoon, you know, at lunch, whatever. 
Nick Clason (22:46):
So mm-hmm. , that's, that's this whole idea of hybrid is it's, there is room for, for physical only. And there's also space, I think for digital. And that's part of the thing is we've, and I think a lot of churches are kind of running up into this, is they're, uh, Hey, you're, you're a youth pastor so you have to do all of it. Mm-hmm. , it's like these are two completely like different lanes. And so there's, I mean, there's staffing conversations and budget conversations I think like around all these things that are gonna be coming, coming down the pike at, at churches, so mm-hmm. , what would you say are times, um, maybe where you would, you would say, Hey, let's put phones away all together. Maybe talk about like camp situation Sure. Or, or retreats or whatever. Yeah. I'm sure that's probably one of the, the main ones that comes to people's minds. 
Derry Prenkert (23:32):
Yeah. Yeah. Nick, you and I are a part of different youth ministry communities. Um, Facebook groups are a wonderful mess at times. . And one of the, one of the hot topics amongst many other things is when this gets asked of, Hey, what's your policy on cell phones? And it's interesting. It's like just hot takes start firing all over the place. Right. So, um, I was a part of one church for 23 years mm-hmm. , and I was a part of another church for 2.3 years. That's my little joke, uhha. But, um, , uh, in the one church that I was at for 23 years that I also grew up where technology was unfolded. And we, we had a hard and fast rule that really any trip that we did, we started with the idea of no cell phones would be allowed. And it was because we had a high emphasis on interactivity and, and, and it, cell phones weren't around when we set the rule. 
Derry Prenkert (24:24):
It was, you can't bring your walkmans, your discmans your game boys because we're here to interact with each other. And the minute you look down on that thing, you're not there. So that just kind of lended itself over to cell phones and everything else. Mm-hmm. . And so, um, so any camp retreat, anything like that, we just, we put a pretty hard and fast rule with the one except perception being our senior retreat that we do with grads. We'd say, Hey, you can bring it. It was almost like this. Oh, you're old enough now. I, I don't know that I liked the motives in it, um,  in, in it all. So, but then I went to, uh, another church where it was like, you can have them all the time mm-hmm. . Um, which, and the interesting thing I saw was effective ministry was taking place in both situations. 
Derry Prenkert (25:09):
Um, but we hadn't really stopped and re strategized in my 23 year church to say, Hey, we're kind of, we kind of just stumbled into this, but these things are so much a part of his life. So we need to understand when we ask a kid to leave theirself at home, we're asking them to leave their most prized valuable mm-hmm. , um, possession mm-hmm.  at home. Um, and then at the other church it was like, it's all there. But where we really said, Hey, how are we, are we, are we assessing how we're we're using these? And so I don't, I don't come from the mindset that says definitely no. Or definitely yes. As much as, again, back to that word, intentionality. Yeah. Um, have a plan. Yeah. Talk about it. So, so where we really landed, where at the church I was just at, was, um, if the event is going to be primarily focused on those that don't know Jesus coming into the situation, we're gonna be very hesitant to say he phones. 
Derry Prenkert (26:06):
Yeah. Because they're not gonna get the idea of it. If the event is, is high, um, service based, um, intentional discipleship mm-hmm.  and deepening, we're gonna stop and say, Hey, you know what, let's, this might be a time, Yeah. Let's evaluate this, where we're gonna maybe more lean toward this is a no-go, but then we're gonna say, here's why it's a no-go. If it's heavy discipleship, it's gonna say, this is gonna be a significant time. Where the primary things we're gonna do is we're gonna focus in on your connection with God and your connection with others, and we're gonna challenge you to find ways to do that outside of the technical technological world. Can you do that inside the technological world? Absolutely. But we see the value of a break. Um, and so that's kind of where we landed. Uh, but I mean the, the, I'm back, I'm back around the church that I was at for 23 years, though a lot of the rules are still in place that if it's a trip or retreat, it's no go. The interesting thing is, um, parents hated a whole lot more than students did. 
Nick Clason (27:03):
Yeah. Now they were the one were noticing that too. Yep. 
Derry Prenkert (27:05):
Yeah. If you, I would argue you wanna try to institute a no cell phone rule and you don't have it, it's gonna be really hard and it may not be worth the fight and it won't be because the kids, it's gonna be the parents. Parents are be, How do I get a hold of Johnny? Yeah. And, you know, in whatever case. Um, but, but when we take seniors on the retreat, when we were taking them, you know, and we'd allow to have phones, it just naturally had come up in conversations. They would go, Wait, are you gonna start allowing this for other kids on your, on, on campus? Like, we didn't have. And and I'm like, and, and I'd get into the conversation with 'em like, Oh, are you ticked because you had to suffer through not having 'em. Yeah. And you're, and you wanna make sure they get punished like you did. 
Derry Prenkert (27:42):
And the seniors would be like, No, no. Like, I'd love that. We didn't have 'em. Yeah. I, I I actually would come back from camp. So grateful that you really pushed that on us for that time. Mm-hmm. . Now, is that right or wrong? No, I, I like, does that mean that you absolutely shouldn't do it? No, but it was just, it's an interesting aspect to it all. So again, long, long talking to just say it's about intentionality, it's about thinking through why would we want to do this? Mm-hmm.  and then, and then making sure to communicate to those that are participating. And if it's in youth ministry, the parents of saying here's why. Yeah. Um, and then being ready for a fight, if you wanna say No phones. Cause it's, it's a challenge. 
Nick Clason (28:20):
Yeah. That, No, that's really good. And again, right, like there's things that only physical can accomplish and there's things that only digital can accomplish. And I think an experience like a camp or whatever, there is a lot of connection that needs to take place. And most students, and you know, back to what you said earlier, people in church like don't know how to live in a world where it's just that where their phone isn't constantly dinging or lighting up or vying for their attention. And so I, I too have noticed in those types of environments where students, people are like grateful and thankful or say, man, like I'm, I haven't even like, wanted my phone. They're kinda surprised by it. You know, that that's, that's kind of the case. So Yeah. It's so 
Derry Prenkert (29:05):
Interesting. Can I give two practical, just real practical tips if you choose to do no phones, especially if you're a youth pastor. Yeah, yeah. Um, one is bring in a, at at least one, maybe multiple people who's their sole job is to capture photos and videos of the experience mm-hmm. . And at the beginning of the experience, make sure that the students know who that person is, because one of the things you're asking them to sacrifice is 
Nick Clason (29:28):
Capturing, capturing 
Derry Prenkert (29:30):
The memories 
Nick Clason (29:30):
Of 
Derry Prenkert (29:31):
It all. And that's bigger than ever, right? Yeah. Because they can do that. And so making sure that that's there, and then making all those photos and videos available as soon as you possibly can. Um, and I, I noticed that, um, the, a camp I was at this summer there, the photographer was actually uploading those, um, to their social media platform, like with a link while the camp was there, even though the kids didn't have phones, so that as soon as they got home within like one hour, the kids were like posting their, you know, their real, their reels that recaps, like that's good. Building up all the stuff on the, That's really good. So I think that's a big one. And then two is think through your strategic feedback loop to parents. The parent freakout is, I don't, I, how do I know? Well mm-hmm. 
Derry Prenkert (30:14):
, if you have a, a way of saying, Hey, here's, here's where you can go, um, whether it's a Facebook page or group, or if it's your Instagram, or if it's even like a, a remind, uh, setup or whatever, texting, like, here's where it's at. We found that Facebook lives where you could at a camp mm-hmm. , um, actually doing a, Hey, I'm gonna, I'm gonna go live at this time. I'm actually gonna give you a little glimpse into the session just for a short bit so you can just see what's going on and then come back and update you. And the beauty of a Facebook Live, every parent is still on Facebook, uh, for the most part. So they, they, they're there and so they can jump on live and then you can let it sit there. So, um, but those two things will, will go a long way in helping the resistance you might get. Um, when it comes to the no phone 
Nick Clason (31:00):
Rule. Yeah. We, we, we do, we've done like a photographer and my, my favorite, and it always depends on like if the church or I have the budget to pull this off, but like get a videographer as well, or the same person, um, and have them do a daily, like, recap video. Those are great for opening your like sessions, but they're also amazing to throw up on YouTube and then text a link out. And so, you know, parents who, uh, send their kids without phone or whatever, they feel this like sense of relief if like they see their kid. Absolutely. Then the downside is one, one time I had to, uh, remove a clip because a kid was like picking his nose and the mom like, wanted it out. Yeah. Um, and then another time ano a mom was like, I haven't seen my kid in any of the recap bees. Yeah. And I'm trying not to freak out, but like, are they having fun? Like, are they making friends? Like, and I get it, like as a, as a dad myself, you know, now, like I would also want to try and like lay eyes on my kids. So 
Derry Prenkert (32:01):
Totally same. Totally same. Actually Gabe, the pastor at the church that I'm serving with now, he did a meal time at camp and he just said, Okay, who needs to see their kid Facebook Live, , who needs to see their kid? And he just went around and said, funny. And he put up the phone, he said, Tell your mom you're okay. And, and it was like one of the most viewed Yeah. There are a lot of people there, so Yeah. And that is legit. And it's, you gotta be ready for it for that whole world. And, um, it is, that is evidence again, of the different world. And, and as a parent of a high schooler and a middle schooler, I wasn't at the high school camp. I was at the middle school camp. I was watching for my kid. Yeah. 
Derry Prenkert (32:38):
That I didn't quite quite realize. So. 
Nick Clason (32:40):
All right. Last, last thing. Um, how can we, as pastors, people in ministry, what are ways there that you see that we can optimize technology, um, now Cause like the overall mission, right? Of the church mm-hmm.  to make disciples. And Paul used, you know, the thing available to him writing letters at the time to reach churches that he was not near. So what are some ways, just maybe a couple ideas off the top of your head that you have seen effective or ideas that maybe you haven't seen totally fleshed out, but are ruminating inside. Like Yeah. Where we can use what is available to us in technology. I mean, even the fact that I'm sitting in Texas here in northern Indiana and we're having this conversation and we're seeing each other, like, that's an advantage that wasn't available to us pre 2007. Right. And so, uh, what are some of those things maybe that you have seen or have thought about that we can use to our advantage to help kids take steps closer to Jesus? 
Derry Prenkert (33:40):
Yeah. Let me throw you a little bit of a curve on where I might go with this to start only, um, in that I've been a part of large to very large churches mm-hmm. , and you've been a part of larger churches where there's a budget that's available and mass communication through technology. And so our minds might immediately go to Yeah. Podcasts and video streams mm-hmm.  and, uh, you know, Instagram and getting somehow in with you version so you can build up a Bible reading plan. And I Yes. Yeah. 
Nick Clason (34:10):
But I would it if you can 
Derry Prenkert (34:11):
Yeah. I would say pastors and ministers to remember to that this is an incredible one to one ministry tool still mm-hmm. . And so, um, and, and this has gotten especially big to me as I've shifted over into this world now where my primary job that I says God's called me to is just to pastor pastors, especially those that are youth pastors. Well, they're all over the nation. Yeah. And so, um, last night, Sunday night for me, I'm recognizing I was just like, Lord, who are the people right now that might just kind of be in that spot that a word of encouragement or a check-in could go a long way? And there were, there were four texts that were sent out to individuals going, Hey, you're on my mind. How did today go? Or what's going on in your mind? Woke up this morning and like I already told you about, there was one guy that is first day he shifted from the education world to the church world. 
Derry Prenkert (35:03):
Hmm. And so, um, so I, I would just start by saying yes, I mean, as we think about the massive ways to do it, let's not forget that pastoring at its best that's good is a one to one, a one to three relationship mm-hmm. . And so, uh, connecting with our parishioners are people that we're discipling, whoever they might be, uh, through the phone and doing it healthily and thinking through safeguards and all those things are really important, especially for youth pastors. Um, which probably is a whole other episode to talk through at some point. . Yeah. But, um, but to understand like, this is a ministry tool at its core. And so a a properly placed text, phone call, FaceTime, um, like, or comment on a, um, on a, on a post, uh, can is, is ministry, like, is deep ministry and meaningful ministry at times. 
Derry Prenkert (35:53):
Mm-hmm. . Um, That's great. It was interesting Nick, uh, my former youth pastor, uh, my dad died 10, uh, 13 years ago now, and my former youth minister is no longer in youth ministry. And, but it was an incredible influence on my life. Mm-hmm. . And it was about, uh, it was, it was right around eight years after my dad had died, I posted just a memory of him and below in the comment section, my old youth pastor got on and he, all he wrote was, I'm so proud of you Derry. And I read that and I lost it. And, and I talked to him and, and what happened in that moment was like, I realized, uh, can, like, thank you. I miss I miss having my dad, and I'm not, I don't have a dad that can physically say to me, I'm proud of you anymore. 
Derry Prenkert (36:39):
And I'm, I'm like a 36 year old man, like blubbering over my youth pastor telling me he's proud of me. But it's because he, he, in that moment, he ministered to me through a simple comment on a Facebook group mm-hmm.  that also helped me work through some grieving that I was at. I hadn't really just walked through and said, God, I'm kind of ticked, I'm kind of ticked right now because I've lost, like, why did this happen? And, and it helped me kind of break through to a new level. And so, so anyway, like just, I, I, that's the one thing I would just say is as we think through the strategic and the greater stuff, let's not forget this is a incredible tool for the most effective ministry that is relational and personal in nature. That's good. That's good. Um, um, I would say otherwise though too is, um, I have a good friend, John McAllen, Johnny Mack, he did this thing, he started, it was called Echo Ministry. 
Derry Prenkert (37:25):
And the idea was how do you take and create echos of what's happening on the, on the weekend? How do you have the message echo through the rest of the week? And our technology, our cell phones are such a primary tool to make that happen. You said it so well, there are things that we can do now because we have these, um, where it can show up in the moment, in, in different ways, uh, whether it's, uh, uh, a thinking through, uh, devotional journey, like I said, through you version. Mm-hmm. , uh, uh, the youth group that I just was at for the last couple of years, they're doing a thing called sale up Moments every week. They have just one moment that, that where they, they use on social media where they say, Okay, you're scrolling through, but stop, exhale, um, and listen to God allow 'em to speak to you. 
Derry Prenkert (38:16):
You know? And there's a whole acronym to it. I can't remember what the H was good. Yeah. I like that. You know, have a burger, I think was the last, no, I can't remember what the H was, but, um, they, they, they walked through it and, and so using that was, um, was, was a way to do it. So I, I think it's that matter of how can we echo it mm-hmm. . And there's a lot, you know, podcasts can be a part of it. Uh, I started something called Digging Deeper with our main services when I was, uh, at my own church. And, and what we did was every Wednesday I would sit down with whoever was preaching mm-hmm. . And if I, I, I was a part of the teaching time. If I was preaching, somebody else would come in and the first thing we'd say, Hey, hey, what hit the cutting room floor? 
Derry Prenkert (38:53):
What were you not able to get to this weekend that you wish you could have? And people just love that aspect, but then we would pick it part a little bit more mm-hmm. . And so, and it, it's not hard. It's a, you know, get, get a little basic, um, Yeah. Recording set up and you can get it set up pretty easy. Um, and so there's just so many ways, but I would just start with the, like, how can we echo into the week, what happened on the weekend Yep. And use it on a digital format. 
Nick Clason (39:16):
Yeah. No, that's good. I, I also personally think that we don't know yet like, the answer to some of these questions. Yeah. Like, I still think that there's, uh, things yet to be discovered, you know, in front of us. And so I think, uh, if there's any sort of like, challenge for anyone listening, I would just say like, just do something. Um, and you may stumble upon something great. You may find some stuff that's terrible and you need to cut it out. Um, but if you're, if you're always looking that direction, uh, you'll, you'll stumble upon something good that you maybe don't even know, or you maybe didn't, you know, you maybe weren't even able to see it right now when you started it because of a limited technology or budget or whatever. And so just be looking for ways. Cuz like I said, it's less, I think, I personally think it's easy to make digital about being flashy, um, or whatever, looking good to parents or other youth pastors or other people in ministry, whatever. 
Nick Clason (40:15):
But I think it's far less about that for me at least, and it's more about how effective can I be in spreading the message of Jesus with all the tools that he's given to me. Yeah. Like, I'm, I'm alive in 2022 with access to podcast microphones and phones that can take incredible videos and pictures, like mm-hmm. , how am I going to use steward those things to reach the most amount of people, you know, that have an audience to reach. So I think that's, that would be my challenge to whoever's listening is think what Dare said, think through all the things that, with intentionality, Um, and then just be open, you know, to, to utilizing some stuff. 
Derry Prenkert (40:52):
So yeah. You're, you're so right on. We don't have it all figured out. Probably one of my greatest pet peeves in life are, uh, those that are convinced they have it all figured out. Um, Yeah.  and I, I, I can do that at times. And usually when I'm at that point and I'm like, Oh yeah, I know how to do this. Mm-hmm. , that's the moment when I will fall flat on my face. And so, so there's a ton to be learned. There's a ton to be determined I love, or 
Nick Clason (41:14):
That's when a new iPhone comes out, Right. And you're like, Oh, this changed everything. Or Covid hit and this changed everything. So yes. Totally. Good. Yes. I think we're living through that. Well, hey man. Um, anything else off top of your head? You don't have to, but I just wanna make sure you said everything you wanted to say. Didn't leave anything unsaid. 
Derry Prenkert (41:30):
I think the only thing I would maybe end with is in that same vein is, um, it's everywhere. It's so much. Uh, also don't be afraid to not feel like you have to do everything, you know? Um, uh, especially to the minister that's trying to think through how to do effectively. There is a, there is a moment where less is more because your soul needs to rest, you know? Mm-hmm. , if you're finding yourself trying to, uh, late at night when you should be being around your family, invest your family or on your day off going, this is the time while Ill dive into all this digital stuff. Eh, you know what, maybe, maybe that's, uh, not worth it. No, not, maybe it definitely is not worth it. Definitely not worth, There's just, that's the part of like this thing, there's just so much out there. Mm-hmm.  don't, I, I I guess it's like that idea of don't gain the digital world at the cost of your soul. Yeah.  good is, is, is a big thing. And I just, I say that out of a season where I'm just seeing so many of us burn out. Um, and we're burning out in a lot of different ways, but one is because we're just constantly on and we don't hit the off switch. That's 
Nick Clason (42:34):
Good. That's good. Love it, man. Well, hey, thanks again. Uh, you referenced a couple things in here. I'll toss 'em in show notes, like your resource on D ym  so that all tens of our listeners can go get it. There you go. Um, anyway, thanks for hanging out man. And uh, absolutely. We'll chat again. Chat again. Yeah. Awesome. 
Nick Clason (42:52):
Well, wasn't that great, Uh, super thoughtful, super helpful. Um, I hope that you found this interesting and helpful as well. Hey, um, we are online on Twitter at Hybrid Ministry. Would love to have you come hang out, follow us over there. Um, we're still growing, not super active yet, but, uh, we're well on our way. And also everything you need, show notes, links, transcripts, all kinds of stuff. You can find out hybrid ministry.xyz along with a now growing bank of archive and older episodes. So if you're just not stumbling upon us, we'd love to have you go back and check it out. Uh, you can do all of that at hybridministry.xyz (http://www.hybridministry.xyz) Ze. Again, thanks for being with us today and we'll chat next time.
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Technology, Digital Ministry, Gen Z, Pastors, Students, Ministry,  Youth Ministry, Online Church, Digital Ministry, Millennials</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this episode, Nick sits down with his friend, Derry Prenkert, a 20+ year youth ministry veteran. Derry shares about the monumental shift of the invention of the smart phone. How things were before, and how things have shifted, but most importantly, how we utilize this technology for our benefit and gain to reach more students for the mission of Jesus.</p>

<p>Follow us on Twitter <a href="http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry</a><br>
Find all the resources you need from the podcast <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://www.hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Follow Derry online: <br>
-TWITTER: <a href="https://twitter.com/derryprenkert" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/derryprenkert</a><br>
-INSTAGRAM: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/derryprenkert/" rel="nofollow">https://www.instagram.com/derryprenkert/</a><br>
-PODCAST: <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/my-third-decade-in-youth-ministry/id1338273697" rel="nofollow">https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/my-third-decade-in-youth-ministry/id1338273697</a></p>

<p><strong>SHOWNOTES</strong><br>
Steve Job&#39;s introduction of the iPhone: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7qPAY9JqE4" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7qPAY9JqE4</a><br>
Derry&#39;s Parenting Resource: <a href="https://www.downloadyouthministry.com/p/adolescence%2C-technology-and-parenting/training-3996.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.downloadyouthministry.com/p/adolescence%2C-technology-and-parenting/training-3996.html</a><br>
Johnny Mac&#39;s Stuff: <a href="https://yourhouseblend.com/jonnysblend" rel="nofollow">https://yourhouseblend.com/jonnysblend</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-03:30 Intro<br>
03:30-10:53 The impact of the invention of the iPhone<br>
10:53-14:30 What happened in ministry after the invention of the iPhone<br>
14:30-23:20 How have you responded since then?<br>
23:20-32:44 When do you ask phones to be put away?<br>
32:44-41:23 How can we utilize technology now to further and advance God&#39;s mission?<br>
41:23-43:38 Outro</p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What is up everybody? Welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. Uh, today we have our very first, uh, guest interview, uh, friend of mine Derry Pinker. He&#39;s located in, um, Amish town, Nape Indiana. Um, right now, uh, he worked at that church for over 20 years, and then he was at another church for just a couple years, super large church in, uh, Kentucky. So, um, excited to bring you Derry&#39;s conversation. Uh, he mentions a couple of different links. He talks about Steve Jobs&#39; keynote, a resource that he has on download youth ministry and echo ministry. I&#39;m gonna include all of those in the show notes, but without any further ado, let&#39;s just hop in so you can get to know Derry. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (00:51):<br>
All right, well, what&#39;s up Derry? Good to have you on the podcast. Welcome, man. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (00:56):<br>
Yeah, it&#39;s so good to be with you, Nick. Thanks for having me on. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (00:58):<br>
Yeah. So as we were talking a little bit before I hit record here, you have a podcast or did, or what would you define the, the existence of your podcast? Right Now?</p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (01:11):<br>
The status of my third decade. It is, it has been on the longest hiatus ever. Um, yeah. And it is coming back. Um, it&#39;s tied to this whole world of the shift that I&#39;ve, I&#39;ve made from being in a local church to now serving pastors in the local church. Yeah. And I&#39;m in a season of getting all the groundwork laid for that. I, uh, have every intention, every intention by, uh, early 2023 that it&#39;s gonna launch back out. And there are some, there are actually some things already recorded for it, so, so it hasn&#39;t completely gone away. There, there is, there is a future to it. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:46):<br>
That&#39;s good. Cuz it&#39;s still in my podcast catcher, so I&#39;m not unsubscribing from, I just wanna let you know that it&#39;s still there. So, um, but back when I mowed the lawn when I worked two churches ago, I think I heard you, um, talk about like, uh, this really big shift in culture and you noticed that it was, uh, have to do with when the iPhone came into existence. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, just give us a little bit, like give us your story, how long you&#39;ve been, you know, doing youth ministry, um, and how you have a beneficial perspective of before technology and phones are a part of what we have to navigate and deal with. And then post, and then maybe we can just kind of chat about how we navigate that as, you know, people who are, uh, ministering to people, students, um, who are very much entrenched in this technology, like Lane and world. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (02:42):<br>
Yeah, absolutely. So, um, my story is somebody that started in youth ministry at 19 years old. I was just about to turn 20 and I started an internship and that was back in 1996. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Yeah, I&#39;m old. Um, and so graduated from high school in 95, start in, in ministry in 96. And so I get 11 years of ministry. Um, and in those 11 years, uh, you know, cell phones, car phones were around when I started <laugh>. Yeah. And cell phones were around when I finished college in 1999. But they were, they roamed the minute you got outside of about 10 miles from your house and you only use them in emergencies. And then, and then it moved into, you know, 2004, 2005, the razor flip. Flum was the coolest thing in the world is texting, kind of entered the picture mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, and then, you know, so I, but, but really it was 2007 when Steve Jobs holds up this, this phone. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (03:36):<br>
And it&#39;s actually interesting to go back and watch, I don&#39;t know if you&#39;ve ever watched that keynote when he does it. No, I should, but, but he, he, he introduces it and is pretty prophetic, like the level of what he&#39;s talking about where technology is heading. Cause he said this is gonna revolutionize and change. And he says, he says, What would happen if we were to introduce a computer operating system, a phone and a iPod all in one thing. Yeah. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s the heartbeat of what they did. Um, and actually I, I do a technology thing with parents, uh, adolescents, technology and parenting. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, what I do is, I&#39;ll actually, it&#39;s, it&#39;s a fun little exercise cuz if you think about, you got, most parents of teenagers right now are, are there children of the eighties if they&#39;re really, if they&#39;ve got younger, like their youngest kids are teenagers now, nineties or maybe early two thousands mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so what I do is I&#39;ll put up on the screen different, like, what was the technology of our time. And so like, you know, in the eighties you got like VCRs and corded phones and, and a Walkman or a giant computer that has a green screen maybe. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:41):<br>
Yeah. I found the VCR yesterday in our building, so that was cool, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (04:46):<br>
Dude. And, and did you try playing anything? Cause it probably just ate the tape, right? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:49):<br>
Yeah, no, I was like, I don&#39;t, I don&#39;t even know if we would ever need this, but, Right. Yeah. Here it </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (04:53):<br>
Is. Yeah. Yeah. It&#39;s, see the, in the eighties in technology, like everything got fixed by blowing on it. Um, so like the VHS tape wasn&#39;t working. You blew on it. The, the Nintendo cartridge. Yep. You blew in that and then blew in the box. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. So that was, you know, eighties in the nineties, you have cell phones come, you got the Discman mm-hmm. <affirmative> that I remember. I would, as the nineties I would run or exercise with a discman, but I had to be careful not to run too hard because the CD would skip Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:17):<br>
As I skipping. I </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (05:18):<br>
Remember that. Yeah. Yeah. Um, and then, you know, early two thousands social media in MySpace shows up. Yep. But, you know, garins show up, Uhhuh, um, digital cameras are a big deal in another 2000 flat screen TVs. Right. So we walk through these different, different moments and I say in 2007, Steve Jobs holds up this, this little device. And everything I just said was around in those different decades now lives inside this single device. Mm. Interesting. It is your video games. It is your music, you know, it&#39;s your disc man, it&#39;s your VCR or your DVD player. It is your </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:53):<br>
Computer, your calendar. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (05:55):<br>
Yeah. It&#39;s everything. It&#39;s all there. And, and so for parents, it&#39;s just saying like, recognize how significant this shift is. And so for those of us in ministry, if we are in that age, it&#39;s important to recognize that for those of us that are, I I, a lot of youth pastors are maybe a little, um, younger than the parents that they have. Right. Remember, like, these are the parents you&#39;re working with that, that this shift has happened. It might be a little more native to you as a youth pastor if you&#39;re in your, your mid to early twenties mm-hmm. <affirmative>. But it&#39;s foreign. It&#39;s, it&#39;s, it&#39;s so different and, and it&#39;s, it&#39;s changed so much. Um, the two things to kind of say, when I look at youth culture, cuz that&#39;s where I spent a lot of my time Yeah. That I would say are huge, is, uh, one youth group in church. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (06:40):<br>
I was at a church that ha drew from multiple high schools. And pre 2007, we were the place to go to connect with friends. Hmm. Um, now we saw God move and we were, we were, we were unapologetic that that wasn&#39;t the, that wasn&#39;t the primary point. The primary point was to encounter a relationship with Jesus, to understand your call, to be a part of this kingdom work. But the appeal for my kids, I&#39;m gonna drop names that nobody knows from Wawa c high school at Northwood High School. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and Goshan High School. Someone knows each other. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Um, uh, they can meet weekly at our place. Right. Uh, now with the institution of not only, you know, the, just the move of the cell phone with texting, but then once the iPhone came in, it wasn&#39;t just you, you could, you didn&#39;t have to go there to meet a place you could actually interact face to face, you know, through FaceTime, through, through, um, whatever it might be. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (07:33):<br>
Google Meet all do different stuff. You could, you could do that over the phone. So it became less important. The other thing that&#39;s super intriguing is, I don&#39;t know about Eich, but the greatest day of my life, uh, as a teenager was when I turned 16 in one month in my town, because that was the day I could get my driver&#39;s license. Yeah. And by getting my driver&#39;s license, that meant a whole new, uh, level of freedom, empowerment, and ownership. Like that driver&#39;s license was my ticket to independence. Yeah. I&#39;ve noticed, um, a major change. I can&#39;t believe how many kids I interact with that are like 16, 17 and, you know, we&#39;re doing an event. They&#39;re like, Hey, can I get a ride? I&#39;m like, You don&#39;t have your license yet. Yeah. No. And, and, and, and I I don&#39;t have like the scientific proof to this, just the conversation. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (08:25):<br>
Sure. It&#39;s, they&#39;re like, Why would I, why would I need it? Well, yeah, the big shift came like that that license was my way to get to my friends. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and my community. Now, this, this thing that we can hold in our hands is our ticket to interact. And so, so like one of the, I guess like the big implication that I would throw out that is huge is it it has radically transformed our connectivity mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, even with the people right next to us. Yeah. Um, so I mean, so many other thoughts, but there&#39;s, those are just a couple things like that we recognize. Another way I say it is like we basically now are carrying around super computers in our pockets. Yeah. That, uh, it&#39;s, they are that we&#39;re, we have, we have excessive, uh, access to information. We are, we are constantly connected. Um, and it&#39;s like invasive, you know, it&#39;s not like it&#39;s, when&#39;s the last time I I I, you can answer this or the people are listening, When&#39;s the last time you actually turned off powered down your phone </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:26):<br>
On your own? Well, mine&#39;s new, so never </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (09:29):<br>
Yeah. <laugh>. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:30):<br>
Right, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (09:30):<br>
Right. And it&#39;s, it&#39;s like impossible to, like, they&#39;ve made it so it&#39;s hard to do. And so it&#39;s always there. Now, now I might sound like I&#39;m interesting. Yeah. I&#39;m negative on this. I do mourn more in some things because I&#39;m old and I&#39;m an old guy sitting saying, Get off my lawn kids. You know, a little bit. But, um, but those are some of the things that I think are big that have changed. And so, so just the way we go about ministry has to change with it. It is in my mind, we measure time on before and after like, events that come to mind in youth ministry world, most youth pastors that were around before Columbine mm-hmm. <affirmative> and after Columbine, they know it changed the way you had to handle liabilities and safety </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:10):<br>
Measures. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (10:11):<br>
Mm-hmm. <affirmative> pre nine 11. Post nine 11 as a, as a culture, our life shifted on how we view, uh, things pre covid, post covid. We&#39;re still learning that all. Yeah. I still could make the argument pre iPhone and post iPhone, pre smartphone and post iPhone could be, could be the most significant watershed cultural moment that we&#39;ve experienced in the LA since World War ii. Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:35):<br>
I don&#39;t, one of, one of like, I, one of the guys I listen to a lot, his name, you know, Brady Shear mm-hmm. <affirmative>, he talks about this being the biggest communication shift that we&#39;ve seen in 500 years. So he&#39;s referencing that being the printing press. Yeah. And now with all this digital stuff. So that&#39;s a great call. Let&#39;s go like, let&#39;s go there a little bit. You said, um, pre iPhone people would gather from multiple high schools to your church. Did you notice that stopping, um, after, did you notice attendance shifting or did you just notice that still happens but there&#39;s, there&#39;s now just an iPhone in everyone&#39;s pocket and that&#39;s changing how they&#39;re interacting. But things are still, still sort of the same. Like, what would you say was, uh, like a, an actual effect, right? Yeah. Of that attendance thing you&#39;re talking about. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (11:25):<br>
This is not scientific at all. It&#39;s very guttural and it&#39;s nature. Uh, and it&#39;s my experience, I would say it didn&#39;t, for some it stopped. But I would say the bigger thing is it got more sporadic. In fact, you we&#39;re just talking, I don&#39;t know, it would be fascinating. You know, they talk about how people are coming to church less often Right. Than they used to. That a regular attendant is, attender is considered once every month or once every three weeks. Right? Yep. I wonder how that correlates to the institution of like the, the actual cell phone and smartphone because Yeah, because that was the thing. Like pre pre smartphone, um, even kids from the same school, there was the chance to just, you know, we&#39;re not just going through in passing periods. We&#39;re gonna have a small group time. We&#39;re gonna have a pre hangout post hangout mm-hmm. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (12:09):<br>
<affirmative> once a week. This is my guaranteed time. I&#39;m gonna get time with my friends. Yeah. Um, and so it got more sporadic. Yeah. Uh, definitely. And, and that could be in part because they could have the community outside of the youth group. Um, but it still, that&#39;s why I would, I would still be a firm believer. There is a limitation to what you can accomplish over digital. I think anybody that truly had to walk through the PA pandemic and live completely on a screen would a hundred percent agree with me. You can&#39;t replace, um, interpersonal in person reaction Totally. With digital. But you can find more connection or, or you can find connection in the gaps through that. And so I think it got more, um, more sporadic, uh, in nature. And yes, they are showing up with them. And I mean, man, whew, how many conversations do I have? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (12:58):<br>
I had with parents and leaders on, We gotta, we gotta, we gotta like force kids to turn these off or tell &#39;em they can&#39;t have &#39;em at all. And then, and then the issue of parents talking about what age do I give my kid a phone? When do I not? Because not only are they carrying it around, I mean, it&#39;s just, it&#39;s just there. And so the amount of attention that was going down to it when they were around that, that I&#39;d say kinda really hit in the two, like 2014 15 phrase when everybody got one. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, everybody had one. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:28):<br>
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, even my kids in first grade and his teacher sended stuff on his like e backpack and then his like e folder and he has like iPad time. Like, so my sort of thing is, while you may lament the loss of some of what was prefo and pre-technology, um, it&#39;s not going anywhere. And so, you know, cuz I, I&#39;m with you sometimes I have leaders who are like, We just need to get rid of the phones, take &#39;em away from the kids. Like make sure that they, you know, only use paper bibles and that, you know, it&#39;s, it&#39;s wrong to read God&#39;s word on a screen type of thing. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s a high preference maybe mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And there may be some validity to some of those things, but the fact of the matter is like, why, You know, my argument is why are we discouraging a kid from reading the Bible if it&#39;s super accessible to them and in their pocket 24 hours a day? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:25):<br>
Um, you know, so, So what have you noticed or what are some of the things that you&#39;ve done realizing like, we can&#39;t, we can&#39;t get ourselves away from these. They are everywhere. They&#39;re on all the time. They are our everything. Our day planner, our calendar and our social life in a lot of ways. You know, like what are some of the things that you&#39;ve, you&#39;ve tried to embrace as a youth pastor, um, to maybe leverage them or lean into them and then maybe what are some of the times that you&#39;ve discouraged use of them? Because you&#39;re like the, the, you know, the re the result of what&#39;s gonna happen here physically is gonna be greater than what is happening if you&#39;re on your </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (15:02):<br>
Phone. Yeah. It&#39;s great. Um, in the thing I do with parents, which total shameless plug, it&#39;s actually on D ym, you get it, download Youth Mystery </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:12):<br>
And then you have an extra $4 in your pocket. Yeah, yeah, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (15:15):<br>
Yeah. From that roof. Yeah. It&#39;s called Adolescents Parenting and Technology. I use an illustration. I, and I, it&#39;s an illustration that, that hit me is our phones are a knife, um, and a knife, uh, can serve many purposes. Uh, a knife is, can be used to spread butter. It can be used to whittle wood to make, uh, amazing things. It can be, it can be, uh, used to, you know, cut through things that are hard to cut through. It also can be used to kill people. Um, it&#39;s really about what is happening with the person that has it in their hands. And a part of that is what&#39;s their intentions as well as what&#39;s their awareness of a knife. You know, I&#39;ve got, you&#39;ve got younger kids. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, I had a six year old that early on, he just got us obsessed with our steak knives when he was three or four. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (16:03):<br>
And we had to like, put those things up high cuz he just, he didn&#39;t understand the danger involving those knives. Right. Um, and, and so, uh, so with that, like, with that illustration in mind and looking at it that way, I, I look at this thing, a knife is really, for the most part neutral. Unless it&#39;s this crazy butcher knife that is, for the most part, a knife is neutral. It&#39;s what you&#39;re doing with it in your hands. So then it becomes about making sure to check your motives as well as prepare the person that has it in their hands to use it in the right way and to know how to use it in the right way. And, um, I think in that, like, especially if we&#39;re talking to ministers and I, I would put this across the board, in fact mm-hmm. <affirmative>, I would argue that senior pastors teaching pastors should be coaching, uh, 50, 60 year olds how to utilize their phones wisely, even more so than those that are just growing up with it, a native part of their life. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (17:03):<br>
Hmm. Um, cuz I don&#39;t see a lot of students, uh, just making a fool of themselves on how they treat people on, on social media is, uh, as much as I see adults, uh, in what they&#39;re saying and everything else. So, so the, it&#39;s across the board. Like we have a responsibility to look at what does scripture say about, especially from a discipleship aspect of how we are to love our neighbors ourselves, and then how does it play out on this thing, you know? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. So, so that would be, that would be a thing. So, um, so that&#39;s just, sorry, little rant there, but the knife and, and, and we, we have a responsibility to show them. Uh, I am a big fan Nick, of just intentionality in ministry overall. I think a lot of pastors, uh, I&#39;m, I&#39;m dedicating really, I feel like the second, second half of my life is I just want youth pastors and any pastors to be healthy in ministry. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (17:53):<br>
And a big part of that is guarding your own heart. Um, another part is just thinking clearly and strategically in Christ&#39;s focus and inten and intentionality in what you&#39;re doing is a big part of that. Um, and so I would, I would argue that anybody that is in charge of a program, uh, a ministry, uh, any regular ministry gathering, there should be a side to say, Okay, what&#39;s our philosophy in how phones play into this? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And it can take up a lot of different forms. Yeah. One is what&#39;s our, so we&#39;re gonna be teaching this series, How&#39;s it showing up on their phones? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, are we gonna do digital notes that they can look at while they&#39;re in the room? Are we going to do follow up stuff through social media that&#39;s gonna create interaction? Um, you&#39;ve done some great stuff on the importance of don&#39;t just use your social media of as a, as a billboard that uses this interactive place. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (18:47):<br>
You know, thinking through those things. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, how are we going to actually handle the phones inside the space? What are, are, are, uh, uh, to what, what do we need to take into account if a middle school, I, I&#39;m helping out in middle school right now, and I&#39;m at a pretty conservative community mm-hmm. <affirmative> where I&#39;d say it&#39;s six through eight grade, I would say no more than half the kids are, are actually walking in with smartphones. Now I know some would go, That&#39;s ridiculous. Well, that&#39;s my community. Sure. So I need to be thinking through, um, that I, I have to have a path for the non phone user. Right. But also I need to be thinking through for the phone user to begin to show them now. Like, Hey, if you&#39;re gonna follow Jesus, that plays out in this thing. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (19:28):<br>
So how do we do that? So what, what am I teaching? You know, when I get to the practical steps of my teaching, how am I intentionally saying, Hey, this is how this plays out on your phone. You know, that can be a part of it. Um, and then, and then I think, uh, there&#39;s just the overall, uh, idea of, I, I have kind of these categories I think through that I want to try to do inside the programming. And this is very youth ministry specific. I want to have times where, uh, where they have it and it&#39;s on, but they&#39;re encouraged to put it to, to the side mm-hmm. <affirmative> and not access it at all. Because, because we need to be able to do that in real life at times. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, you know mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so small groups, a lot of times, I don&#39;t know if you have this some, sometimes they&#39;ll do like the basket or, or, or things to say, Hey, it&#39;s here. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (20:14):<br>
Or just even stack them in the middle of the room like, it&#39;s here, but we&#39;re not gonna use Oh yeah. Use that right now. Yeah. And, um, or it&#39;s just even a, Hey, let&#39;s put this in our pockets. Just hang tight with me for a little bit. Um, then there&#39;s then there&#39;s times where it&#39;s like off or not there at all. And we can talk about that one a little bit more. Probably it&#39;d be a good one of, of, Hey, this is a no cell phone situation. Yeah. I think that&#39;s very debatable on how much we&#39;re often, but there&#39;s times where it&#39;s important to just, I mean, uh, solitude, simplicity, um, making sure that we&#39;re not controlled by things all apart of following Jesus. But then most importantly is we&#39;re gonna have times where we use this thing in a redemptive manner. Yeah. Um, we&#39;re gonna find ways. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (20:57):<br>
So, so we are closing out and we&#39;ve talked about, uh, the importance of praying for others and what ha you know, maybe we&#39;re doing a series on prayer and it&#39;s about praying for others. And, and what we say is, Okay, here&#39;s what we&#39;re gonna do right now. If you have a phone, I want you to pull it out and I&#39;m just gonna ask the Lord to speak to us, to give you a name right now as somebody you could pray for. Hmm. And, and now I want you to pull out your phone and I want you to text them, not not, not text them that you are praying for them, actually text out what your prayer for them is. Hmm. Or when you walk out the room tonight, I want you to use that little voice memo thing. I did this this morning. Uh, I got a friend who just started first day in ministry today. I, I did a voice memo to him that was just solely my prayer and that was it. Like, here&#39;s my prayer for you today as you started on ministry. Yeah. That&#39;s cool. So, so finding ways to use it, redemptively. So again, I kind of went different, but use it redemptively. Find ways to put it to the side, find ways to turn it off or not have it there at all. And do all of that intentionally. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:51):<br>
Yeah. I mean, a lot, a lot of what we say on here is that digital and physical, uh, both are important, but they&#39;re both categorically different. And so that&#39;s why I do think there is value in things that are strictly physical only. I think, like you said, we learned a lot of things about ourselves and people during covid when what was physical could not be completely replicated digitally. Yeah. Um, and vice versa. Right. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s the thing too, is like, I think the vice versa piece is like, there are some digital things that are digital only, like mm-hmm. <affirmative> me. Like you can do message recaps and, and things like that where you&#39;re calling back to what you did, um, throughout the week. Like on things like social media where people are not physically gathering in your room on a Tuesday morning, or they can be reading a u version plan on their own when they wake up on Thursday afternoon, you know, at lunch, whatever. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (22:46):<br>
So mm-hmm. <affirmative>, that&#39;s, that&#39;s this whole idea of hybrid is it&#39;s, there is room for, for physical only. And there&#39;s also space, I think for digital. And that&#39;s part of the thing is we&#39;ve, and I think a lot of churches are kind of running up into this, is they&#39;re, uh, Hey, you&#39;re, you&#39;re a youth pastor so you have to do all of it. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, it&#39;s like these are two completely like different lanes. And so there&#39;s, I mean, there&#39;s staffing conversations and budget conversations I think like around all these things that are gonna be coming, coming down the pike at, at churches, so mm-hmm. <affirmative>, what would you say are times, um, maybe where you would, you would say, Hey, let&#39;s put phones away all together. Maybe talk about like camp situation Sure. Or, or retreats or whatever. Yeah. I&#39;m sure that&#39;s probably one of the, the main ones that comes to people&#39;s minds. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (23:32):<br>
Yeah. Yeah. Nick, you and I are a part of different youth ministry communities. Um, Facebook groups are a wonderful mess at times. <laugh>. And one of the, one of the hot topics amongst many other things is when this gets asked of, Hey, what&#39;s your policy on cell phones? And it&#39;s interesting. It&#39;s like just hot takes start firing all over the place. Right. So, um, I was a part of one church for 23 years mm-hmm. <affirmative>, and I was a part of another church for 2.3 years. That&#39;s my little joke, uhha. But, um, <laugh>, uh, in the one church that I was at for 23 years that I also grew up where technology was unfolded. And we, we had a hard and fast rule that really any trip that we did, we started with the idea of no cell phones would be allowed. And it was because we had a high emphasis on interactivity and, and, and it, cell phones weren&#39;t around when we set the rule. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (24:24):<br>
It was, you can&#39;t bring your walkmans, your discmans your game boys because we&#39;re here to interact with each other. And the minute you look down on that thing, you&#39;re not there. So that just kind of lended itself over to cell phones and everything else. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, um, so any camp retreat, anything like that, we just, we put a pretty hard and fast rule with the one except perception being our senior retreat that we do with grads. We&#39;d say, Hey, you can bring it. It was almost like this. Oh, you&#39;re old enough now. I, I don&#39;t know that I liked the motives in it, um, <laugh> in, in it all. So, but then I went to, uh, another church where it was like, you can have them all the time mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, which, and the interesting thing I saw was effective ministry was taking place in both situations. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (25:09):<br>
Um, but we hadn&#39;t really stopped and re strategized in my 23 year church to say, Hey, we&#39;re kind of, we kind of just stumbled into this, but these things are so much a part of his life. So we need to understand when we ask a kid to leave theirself at home, we&#39;re asking them to leave their most prized valuable mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, possession mm-hmm. <affirmative> at home. Um, and then at the other church it was like, it&#39;s all there. But where we really said, Hey, how are we, are we, are we assessing how we&#39;re we&#39;re using these? And so I don&#39;t, I don&#39;t come from the mindset that says definitely no. Or definitely yes. As much as, again, back to that word, intentionality. Yeah. Um, have a plan. Yeah. Talk about it. So, so where we really landed, where at the church I was just at, was, um, if the event is going to be primarily focused on those that don&#39;t know Jesus coming into the situation, we&#39;re gonna be very hesitant to say he phones. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (26:06):<br>
Yeah. Because they&#39;re not gonna get the idea of it. If the event is, is high, um, service based, um, intentional discipleship mm-hmm. <affirmative> and deepening, we&#39;re gonna stop and say, Hey, you know what, let&#39;s, this might be a time, Yeah. Let&#39;s evaluate this, where we&#39;re gonna maybe more lean toward this is a no-go, but then we&#39;re gonna say, here&#39;s why it&#39;s a no-go. If it&#39;s heavy discipleship, it&#39;s gonna say, this is gonna be a significant time. Where the primary things we&#39;re gonna do is we&#39;re gonna focus in on your connection with God and your connection with others, and we&#39;re gonna challenge you to find ways to do that outside of the technical technological world. Can you do that inside the technological world? Absolutely. But we see the value of a break. Um, and so that&#39;s kind of where we landed. Uh, but I mean the, the, I&#39;m back, I&#39;m back around the church that I was at for 23 years, though a lot of the rules are still in place that if it&#39;s a trip or retreat, it&#39;s no go. The interesting thing is, um, parents hated a whole lot more than students did. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (27:03):<br>
Yeah. Now they were the one were noticing that too. Yep. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (27:05):<br>
Yeah. If you, I would argue you wanna try to institute a no cell phone rule and you don&#39;t have it, it&#39;s gonna be really hard and it may not be worth the fight and it won&#39;t be because the kids, it&#39;s gonna be the parents. Parents are be, How do I get a hold of Johnny? Yeah. And, you know, in whatever case. Um, but, but when we take seniors on the retreat, when we were taking them, you know, and we&#39;d allow to have phones, it just naturally had come up in conversations. They would go, Wait, are you gonna start allowing this for other kids on your, on, on campus? Like, we didn&#39;t have. And and I&#39;m like, and, and I&#39;d get into the conversation with &#39;em like, Oh, are you ticked because you had to suffer through not having &#39;em. Yeah. And you&#39;re, and you wanna make sure they get punished like you did. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (27:42):<br>
And the seniors would be like, No, no. Like, I&#39;d love that. We didn&#39;t have &#39;em. Yeah. I, I I actually would come back from camp. So grateful that you really pushed that on us for that time. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Now, is that right or wrong? No, I, I like, does that mean that you absolutely shouldn&#39;t do it? No, but it was just, it&#39;s an interesting aspect to it all. So again, long, long talking to just say it&#39;s about intentionality, it&#39;s about thinking through why would we want to do this? Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and then, and then making sure to communicate to those that are participating. And if it&#39;s in youth ministry, the parents of saying here&#39;s why. Yeah. Um, and then being ready for a fight, if you wanna say No phones. Cause it&#39;s, it&#39;s a challenge. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (28:20):<br>
Yeah. That, No, that&#39;s really good. And again, right, like there&#39;s things that only physical can accomplish and there&#39;s things that only digital can accomplish. And I think an experience like a camp or whatever, there is a lot of connection that needs to take place. And most students, and you know, back to what you said earlier, people in church like don&#39;t know how to live in a world where it&#39;s just that where their phone isn&#39;t constantly dinging or lighting up or vying for their attention. And so I, I too have noticed in those types of environments where students, people are like grateful and thankful or say, man, like I&#39;m, I haven&#39;t even like, wanted my phone. They&#39;re kinda surprised by it. You know, that that&#39;s, that&#39;s kind of the case. So Yeah. It&#39;s so </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:05):<br>
Interesting. Can I give two practical, just real practical tips if you choose to do no phones, especially if you&#39;re a youth pastor. Yeah, yeah. Um, one is bring in a, at at least one, maybe multiple people who&#39;s their sole job is to capture photos and videos of the experience mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And at the beginning of the experience, make sure that the students know who that person is, because one of the things you&#39;re asking them to sacrifice is </p>

<p>Nick Clason (29:28):<br>
Capturing, capturing </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:30):<br>
The memories </p>

<p>Nick Clason (29:30):<br>
Of </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:31):<br>
It all. And that&#39;s bigger than ever, right? Yeah. Because they can do that. And so making sure that that&#39;s there, and then making all those photos and videos available as soon as you possibly can. Um, and I, I noticed that, um, the, a camp I was at this summer there, the photographer was actually uploading those, um, to their social media platform, like with a link while the camp was there, even though the kids didn&#39;t have phones, so that as soon as they got home within like one hour, the kids were like posting their, you know, their real, their reels that recaps, like that&#39;s good. Building up all the stuff on the, That&#39;s really good. So I think that&#39;s a big one. And then two is think through your strategic feedback loop to parents. The parent freakout is, I don&#39;t, I, how do I know? Well mm-hmm. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (30:14):<br>
<affirmative>, if you have a, a way of saying, Hey, here&#39;s, here&#39;s where you can go, um, whether it&#39;s a Facebook page or group, or if it&#39;s your Instagram, or if it&#39;s even like a, a remind, uh, setup or whatever, texting, like, here&#39;s where it&#39;s at. We found that Facebook lives where you could at a camp mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, actually doing a, Hey, I&#39;m gonna, I&#39;m gonna go live at this time. I&#39;m actually gonna give you a little glimpse into the session just for a short bit so you can just see what&#39;s going on and then come back and update you. And the beauty of a Facebook Live, every parent is still on Facebook, uh, for the most part. So they, they, they&#39;re there and so they can jump on live and then you can let it sit there. So, um, but those two things will, will go a long way in helping the resistance you might get. Um, when it comes to the no phone </p>

<p>Nick Clason (31:00):<br>
Rule. Yeah. We, we, we do, we&#39;ve done like a photographer and my, my favorite, and it always depends on like if the church or I have the budget to pull this off, but like get a videographer as well, or the same person, um, and have them do a daily, like, recap video. Those are great for opening your like sessions, but they&#39;re also amazing to throw up on YouTube and then text a link out. And so, you know, parents who, uh, send their kids without phone or whatever, they feel this like sense of relief if like they see their kid. Absolutely. Then the downside is one, one time I had to, uh, remove a clip because a kid was like picking his nose and the mom like, wanted it out. Yeah. Um, and then another time ano a mom was like, I haven&#39;t seen my kid in any of the recap bees. Yeah. And I&#39;m trying not to freak out, but like, are they having fun? Like, are they making friends? Like, and I get it, like as a, as a dad myself, you know, now, like I would also want to try and like lay eyes on my kids. So </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (32:01):<br>
Totally same. Totally same. Actually Gabe, the pastor at the church that I&#39;m serving with now, he did a meal time at camp and he just said, Okay, who needs to see their kid Facebook Live, <laugh>, who needs to see their kid? And he just went around and said, funny. And he put up the phone, he said, Tell your mom you&#39;re okay. And, and it was like one of the most viewed Yeah. There are a lot of people there, so Yeah. And that is legit. And it&#39;s, you gotta be ready for it for that whole world. And, um, it is, that is evidence again, of the different world. And, and as a parent of a high schooler and a middle schooler, I wasn&#39;t at the high school camp. I was at the middle school camp. I was watching for my kid. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (32:38):<br>
That I didn&#39;t quite quite realize. So. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (32:40):<br>
All right. Last, last thing. Um, how can we, as pastors, people in ministry, what are ways there that you see that we can optimize technology, um, now Cause like the overall mission, right? Of the church mm-hmm. <affirmative> to make disciples. And Paul used, you know, the thing available to him writing letters at the time to reach churches that he was not near. So what are some ways, just maybe a couple ideas off the top of your head that you have seen effective or ideas that maybe you haven&#39;t seen totally fleshed out, but are ruminating inside. Like Yeah. Where we can use what is available to us in technology. I mean, even the fact that I&#39;m sitting in Texas here in northern Indiana and we&#39;re having this conversation and we&#39;re seeing each other, like, that&#39;s an advantage that wasn&#39;t available to us pre 2007. Right. And so, uh, what are some of those things maybe that you have seen or have thought about that we can use to our advantage to help kids take steps closer to Jesus? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (33:40):<br>
Yeah. Let me throw you a little bit of a curve on where I might go with this to start only, um, in that I&#39;ve been a part of large to very large churches mm-hmm. <affirmative>, and you&#39;ve been a part of larger churches where there&#39;s a budget that&#39;s available and mass communication through technology. And so our minds might immediately go to Yeah. Podcasts and video streams mm-hmm. <affirmative> and, uh, you know, Instagram and getting somehow in with you version so you can build up a Bible reading plan. And I Yes. Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (34:10):<br>
But I would it if you can </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (34:11):<br>
Yeah. I would say pastors and ministers to remember to that this is an incredible one to one ministry tool still mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, um, and, and this has gotten especially big to me as I&#39;ve shifted over into this world now where my primary job that I says God&#39;s called me to is just to pastor pastors, especially those that are youth pastors. Well, they&#39;re all over the nation. Yeah. And so, um, last night, Sunday night for me, I&#39;m recognizing I was just like, Lord, who are the people right now that might just kind of be in that spot that a word of encouragement or a check-in could go a long way? And there were, there were four texts that were sent out to individuals going, Hey, you&#39;re on my mind. How did today go? Or what&#39;s going on in your mind? Woke up this morning and like I already told you about, there was one guy that is first day he shifted from the education world to the church world. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (35:03):<br>
Hmm. And so, um, so I, I would just start by saying yes, I mean, as we think about the massive ways to do it, let&#39;s not forget that pastoring at its best that&#39;s good is a one to one, a one to three relationship mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, uh, connecting with our parishioners are people that we&#39;re discipling, whoever they might be, uh, through the phone and doing it healthily and thinking through safeguards and all those things are really important, especially for youth pastors. Um, which probably is a whole other episode to talk through at some point. <laugh>. Yeah. But, um, but to understand like, this is a ministry tool at its core. And so a a properly placed text, phone call, FaceTime, um, like, or comment on a, um, on a, on a post, uh, can is, is ministry, like, is deep ministry and meaningful ministry at times. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (35:53):<br>
Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, That&#39;s great. It was interesting Nick, uh, my former youth pastor, uh, my dad died 10, uh, 13 years ago now, and my former youth minister is no longer in youth ministry. And, but it was an incredible influence on my life. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And it was about, uh, it was, it was right around eight years after my dad had died, I posted just a memory of him and below in the comment section, my old youth pastor got on and he, all he wrote was, I&#39;m so proud of you Derry. And I read that and I lost it. And, and I talked to him and, and what happened in that moment was like, I realized, uh, can, like, thank you. I miss I miss having my dad, and I&#39;m not, I don&#39;t have a dad that can physically say to me, I&#39;m proud of you anymore. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (36:39):<br>
And I&#39;m, I&#39;m like a 36 year old man, like blubbering over my youth pastor telling me he&#39;s proud of me. But it&#39;s because he, he, in that moment, he ministered to me through a simple comment on a Facebook group mm-hmm. <affirmative> that also helped me work through some grieving that I was at. I hadn&#39;t really just walked through and said, God, I&#39;m kind of ticked, I&#39;m kind of ticked right now because I&#39;ve lost, like, why did this happen? And, and it helped me kind of break through to a new level. And so, so anyway, like just, I, I, that&#39;s the one thing I would just say is as we think through the strategic and the greater stuff, let&#39;s not forget this is a incredible tool for the most effective ministry that is relational and personal in nature. That&#39;s good. That&#39;s good. Um, um, I would say otherwise though too is, um, I have a good friend, John McAllen, Johnny Mack, he did this thing, he started, it was called Echo Ministry. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (37:25):<br>
And the idea was how do you take and create echos of what&#39;s happening on the, on the weekend? How do you have the message echo through the rest of the week? And our technology, our cell phones are such a primary tool to make that happen. You said it so well, there are things that we can do now because we have these, um, where it can show up in the moment, in, in different ways, uh, whether it&#39;s, uh, uh, a thinking through, uh, devotional journey, like I said, through you version. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, uh, the youth group that I just was at for the last couple of years, they&#39;re doing a thing called sale up Moments every week. They have just one moment that, that where they, they use on social media where they say, Okay, you&#39;re scrolling through, but stop, exhale, um, and listen to God allow &#39;em to speak to you. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (38:16):<br>
You know? And there&#39;s a whole acronym to it. I can&#39;t remember what the H was good. Yeah. I like that. You know, have a burger, I think was the last, no, I can&#39;t remember what the H was, but, um, they, they, they walked through it and, and so using that was, um, was, was a way to do it. So I, I think it&#39;s that matter of how can we echo it mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And there&#39;s a lot, you know, podcasts can be a part of it. Uh, I started something called Digging Deeper with our main services when I was, uh, at my own church. And, and what we did was every Wednesday I would sit down with whoever was preaching mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And if I, I, I was a part of the teaching time. If I was preaching, somebody else would come in and the first thing we&#39;d say, Hey, hey, what hit the cutting room floor? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (38:53):<br>
What were you not able to get to this weekend that you wish you could have? And people just love that aspect, but then we would pick it part a little bit more mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, and it, it&#39;s not hard. It&#39;s a, you know, get, get a little basic, um, Yeah. Recording set up and you can get it set up pretty easy. Um, and so there&#39;s just so many ways, but I would just start with the, like, how can we echo into the week, what happened on the weekend Yep. And use it on a digital format. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (39:16):<br>
Yeah. No, that&#39;s good. I, I also personally think that we don&#39;t know yet like, the answer to some of these questions. Yeah. Like, I still think that there&#39;s, uh, things yet to be discovered, you know, in front of us. And so I think, uh, if there&#39;s any sort of like, challenge for anyone listening, I would just say like, just do something. Um, and you may stumble upon something great. You may find some stuff that&#39;s terrible and you need to cut it out. Um, but if you&#39;re, if you&#39;re always looking that direction, uh, you&#39;ll, you&#39;ll stumble upon something good that you maybe don&#39;t even know, or you maybe didn&#39;t, you know, you maybe weren&#39;t even able to see it right now when you started it because of a limited technology or budget or whatever. And so just be looking for ways. Cuz like I said, it&#39;s less, I think, I personally think it&#39;s easy to make digital about being flashy, um, or whatever, looking good to parents or other youth pastors or other people in ministry, whatever. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (40:15):<br>
But I think it&#39;s far less about that for me at least, and it&#39;s more about how effective can I be in spreading the message of Jesus with all the tools that he&#39;s given to me. Yeah. Like, I&#39;m, I&#39;m alive in 2022 with access to podcast microphones and phones that can take incredible videos and pictures, like mm-hmm. <affirmative>, how am I going to use steward those things to reach the most amount of people, you know, that have an audience to reach. So I think that&#39;s, that would be my challenge to whoever&#39;s listening is think what Dare said, think through all the things that, with intentionality, Um, and then just be open, you know, to, to utilizing some stuff. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (40:52):<br>
So yeah. You&#39;re, you&#39;re so right on. We don&#39;t have it all figured out. Probably one of my greatest pet peeves in life are, uh, those that are convinced they have it all figured out. Um, Yeah. <laugh> and I, I, I can do that at times. And usually when I&#39;m at that point and I&#39;m like, Oh yeah, I know how to do this. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, that&#39;s the moment when I will fall flat on my face. And so, so there&#39;s a ton to be learned. There&#39;s a ton to be determined I love, or </p>

<p>Nick Clason (41:14):<br>
That&#39;s when a new iPhone comes out, Right. And you&#39;re like, Oh, this changed everything. Or Covid hit and this changed everything. So yes. Totally. Good. Yes. I think we&#39;re living through that. Well, hey man. Um, anything else off top of your head? You don&#39;t have to, but I just wanna make sure you said everything you wanted to say. Didn&#39;t leave anything unsaid. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (41:30):<br>
I think the only thing I would maybe end with is in that same vein is, um, it&#39;s everywhere. It&#39;s so much. Uh, also don&#39;t be afraid to not feel like you have to do everything, you know? Um, uh, especially to the minister that&#39;s trying to think through how to do effectively. There is a, there is a moment where less is more because your soul needs to rest, you know? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, if you&#39;re finding yourself trying to, uh, late at night when you should be being around your family, invest your family or on your day off going, this is the time while Ill dive into all this digital stuff. Eh, you know what, maybe, maybe that&#39;s, uh, not worth it. No, not, maybe it definitely is not worth it. Definitely not worth, There&#39;s just, that&#39;s the part of like this thing, there&#39;s just so much out there. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> don&#39;t, I, I I guess it&#39;s like that idea of don&#39;t gain the digital world at the cost of your soul. Yeah. <laugh> good is, is, is a big thing. And I just, I say that out of a season where I&#39;m just seeing so many of us burn out. Um, and we&#39;re burning out in a lot of different ways, but one is because we&#39;re just constantly on and we don&#39;t hit the off switch. That&#39;s </p>

<p>Nick Clason (42:34):<br>
Good. That&#39;s good. Love it, man. Well, hey, thanks again. Uh, you referenced a couple things in here. I&#39;ll toss &#39;em in show notes, like your resource on D ym <laugh> so that all tens of our listeners can go get it. There you go. Um, anyway, thanks for hanging out man. And uh, absolutely. We&#39;ll chat again. Chat again. Yeah. Awesome. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (42:52):<br>
Well, wasn&#39;t that great, Uh, super thoughtful, super helpful. Um, I hope that you found this interesting and helpful as well. Hey, um, we are online on Twitter at Hybrid Ministry. Would love to have you come hang out, follow us over there. Um, we&#39;re still growing, not super active yet, but, uh, we&#39;re well on our way. And also everything you need, show notes, links, transcripts, all kinds of stuff. You can find out hybrid ministry.xyz along with a now growing bank of archive and older episodes. So if you&#39;re just not stumbling upon us, we&#39;d love to have you go back and check it out. Uh, you can do all of that at <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">hybridministry.xyz</a> Ze. Again, thanks for being with us today and we&#39;ll chat next time.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this episode, Nick sits down with his friend, Derry Prenkert, a 20+ year youth ministry veteran. Derry shares about the monumental shift of the invention of the smart phone. How things were before, and how things have shifted, but most importantly, how we utilize this technology for our benefit and gain to reach more students for the mission of Jesus.</p>

<p>Follow us on Twitter <a href="http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://www.twitter.com/hybridministry</a><br>
Find all the resources you need from the podcast <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://www.hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Follow Derry online: <br>
-TWITTER: <a href="https://twitter.com/derryprenkert" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/derryprenkert</a><br>
-INSTAGRAM: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/derryprenkert/" rel="nofollow">https://www.instagram.com/derryprenkert/</a><br>
-PODCAST: <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/my-third-decade-in-youth-ministry/id1338273697" rel="nofollow">https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/my-third-decade-in-youth-ministry/id1338273697</a></p>

<p><strong>SHOWNOTES</strong><br>
Steve Job&#39;s introduction of the iPhone: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7qPAY9JqE4" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7qPAY9JqE4</a><br>
Derry&#39;s Parenting Resource: <a href="https://www.downloadyouthministry.com/p/adolescence%2C-technology-and-parenting/training-3996.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.downloadyouthministry.com/p/adolescence%2C-technology-and-parenting/training-3996.html</a><br>
Johnny Mac&#39;s Stuff: <a href="https://yourhouseblend.com/jonnysblend" rel="nofollow">https://yourhouseblend.com/jonnysblend</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-03:30 Intro<br>
03:30-10:53 The impact of the invention of the iPhone<br>
10:53-14:30 What happened in ministry after the invention of the iPhone<br>
14:30-23:20 How have you responded since then?<br>
23:20-32:44 When do you ask phones to be put away?<br>
32:44-41:23 How can we utilize technology now to further and advance God&#39;s mission?<br>
41:23-43:38 Outro</p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What is up everybody? Welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. Excited to be with you today. Uh, today we have our very first, uh, guest interview, uh, friend of mine Derry Pinker. He&#39;s located in, um, Amish town, Nape Indiana. Um, right now, uh, he worked at that church for over 20 years, and then he was at another church for just a couple years, super large church in, uh, Kentucky. So, um, excited to bring you Derry&#39;s conversation. Uh, he mentions a couple of different links. He talks about Steve Jobs&#39; keynote, a resource that he has on download youth ministry and echo ministry. I&#39;m gonna include all of those in the show notes, but without any further ado, let&#39;s just hop in so you can get to know Derry. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (00:51):<br>
All right, well, what&#39;s up Derry? Good to have you on the podcast. Welcome, man. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (00:56):<br>
Yeah, it&#39;s so good to be with you, Nick. Thanks for having me on. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (00:58):<br>
Yeah. So as we were talking a little bit before I hit record here, you have a podcast or did, or what would you define the, the existence of your podcast? Right Now?</p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (01:11):<br>
The status of my third decade. It is, it has been on the longest hiatus ever. Um, yeah. And it is coming back. Um, it&#39;s tied to this whole world of the shift that I&#39;ve, I&#39;ve made from being in a local church to now serving pastors in the local church. Yeah. And I&#39;m in a season of getting all the groundwork laid for that. I, uh, have every intention, every intention by, uh, early 2023 that it&#39;s gonna launch back out. And there are some, there are actually some things already recorded for it, so, so it hasn&#39;t completely gone away. There, there is, there is a future to it. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:46):<br>
That&#39;s good. Cuz it&#39;s still in my podcast catcher, so I&#39;m not unsubscribing from, I just wanna let you know that it&#39;s still there. So, um, but back when I mowed the lawn when I worked two churches ago, I think I heard you, um, talk about like, uh, this really big shift in culture and you noticed that it was, uh, have to do with when the iPhone came into existence. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, just give us a little bit, like give us your story, how long you&#39;ve been, you know, doing youth ministry, um, and how you have a beneficial perspective of before technology and phones are a part of what we have to navigate and deal with. And then post, and then maybe we can just kind of chat about how we navigate that as, you know, people who are, uh, ministering to people, students, um, who are very much entrenched in this technology, like Lane and world. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (02:42):<br>
Yeah, absolutely. So, um, my story is somebody that started in youth ministry at 19 years old. I was just about to turn 20 and I started an internship and that was back in 1996. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Yeah, I&#39;m old. Um, and so graduated from high school in 95, start in, in ministry in 96. And so I get 11 years of ministry. Um, and in those 11 years, uh, you know, cell phones, car phones were around when I started <laugh>. Yeah. And cell phones were around when I finished college in 1999. But they were, they roamed the minute you got outside of about 10 miles from your house and you only use them in emergencies. And then, and then it moved into, you know, 2004, 2005, the razor flip. Flum was the coolest thing in the world is texting, kind of entered the picture mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, and then, you know, so I, but, but really it was 2007 when Steve Jobs holds up this, this phone. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (03:36):<br>
And it&#39;s actually interesting to go back and watch, I don&#39;t know if you&#39;ve ever watched that keynote when he does it. No, I should, but, but he, he, he introduces it and is pretty prophetic, like the level of what he&#39;s talking about where technology is heading. Cause he said this is gonna revolutionize and change. And he says, he says, What would happen if we were to introduce a computer operating system, a phone and a iPod all in one thing. Yeah. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s the heartbeat of what they did. Um, and actually I, I do a technology thing with parents, uh, adolescents, technology and parenting. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, what I do is, I&#39;ll actually, it&#39;s, it&#39;s a fun little exercise cuz if you think about, you got, most parents of teenagers right now are, are there children of the eighties if they&#39;re really, if they&#39;ve got younger, like their youngest kids are teenagers now, nineties or maybe early two thousands mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so what I do is I&#39;ll put up on the screen different, like, what was the technology of our time. And so like, you know, in the eighties you got like VCRs and corded phones and, and a Walkman or a giant computer that has a green screen maybe. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:41):<br>
Yeah. I found the VCR yesterday in our building, so that was cool, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (04:46):<br>
Dude. And, and did you try playing anything? Cause it probably just ate the tape, right? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:49):<br>
Yeah, no, I was like, I don&#39;t, I don&#39;t even know if we would ever need this, but, Right. Yeah. Here it </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (04:53):<br>
Is. Yeah. Yeah. It&#39;s, see the, in the eighties in technology, like everything got fixed by blowing on it. Um, so like the VHS tape wasn&#39;t working. You blew on it. The, the Nintendo cartridge. Yep. You blew in that and then blew in the box. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. So that was, you know, eighties in the nineties, you have cell phones come, you got the Discman mm-hmm. <affirmative> that I remember. I would, as the nineties I would run or exercise with a discman, but I had to be careful not to run too hard because the CD would skip Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:17):<br>
As I skipping. I </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (05:18):<br>
Remember that. Yeah. Yeah. Um, and then, you know, early two thousands social media in MySpace shows up. Yep. But, you know, garins show up, Uhhuh, um, digital cameras are a big deal in another 2000 flat screen TVs. Right. So we walk through these different, different moments and I say in 2007, Steve Jobs holds up this, this little device. And everything I just said was around in those different decades now lives inside this single device. Mm. Interesting. It is your video games. It is your music, you know, it&#39;s your disc man, it&#39;s your VCR or your DVD player. It is your </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:53):<br>
Computer, your calendar. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (05:55):<br>
Yeah. It&#39;s everything. It&#39;s all there. And, and so for parents, it&#39;s just saying like, recognize how significant this shift is. And so for those of us in ministry, if we are in that age, it&#39;s important to recognize that for those of us that are, I I, a lot of youth pastors are maybe a little, um, younger than the parents that they have. Right. Remember, like, these are the parents you&#39;re working with that, that this shift has happened. It might be a little more native to you as a youth pastor if you&#39;re in your, your mid to early twenties mm-hmm. <affirmative>. But it&#39;s foreign. It&#39;s, it&#39;s, it&#39;s so different and, and it&#39;s, it&#39;s changed so much. Um, the two things to kind of say, when I look at youth culture, cuz that&#39;s where I spent a lot of my time Yeah. That I would say are huge, is, uh, one youth group in church. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (06:40):<br>
I was at a church that ha drew from multiple high schools. And pre 2007, we were the place to go to connect with friends. Hmm. Um, now we saw God move and we were, we were, we were unapologetic that that wasn&#39;t the, that wasn&#39;t the primary point. The primary point was to encounter a relationship with Jesus, to understand your call, to be a part of this kingdom work. But the appeal for my kids, I&#39;m gonna drop names that nobody knows from Wawa c high school at Northwood High School. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and Goshan High School. Someone knows each other. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Um, uh, they can meet weekly at our place. Right. Uh, now with the institution of not only, you know, the, just the move of the cell phone with texting, but then once the iPhone came in, it wasn&#39;t just you, you could, you didn&#39;t have to go there to meet a place you could actually interact face to face, you know, through FaceTime, through, through, um, whatever it might be. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (07:33):<br>
Google Meet all do different stuff. You could, you could do that over the phone. So it became less important. The other thing that&#39;s super intriguing is, I don&#39;t know about Eich, but the greatest day of my life, uh, as a teenager was when I turned 16 in one month in my town, because that was the day I could get my driver&#39;s license. Yeah. And by getting my driver&#39;s license, that meant a whole new, uh, level of freedom, empowerment, and ownership. Like that driver&#39;s license was my ticket to independence. Yeah. I&#39;ve noticed, um, a major change. I can&#39;t believe how many kids I interact with that are like 16, 17 and, you know, we&#39;re doing an event. They&#39;re like, Hey, can I get a ride? I&#39;m like, You don&#39;t have your license yet. Yeah. No. And, and, and, and I I don&#39;t have like the scientific proof to this, just the conversation. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (08:25):<br>
Sure. It&#39;s, they&#39;re like, Why would I, why would I need it? Well, yeah, the big shift came like that that license was my way to get to my friends. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and my community. Now, this, this thing that we can hold in our hands is our ticket to interact. And so, so like one of the, I guess like the big implication that I would throw out that is huge is it it has radically transformed our connectivity mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, even with the people right next to us. Yeah. Um, so I mean, so many other thoughts, but there&#39;s, those are just a couple things like that we recognize. Another way I say it is like we basically now are carrying around super computers in our pockets. Yeah. That, uh, it&#39;s, they are that we&#39;re, we have, we have excessive, uh, access to information. We are, we are constantly connected. Um, and it&#39;s like invasive, you know, it&#39;s not like it&#39;s, when&#39;s the last time I I I, you can answer this or the people are listening, When&#39;s the last time you actually turned off powered down your phone </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:26):<br>
On your own? Well, mine&#39;s new, so never </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (09:29):<br>
Yeah. <laugh>. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:30):<br>
Right, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (09:30):<br>
Right. And it&#39;s, it&#39;s like impossible to, like, they&#39;ve made it so it&#39;s hard to do. And so it&#39;s always there. Now, now I might sound like I&#39;m interesting. Yeah. I&#39;m negative on this. I do mourn more in some things because I&#39;m old and I&#39;m an old guy sitting saying, Get off my lawn kids. You know, a little bit. But, um, but those are some of the things that I think are big that have changed. And so, so just the way we go about ministry has to change with it. It is in my mind, we measure time on before and after like, events that come to mind in youth ministry world, most youth pastors that were around before Columbine mm-hmm. <affirmative> and after Columbine, they know it changed the way you had to handle liabilities and safety </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:10):<br>
Measures. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (10:11):<br>
Mm-hmm. <affirmative> pre nine 11. Post nine 11 as a, as a culture, our life shifted on how we view, uh, things pre covid, post covid. We&#39;re still learning that all. Yeah. I still could make the argument pre iPhone and post iPhone, pre smartphone and post iPhone could be, could be the most significant watershed cultural moment that we&#39;ve experienced in the LA since World War ii. Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:35):<br>
I don&#39;t, one of, one of like, I, one of the guys I listen to a lot, his name, you know, Brady Shear mm-hmm. <affirmative>, he talks about this being the biggest communication shift that we&#39;ve seen in 500 years. So he&#39;s referencing that being the printing press. Yeah. And now with all this digital stuff. So that&#39;s a great call. Let&#39;s go like, let&#39;s go there a little bit. You said, um, pre iPhone people would gather from multiple high schools to your church. Did you notice that stopping, um, after, did you notice attendance shifting or did you just notice that still happens but there&#39;s, there&#39;s now just an iPhone in everyone&#39;s pocket and that&#39;s changing how they&#39;re interacting. But things are still, still sort of the same. Like, what would you say was, uh, like a, an actual effect, right? Yeah. Of that attendance thing you&#39;re talking about. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (11:25):<br>
This is not scientific at all. It&#39;s very guttural and it&#39;s nature. Uh, and it&#39;s my experience, I would say it didn&#39;t, for some it stopped. But I would say the bigger thing is it got more sporadic. In fact, you we&#39;re just talking, I don&#39;t know, it would be fascinating. You know, they talk about how people are coming to church less often Right. Than they used to. That a regular attendant is, attender is considered once every month or once every three weeks. Right? Yep. I wonder how that correlates to the institution of like the, the actual cell phone and smartphone because Yeah, because that was the thing. Like pre pre smartphone, um, even kids from the same school, there was the chance to just, you know, we&#39;re not just going through in passing periods. We&#39;re gonna have a small group time. We&#39;re gonna have a pre hangout post hangout mm-hmm. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (12:09):<br>
<affirmative> once a week. This is my guaranteed time. I&#39;m gonna get time with my friends. Yeah. Um, and so it got more sporadic. Yeah. Uh, definitely. And, and that could be in part because they could have the community outside of the youth group. Um, but it still, that&#39;s why I would, I would still be a firm believer. There is a limitation to what you can accomplish over digital. I think anybody that truly had to walk through the PA pandemic and live completely on a screen would a hundred percent agree with me. You can&#39;t replace, um, interpersonal in person reaction Totally. With digital. But you can find more connection or, or you can find connection in the gaps through that. And so I think it got more, um, more sporadic, uh, in nature. And yes, they are showing up with them. And I mean, man, whew, how many conversations do I have? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (12:58):<br>
I had with parents and leaders on, We gotta, we gotta, we gotta like force kids to turn these off or tell &#39;em they can&#39;t have &#39;em at all. And then, and then the issue of parents talking about what age do I give my kid a phone? When do I not? Because not only are they carrying it around, I mean, it&#39;s just, it&#39;s just there. And so the amount of attention that was going down to it when they were around that, that I&#39;d say kinda really hit in the two, like 2014 15 phrase when everybody got one. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, everybody had one. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:28):<br>
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, even my kids in first grade and his teacher sended stuff on his like e backpack and then his like e folder and he has like iPad time. Like, so my sort of thing is, while you may lament the loss of some of what was prefo and pre-technology, um, it&#39;s not going anywhere. And so, you know, cuz I, I&#39;m with you sometimes I have leaders who are like, We just need to get rid of the phones, take &#39;em away from the kids. Like make sure that they, you know, only use paper bibles and that, you know, it&#39;s, it&#39;s wrong to read God&#39;s word on a screen type of thing. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s a high preference maybe mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And there may be some validity to some of those things, but the fact of the matter is like, why, You know, my argument is why are we discouraging a kid from reading the Bible if it&#39;s super accessible to them and in their pocket 24 hours a day? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:25):<br>
Um, you know, so, So what have you noticed or what are some of the things that you&#39;ve done realizing like, we can&#39;t, we can&#39;t get ourselves away from these. They are everywhere. They&#39;re on all the time. They are our everything. Our day planner, our calendar and our social life in a lot of ways. You know, like what are some of the things that you&#39;ve, you&#39;ve tried to embrace as a youth pastor, um, to maybe leverage them or lean into them and then maybe what are some of the times that you&#39;ve discouraged use of them? Because you&#39;re like the, the, you know, the re the result of what&#39;s gonna happen here physically is gonna be greater than what is happening if you&#39;re on your </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (15:02):<br>
Phone. Yeah. It&#39;s great. Um, in the thing I do with parents, which total shameless plug, it&#39;s actually on D ym, you get it, download Youth Mystery </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:12):<br>
And then you have an extra $4 in your pocket. Yeah, yeah, </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (15:15):<br>
Yeah. From that roof. Yeah. It&#39;s called Adolescents Parenting and Technology. I use an illustration. I, and I, it&#39;s an illustration that, that hit me is our phones are a knife, um, and a knife, uh, can serve many purposes. Uh, a knife is, can be used to spread butter. It can be used to whittle wood to make, uh, amazing things. It can be, it can be, uh, used to, you know, cut through things that are hard to cut through. It also can be used to kill people. Um, it&#39;s really about what is happening with the person that has it in their hands. And a part of that is what&#39;s their intentions as well as what&#39;s their awareness of a knife. You know, I&#39;ve got, you&#39;ve got younger kids. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, I had a six year old that early on, he just got us obsessed with our steak knives when he was three or four. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (16:03):<br>
And we had to like, put those things up high cuz he just, he didn&#39;t understand the danger involving those knives. Right. Um, and, and so, uh, so with that, like, with that illustration in mind and looking at it that way, I, I look at this thing, a knife is really, for the most part neutral. Unless it&#39;s this crazy butcher knife that is, for the most part, a knife is neutral. It&#39;s what you&#39;re doing with it in your hands. So then it becomes about making sure to check your motives as well as prepare the person that has it in their hands to use it in the right way and to know how to use it in the right way. And, um, I think in that, like, especially if we&#39;re talking to ministers and I, I would put this across the board, in fact mm-hmm. <affirmative>, I would argue that senior pastors teaching pastors should be coaching, uh, 50, 60 year olds how to utilize their phones wisely, even more so than those that are just growing up with it, a native part of their life. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (17:03):<br>
Hmm. Um, cuz I don&#39;t see a lot of students, uh, just making a fool of themselves on how they treat people on, on social media is, uh, as much as I see adults, uh, in what they&#39;re saying and everything else. So, so the, it&#39;s across the board. Like we have a responsibility to look at what does scripture say about, especially from a discipleship aspect of how we are to love our neighbors ourselves, and then how does it play out on this thing, you know? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. So, so that would be, that would be a thing. So, um, so that&#39;s just, sorry, little rant there, but the knife and, and, and we, we have a responsibility to show them. Uh, I am a big fan Nick, of just intentionality in ministry overall. I think a lot of pastors, uh, I&#39;m, I&#39;m dedicating really, I feel like the second, second half of my life is I just want youth pastors and any pastors to be healthy in ministry. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (17:53):<br>
And a big part of that is guarding your own heart. Um, another part is just thinking clearly and strategically in Christ&#39;s focus and inten and intentionality in what you&#39;re doing is a big part of that. Um, and so I would, I would argue that anybody that is in charge of a program, uh, a ministry, uh, any regular ministry gathering, there should be a side to say, Okay, what&#39;s our philosophy in how phones play into this? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And it can take up a lot of different forms. Yeah. One is what&#39;s our, so we&#39;re gonna be teaching this series, How&#39;s it showing up on their phones? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, are we gonna do digital notes that they can look at while they&#39;re in the room? Are we going to do follow up stuff through social media that&#39;s gonna create interaction? Um, you&#39;ve done some great stuff on the importance of don&#39;t just use your social media of as a, as a billboard that uses this interactive place. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (18:47):<br>
You know, thinking through those things. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, how are we going to actually handle the phones inside the space? What are, are, are, uh, uh, to what, what do we need to take into account if a middle school, I, I&#39;m helping out in middle school right now, and I&#39;m at a pretty conservative community mm-hmm. <affirmative> where I&#39;d say it&#39;s six through eight grade, I would say no more than half the kids are, are actually walking in with smartphones. Now I know some would go, That&#39;s ridiculous. Well, that&#39;s my community. Sure. So I need to be thinking through, um, that I, I have to have a path for the non phone user. Right. But also I need to be thinking through for the phone user to begin to show them now. Like, Hey, if you&#39;re gonna follow Jesus, that plays out in this thing. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (19:28):<br>
So how do we do that? So what, what am I teaching? You know, when I get to the practical steps of my teaching, how am I intentionally saying, Hey, this is how this plays out on your phone. You know, that can be a part of it. Um, and then, and then I think, uh, there&#39;s just the overall, uh, idea of, I, I have kind of these categories I think through that I want to try to do inside the programming. And this is very youth ministry specific. I want to have times where, uh, where they have it and it&#39;s on, but they&#39;re encouraged to put it to, to the side mm-hmm. <affirmative> and not access it at all. Because, because we need to be able to do that in real life at times. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, you know mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so small groups, a lot of times, I don&#39;t know if you have this some, sometimes they&#39;ll do like the basket or, or, or things to say, Hey, it&#39;s here. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (20:14):<br>
Or just even stack them in the middle of the room like, it&#39;s here, but we&#39;re not gonna use Oh yeah. Use that right now. Yeah. And, um, or it&#39;s just even a, Hey, let&#39;s put this in our pockets. Just hang tight with me for a little bit. Um, then there&#39;s then there&#39;s times where it&#39;s like off or not there at all. And we can talk about that one a little bit more. Probably it&#39;d be a good one of, of, Hey, this is a no cell phone situation. Yeah. I think that&#39;s very debatable on how much we&#39;re often, but there&#39;s times where it&#39;s important to just, I mean, uh, solitude, simplicity, um, making sure that we&#39;re not controlled by things all apart of following Jesus. But then most importantly is we&#39;re gonna have times where we use this thing in a redemptive manner. Yeah. Um, we&#39;re gonna find ways. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (20:57):<br>
So, so we are closing out and we&#39;ve talked about, uh, the importance of praying for others and what ha you know, maybe we&#39;re doing a series on prayer and it&#39;s about praying for others. And, and what we say is, Okay, here&#39;s what we&#39;re gonna do right now. If you have a phone, I want you to pull it out and I&#39;m just gonna ask the Lord to speak to us, to give you a name right now as somebody you could pray for. Hmm. And, and now I want you to pull out your phone and I want you to text them, not not, not text them that you are praying for them, actually text out what your prayer for them is. Hmm. Or when you walk out the room tonight, I want you to use that little voice memo thing. I did this this morning. Uh, I got a friend who just started first day in ministry today. I, I did a voice memo to him that was just solely my prayer and that was it. Like, here&#39;s my prayer for you today as you started on ministry. Yeah. That&#39;s cool. So, so finding ways to use it, redemptively. So again, I kind of went different, but use it redemptively. Find ways to put it to the side, find ways to turn it off or not have it there at all. And do all of that intentionally. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:51):<br>
Yeah. I mean, a lot, a lot of what we say on here is that digital and physical, uh, both are important, but they&#39;re both categorically different. And so that&#39;s why I do think there is value in things that are strictly physical only. I think, like you said, we learned a lot of things about ourselves and people during covid when what was physical could not be completely replicated digitally. Yeah. Um, and vice versa. Right. And that&#39;s, that&#39;s the thing too, is like, I think the vice versa piece is like, there are some digital things that are digital only, like mm-hmm. <affirmative> me. Like you can do message recaps and, and things like that where you&#39;re calling back to what you did, um, throughout the week. Like on things like social media where people are not physically gathering in your room on a Tuesday morning, or they can be reading a u version plan on their own when they wake up on Thursday afternoon, you know, at lunch, whatever. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (22:46):<br>
So mm-hmm. <affirmative>, that&#39;s, that&#39;s this whole idea of hybrid is it&#39;s, there is room for, for physical only. And there&#39;s also space, I think for digital. And that&#39;s part of the thing is we&#39;ve, and I think a lot of churches are kind of running up into this, is they&#39;re, uh, Hey, you&#39;re, you&#39;re a youth pastor so you have to do all of it. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, it&#39;s like these are two completely like different lanes. And so there&#39;s, I mean, there&#39;s staffing conversations and budget conversations I think like around all these things that are gonna be coming, coming down the pike at, at churches, so mm-hmm. <affirmative>, what would you say are times, um, maybe where you would, you would say, Hey, let&#39;s put phones away all together. Maybe talk about like camp situation Sure. Or, or retreats or whatever. Yeah. I&#39;m sure that&#39;s probably one of the, the main ones that comes to people&#39;s minds. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (23:32):<br>
Yeah. Yeah. Nick, you and I are a part of different youth ministry communities. Um, Facebook groups are a wonderful mess at times. <laugh>. And one of the, one of the hot topics amongst many other things is when this gets asked of, Hey, what&#39;s your policy on cell phones? And it&#39;s interesting. It&#39;s like just hot takes start firing all over the place. Right. So, um, I was a part of one church for 23 years mm-hmm. <affirmative>, and I was a part of another church for 2.3 years. That&#39;s my little joke, uhha. But, um, <laugh>, uh, in the one church that I was at for 23 years that I also grew up where technology was unfolded. And we, we had a hard and fast rule that really any trip that we did, we started with the idea of no cell phones would be allowed. And it was because we had a high emphasis on interactivity and, and, and it, cell phones weren&#39;t around when we set the rule. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (24:24):<br>
It was, you can&#39;t bring your walkmans, your discmans your game boys because we&#39;re here to interact with each other. And the minute you look down on that thing, you&#39;re not there. So that just kind of lended itself over to cell phones and everything else. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, um, so any camp retreat, anything like that, we just, we put a pretty hard and fast rule with the one except perception being our senior retreat that we do with grads. We&#39;d say, Hey, you can bring it. It was almost like this. Oh, you&#39;re old enough now. I, I don&#39;t know that I liked the motives in it, um, <laugh> in, in it all. So, but then I went to, uh, another church where it was like, you can have them all the time mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, which, and the interesting thing I saw was effective ministry was taking place in both situations. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (25:09):<br>
Um, but we hadn&#39;t really stopped and re strategized in my 23 year church to say, Hey, we&#39;re kind of, we kind of just stumbled into this, but these things are so much a part of his life. So we need to understand when we ask a kid to leave theirself at home, we&#39;re asking them to leave their most prized valuable mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, possession mm-hmm. <affirmative> at home. Um, and then at the other church it was like, it&#39;s all there. But where we really said, Hey, how are we, are we, are we assessing how we&#39;re we&#39;re using these? And so I don&#39;t, I don&#39;t come from the mindset that says definitely no. Or definitely yes. As much as, again, back to that word, intentionality. Yeah. Um, have a plan. Yeah. Talk about it. So, so where we really landed, where at the church I was just at, was, um, if the event is going to be primarily focused on those that don&#39;t know Jesus coming into the situation, we&#39;re gonna be very hesitant to say he phones. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (26:06):<br>
Yeah. Because they&#39;re not gonna get the idea of it. If the event is, is high, um, service based, um, intentional discipleship mm-hmm. <affirmative> and deepening, we&#39;re gonna stop and say, Hey, you know what, let&#39;s, this might be a time, Yeah. Let&#39;s evaluate this, where we&#39;re gonna maybe more lean toward this is a no-go, but then we&#39;re gonna say, here&#39;s why it&#39;s a no-go. If it&#39;s heavy discipleship, it&#39;s gonna say, this is gonna be a significant time. Where the primary things we&#39;re gonna do is we&#39;re gonna focus in on your connection with God and your connection with others, and we&#39;re gonna challenge you to find ways to do that outside of the technical technological world. Can you do that inside the technological world? Absolutely. But we see the value of a break. Um, and so that&#39;s kind of where we landed. Uh, but I mean the, the, I&#39;m back, I&#39;m back around the church that I was at for 23 years, though a lot of the rules are still in place that if it&#39;s a trip or retreat, it&#39;s no go. The interesting thing is, um, parents hated a whole lot more than students did. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (27:03):<br>
Yeah. Now they were the one were noticing that too. Yep. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (27:05):<br>
Yeah. If you, I would argue you wanna try to institute a no cell phone rule and you don&#39;t have it, it&#39;s gonna be really hard and it may not be worth the fight and it won&#39;t be because the kids, it&#39;s gonna be the parents. Parents are be, How do I get a hold of Johnny? Yeah. And, you know, in whatever case. Um, but, but when we take seniors on the retreat, when we were taking them, you know, and we&#39;d allow to have phones, it just naturally had come up in conversations. They would go, Wait, are you gonna start allowing this for other kids on your, on, on campus? Like, we didn&#39;t have. And and I&#39;m like, and, and I&#39;d get into the conversation with &#39;em like, Oh, are you ticked because you had to suffer through not having &#39;em. Yeah. And you&#39;re, and you wanna make sure they get punished like you did. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (27:42):<br>
And the seniors would be like, No, no. Like, I&#39;d love that. We didn&#39;t have &#39;em. Yeah. I, I I actually would come back from camp. So grateful that you really pushed that on us for that time. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Now, is that right or wrong? No, I, I like, does that mean that you absolutely shouldn&#39;t do it? No, but it was just, it&#39;s an interesting aspect to it all. So again, long, long talking to just say it&#39;s about intentionality, it&#39;s about thinking through why would we want to do this? Mm-hmm. <affirmative> and then, and then making sure to communicate to those that are participating. And if it&#39;s in youth ministry, the parents of saying here&#39;s why. Yeah. Um, and then being ready for a fight, if you wanna say No phones. Cause it&#39;s, it&#39;s a challenge. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (28:20):<br>
Yeah. That, No, that&#39;s really good. And again, right, like there&#39;s things that only physical can accomplish and there&#39;s things that only digital can accomplish. And I think an experience like a camp or whatever, there is a lot of connection that needs to take place. And most students, and you know, back to what you said earlier, people in church like don&#39;t know how to live in a world where it&#39;s just that where their phone isn&#39;t constantly dinging or lighting up or vying for their attention. And so I, I too have noticed in those types of environments where students, people are like grateful and thankful or say, man, like I&#39;m, I haven&#39;t even like, wanted my phone. They&#39;re kinda surprised by it. You know, that that&#39;s, that&#39;s kind of the case. So Yeah. It&#39;s so </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:05):<br>
Interesting. Can I give two practical, just real practical tips if you choose to do no phones, especially if you&#39;re a youth pastor. Yeah, yeah. Um, one is bring in a, at at least one, maybe multiple people who&#39;s their sole job is to capture photos and videos of the experience mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And at the beginning of the experience, make sure that the students know who that person is, because one of the things you&#39;re asking them to sacrifice is </p>

<p>Nick Clason (29:28):<br>
Capturing, capturing </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:30):<br>
The memories </p>

<p>Nick Clason (29:30):<br>
Of </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (29:31):<br>
It all. And that&#39;s bigger than ever, right? Yeah. Because they can do that. And so making sure that that&#39;s there, and then making all those photos and videos available as soon as you possibly can. Um, and I, I noticed that, um, the, a camp I was at this summer there, the photographer was actually uploading those, um, to their social media platform, like with a link while the camp was there, even though the kids didn&#39;t have phones, so that as soon as they got home within like one hour, the kids were like posting their, you know, their real, their reels that recaps, like that&#39;s good. Building up all the stuff on the, That&#39;s really good. So I think that&#39;s a big one. And then two is think through your strategic feedback loop to parents. The parent freakout is, I don&#39;t, I, how do I know? Well mm-hmm. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (30:14):<br>
<affirmative>, if you have a, a way of saying, Hey, here&#39;s, here&#39;s where you can go, um, whether it&#39;s a Facebook page or group, or if it&#39;s your Instagram, or if it&#39;s even like a, a remind, uh, setup or whatever, texting, like, here&#39;s where it&#39;s at. We found that Facebook lives where you could at a camp mm-hmm. <affirmative>, um, actually doing a, Hey, I&#39;m gonna, I&#39;m gonna go live at this time. I&#39;m actually gonna give you a little glimpse into the session just for a short bit so you can just see what&#39;s going on and then come back and update you. And the beauty of a Facebook Live, every parent is still on Facebook, uh, for the most part. So they, they, they&#39;re there and so they can jump on live and then you can let it sit there. So, um, but those two things will, will go a long way in helping the resistance you might get. Um, when it comes to the no phone </p>

<p>Nick Clason (31:00):<br>
Rule. Yeah. We, we, we do, we&#39;ve done like a photographer and my, my favorite, and it always depends on like if the church or I have the budget to pull this off, but like get a videographer as well, or the same person, um, and have them do a daily, like, recap video. Those are great for opening your like sessions, but they&#39;re also amazing to throw up on YouTube and then text a link out. And so, you know, parents who, uh, send their kids without phone or whatever, they feel this like sense of relief if like they see their kid. Absolutely. Then the downside is one, one time I had to, uh, remove a clip because a kid was like picking his nose and the mom like, wanted it out. Yeah. Um, and then another time ano a mom was like, I haven&#39;t seen my kid in any of the recap bees. Yeah. And I&#39;m trying not to freak out, but like, are they having fun? Like, are they making friends? Like, and I get it, like as a, as a dad myself, you know, now, like I would also want to try and like lay eyes on my kids. So </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (32:01):<br>
Totally same. Totally same. Actually Gabe, the pastor at the church that I&#39;m serving with now, he did a meal time at camp and he just said, Okay, who needs to see their kid Facebook Live, <laugh>, who needs to see their kid? And he just went around and said, funny. And he put up the phone, he said, Tell your mom you&#39;re okay. And, and it was like one of the most viewed Yeah. There are a lot of people there, so Yeah. And that is legit. And it&#39;s, you gotta be ready for it for that whole world. And, um, it is, that is evidence again, of the different world. And, and as a parent of a high schooler and a middle schooler, I wasn&#39;t at the high school camp. I was at the middle school camp. I was watching for my kid. Yeah. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (32:38):<br>
That I didn&#39;t quite quite realize. So. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (32:40):<br>
All right. Last, last thing. Um, how can we, as pastors, people in ministry, what are ways there that you see that we can optimize technology, um, now Cause like the overall mission, right? Of the church mm-hmm. <affirmative> to make disciples. And Paul used, you know, the thing available to him writing letters at the time to reach churches that he was not near. So what are some ways, just maybe a couple ideas off the top of your head that you have seen effective or ideas that maybe you haven&#39;t seen totally fleshed out, but are ruminating inside. Like Yeah. Where we can use what is available to us in technology. I mean, even the fact that I&#39;m sitting in Texas here in northern Indiana and we&#39;re having this conversation and we&#39;re seeing each other, like, that&#39;s an advantage that wasn&#39;t available to us pre 2007. Right. And so, uh, what are some of those things maybe that you have seen or have thought about that we can use to our advantage to help kids take steps closer to Jesus? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (33:40):<br>
Yeah. Let me throw you a little bit of a curve on where I might go with this to start only, um, in that I&#39;ve been a part of large to very large churches mm-hmm. <affirmative>, and you&#39;ve been a part of larger churches where there&#39;s a budget that&#39;s available and mass communication through technology. And so our minds might immediately go to Yeah. Podcasts and video streams mm-hmm. <affirmative> and, uh, you know, Instagram and getting somehow in with you version so you can build up a Bible reading plan. And I Yes. Yeah. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (34:10):<br>
But I would it if you can </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (34:11):<br>
Yeah. I would say pastors and ministers to remember to that this is an incredible one to one ministry tool still mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, um, and, and this has gotten especially big to me as I&#39;ve shifted over into this world now where my primary job that I says God&#39;s called me to is just to pastor pastors, especially those that are youth pastors. Well, they&#39;re all over the nation. Yeah. And so, um, last night, Sunday night for me, I&#39;m recognizing I was just like, Lord, who are the people right now that might just kind of be in that spot that a word of encouragement or a check-in could go a long way? And there were, there were four texts that were sent out to individuals going, Hey, you&#39;re on my mind. How did today go? Or what&#39;s going on in your mind? Woke up this morning and like I already told you about, there was one guy that is first day he shifted from the education world to the church world. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (35:03):<br>
Hmm. And so, um, so I, I would just start by saying yes, I mean, as we think about the massive ways to do it, let&#39;s not forget that pastoring at its best that&#39;s good is a one to one, a one to three relationship mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, uh, connecting with our parishioners are people that we&#39;re discipling, whoever they might be, uh, through the phone and doing it healthily and thinking through safeguards and all those things are really important, especially for youth pastors. Um, which probably is a whole other episode to talk through at some point. <laugh>. Yeah. But, um, but to understand like, this is a ministry tool at its core. And so a a properly placed text, phone call, FaceTime, um, like, or comment on a, um, on a, on a post, uh, can is, is ministry, like, is deep ministry and meaningful ministry at times. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (35:53):<br>
Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. Um, That&#39;s great. It was interesting Nick, uh, my former youth pastor, uh, my dad died 10, uh, 13 years ago now, and my former youth minister is no longer in youth ministry. And, but it was an incredible influence on my life. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And it was about, uh, it was, it was right around eight years after my dad had died, I posted just a memory of him and below in the comment section, my old youth pastor got on and he, all he wrote was, I&#39;m so proud of you Derry. And I read that and I lost it. And, and I talked to him and, and what happened in that moment was like, I realized, uh, can, like, thank you. I miss I miss having my dad, and I&#39;m not, I don&#39;t have a dad that can physically say to me, I&#39;m proud of you anymore. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (36:39):<br>
And I&#39;m, I&#39;m like a 36 year old man, like blubbering over my youth pastor telling me he&#39;s proud of me. But it&#39;s because he, he, in that moment, he ministered to me through a simple comment on a Facebook group mm-hmm. <affirmative> that also helped me work through some grieving that I was at. I hadn&#39;t really just walked through and said, God, I&#39;m kind of ticked, I&#39;m kind of ticked right now because I&#39;ve lost, like, why did this happen? And, and it helped me kind of break through to a new level. And so, so anyway, like just, I, I, that&#39;s the one thing I would just say is as we think through the strategic and the greater stuff, let&#39;s not forget this is a incredible tool for the most effective ministry that is relational and personal in nature. That&#39;s good. That&#39;s good. Um, um, I would say otherwise though too is, um, I have a good friend, John McAllen, Johnny Mack, he did this thing, he started, it was called Echo Ministry. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (37:25):<br>
And the idea was how do you take and create echos of what&#39;s happening on the, on the weekend? How do you have the message echo through the rest of the week? And our technology, our cell phones are such a primary tool to make that happen. You said it so well, there are things that we can do now because we have these, um, where it can show up in the moment, in, in different ways, uh, whether it&#39;s, uh, uh, a thinking through, uh, devotional journey, like I said, through you version. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, uh, uh, the youth group that I just was at for the last couple of years, they&#39;re doing a thing called sale up Moments every week. They have just one moment that, that where they, they use on social media where they say, Okay, you&#39;re scrolling through, but stop, exhale, um, and listen to God allow &#39;em to speak to you. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (38:16):<br>
You know? And there&#39;s a whole acronym to it. I can&#39;t remember what the H was good. Yeah. I like that. You know, have a burger, I think was the last, no, I can&#39;t remember what the H was, but, um, they, they, they walked through it and, and so using that was, um, was, was a way to do it. So I, I think it&#39;s that matter of how can we echo it mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And there&#39;s a lot, you know, podcasts can be a part of it. Uh, I started something called Digging Deeper with our main services when I was, uh, at my own church. And, and what we did was every Wednesday I would sit down with whoever was preaching mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And if I, I, I was a part of the teaching time. If I was preaching, somebody else would come in and the first thing we&#39;d say, Hey, hey, what hit the cutting room floor? </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (38:53):<br>
What were you not able to get to this weekend that you wish you could have? And people just love that aspect, but then we would pick it part a little bit more mm-hmm. <affirmative>. And so, and it, it&#39;s not hard. It&#39;s a, you know, get, get a little basic, um, Yeah. Recording set up and you can get it set up pretty easy. Um, and so there&#39;s just so many ways, but I would just start with the, like, how can we echo into the week, what happened on the weekend Yep. And use it on a digital format. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (39:16):<br>
Yeah. No, that&#39;s good. I, I also personally think that we don&#39;t know yet like, the answer to some of these questions. Yeah. Like, I still think that there&#39;s, uh, things yet to be discovered, you know, in front of us. And so I think, uh, if there&#39;s any sort of like, challenge for anyone listening, I would just say like, just do something. Um, and you may stumble upon something great. You may find some stuff that&#39;s terrible and you need to cut it out. Um, but if you&#39;re, if you&#39;re always looking that direction, uh, you&#39;ll, you&#39;ll stumble upon something good that you maybe don&#39;t even know, or you maybe didn&#39;t, you know, you maybe weren&#39;t even able to see it right now when you started it because of a limited technology or budget or whatever. And so just be looking for ways. Cuz like I said, it&#39;s less, I think, I personally think it&#39;s easy to make digital about being flashy, um, or whatever, looking good to parents or other youth pastors or other people in ministry, whatever. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (40:15):<br>
But I think it&#39;s far less about that for me at least, and it&#39;s more about how effective can I be in spreading the message of Jesus with all the tools that he&#39;s given to me. Yeah. Like, I&#39;m, I&#39;m alive in 2022 with access to podcast microphones and phones that can take incredible videos and pictures, like mm-hmm. <affirmative>, how am I going to use steward those things to reach the most amount of people, you know, that have an audience to reach. So I think that&#39;s, that would be my challenge to whoever&#39;s listening is think what Dare said, think through all the things that, with intentionality, Um, and then just be open, you know, to, to utilizing some stuff. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (40:52):<br>
So yeah. You&#39;re, you&#39;re so right on. We don&#39;t have it all figured out. Probably one of my greatest pet peeves in life are, uh, those that are convinced they have it all figured out. Um, Yeah. <laugh> and I, I, I can do that at times. And usually when I&#39;m at that point and I&#39;m like, Oh yeah, I know how to do this. Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, that&#39;s the moment when I will fall flat on my face. And so, so there&#39;s a ton to be learned. There&#39;s a ton to be determined I love, or </p>

<p>Nick Clason (41:14):<br>
That&#39;s when a new iPhone comes out, Right. And you&#39;re like, Oh, this changed everything. Or Covid hit and this changed everything. So yes. Totally. Good. Yes. I think we&#39;re living through that. Well, hey man. Um, anything else off top of your head? You don&#39;t have to, but I just wanna make sure you said everything you wanted to say. Didn&#39;t leave anything unsaid. </p>

<p>Derry Prenkert (41:30):<br>
I think the only thing I would maybe end with is in that same vein is, um, it&#39;s everywhere. It&#39;s so much. Uh, also don&#39;t be afraid to not feel like you have to do everything, you know? Um, uh, especially to the minister that&#39;s trying to think through how to do effectively. There is a, there is a moment where less is more because your soul needs to rest, you know? Mm-hmm. <affirmative>, if you&#39;re finding yourself trying to, uh, late at night when you should be being around your family, invest your family or on your day off going, this is the time while Ill dive into all this digital stuff. Eh, you know what, maybe, maybe that&#39;s, uh, not worth it. No, not, maybe it definitely is not worth it. Definitely not worth, There&#39;s just, that&#39;s the part of like this thing, there&#39;s just so much out there. Mm-hmm. <affirmative> don&#39;t, I, I I guess it&#39;s like that idea of don&#39;t gain the digital world at the cost of your soul. Yeah. <laugh> good is, is, is a big thing. And I just, I say that out of a season where I&#39;m just seeing so many of us burn out. Um, and we&#39;re burning out in a lot of different ways, but one is because we&#39;re just constantly on and we don&#39;t hit the off switch. That&#39;s </p>

<p>Nick Clason (42:34):<br>
Good. That&#39;s good. Love it, man. Well, hey, thanks again. Uh, you referenced a couple things in here. I&#39;ll toss &#39;em in show notes, like your resource on D ym <laugh> so that all tens of our listeners can go get it. There you go. Um, anyway, thanks for hanging out man. And uh, absolutely. We&#39;ll chat again. Chat again. Yeah. Awesome. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (42:52):<br>
Well, wasn&#39;t that great, Uh, super thoughtful, super helpful. Um, I hope that you found this interesting and helpful as well. Hey, um, we are online on Twitter at Hybrid Ministry. Would love to have you come hang out, follow us over there. Um, we&#39;re still growing, not super active yet, but, uh, we&#39;re well on our way. And also everything you need, show notes, links, transcripts, all kinds of stuff. You can find out hybrid ministry.xyz along with a now growing bank of archive and older episodes. So if you&#39;re just not stumbling upon us, we&#39;d love to have you go back and check it out. Uh, you can do all of that at <a href="http://www.hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">hybridministry.xyz</a> Ze. Again, thanks for being with us today and we&#39;ll chat next time.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 012: Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on demand world we live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it? And are Big Events only for the Pastor's Ego?</title>
  <link>https://www.hybridministry.xyz/012</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">884c669a-911b-4e55-92d9-8382ec04dd61</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2022 04:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Nick Clason</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/e697b7b8-eaee-430b-9281-dfbd9f2d34d0/884c669a-911b-4e55-92d9-8382ec04dd61.mp3" length="13548832" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episode>012</itunes:episode>
  <itunes:title>Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on demand world we live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it? And are Big Events only for the Pastor's Ego?</itunes:title>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Nick Clason</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this solo pod Nick explores three big ideas. Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on-demand world and culture that we currently live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it Especially if you just are using it as an extension of your announcements? And are Big Events only for the Pastor's Ego? Or do they still have a place in our churches? All that and more on this week's episode of the Hybrid Ministry Podcast!</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>27:59</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/e/e697b7b8-eaee-430b-9281-dfbd9f2d34d0/episodes/8/884c669a-911b-4e55-92d9-8382ec04dd61/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;SUMMARY&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br&gt;
In this solo pod Nick explores three big ideas. Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on-demand world and culture that we currently live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it Especially if you just are using it as an extension of your announcements? And are Big Events only for the Pastor's Ego? Or do they still have a place in our churches? All that and more on this week's episode of the Hybrid Ministry Podcast!&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Follow along at &lt;a href="http://hybridministry.xyz" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;http://hybridministry.xyz&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;
Or come hang out on Twitter at &lt;a href="http://twitter.com/hybridministry" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;http://twitter.com/hybridministry&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;TIMECODES&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br&gt;
00:00-04:34 - Intro&lt;br&gt;
04:34-13:07 - Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on demand world we live in.&lt;br&gt;
13:07-18:39 - Is Social Media worth it in your church?&lt;br&gt;
18:39-27:09 - Big Events are for the Ego of the Pastor, not the People&lt;br&gt;
27:09-27:50 - Outro&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;SHOWNOTES&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br&gt;
&lt;a href="http://Nucleus.Church" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"&gt;http://Nucleus.Church&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;TRANSCRIPT&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br&gt;
Nick Clason (00:00):&lt;br&gt;
What up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. I am your host, Nick Clason, this morning solo pod from my new house in Dallas, Texas, and my guest bedroom closet because, uh, none of my stuff is in the house yet. And so every single place I go is gonna be echoy and the least echoy place is the guest bedroom closet. As best as I can tell, you'll have to let me know, cuz honestly, you're on the hearing side of this. I'm on the talking side of this. And so, uh, this is my best attempt. Um, I've mentioned it in previous episodes, Uh, gonna be a solo pod today. Uh, both me and Matt are actually in the middle of moves. Uh, we, my wife and I, uh, we got a little bit of a jumpstart on him and his wife, and so they, I believe his truck is maybe coming today. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (01:07):&lt;br&gt;
Um, and so anyway, so today on this episode, I wanted to just chat about a couple of hot takes. Um, three in particular. I wanted to do three hot takes. And number one, I wanted to talk about how we now live in a more on demand world and how social media, um, or email marketing may not be the best way to approach some of that on demand world. Wanted just chat through and brainstorm some stuff with you guys. The second hot take was, um, social media might not actually be worth it, um, in your churches, uh, if you do some of these things I'm gonna talk about. And then number three, I think that big large scale events are actually more for the pastor's ego than for the actual people who are going to be consuming them. So we'll dive into those a little bit, um, here in just a second. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (02:04):&lt;br&gt;
But like I said, uh, just a quick like, update. So when, when we got this sucker up, up and rolling off the ground, I, uh, recorded, uh, pre-recorded five podcasts. And so I had five in the queue before we ever even launched episode one. With all the hustle and bustle moving and just the absolute impossibility has seemed for Matt and I to be able to coordinate our schedules. Um, I am now recording this episode one day before it will release tomorrow, Thursday morning, October 6th. And so, um, I to keep things rolling, to remain consistent, my goal is to give you something every single Thursday morning. Um, it's, it, you know, I'm just letting you know like that. That's sort of why, like, I could wait and Matt and I could get on the same page, but we're gonna miss a couple posts. Um, and so I'm gonna keep bringing you guys some stuff. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (03:02):&lt;br&gt;
Um, and when life settles down for the both of us, we will make this happen. But like I said, I'm on the tail end of a move. Um, my family and I rolled into town last Friday, closed on a house here in, uh, Fort Worth, Texas, uh, to start a new job at church in the DFW metroplex area. Love it. Super excited working with, um, former boss of mine who, uh, so it's, you know, it's a great ex experience, um, and also feels incredibly familiar even though I'm in a new church. I'm in a similar youth ministry environment, so that's really exciting. Um, and then Matt's actually gonna be stepping into a different role as well, and I'll let him talk a little bit more about that. But his first, uh, day on the job is actually gonna be in Spain. And so, uh, who knows, you know, how soon we'll be able to be together on the podcast again. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (03:56):&lt;br&gt;
But our goal is to continue to bring something to y'all, um, and continue to bring both of our voices. I I'm not a gigantic fan of these solo pods. It feels like just a lot of rambling into an empty microphone with very little feedback, pushback, conversation. Um, but I'm gonna do my best in learning and I'm trying to make it something that is gonna be worth everybody's while. So without any anymore explanation for all that, um, I'm just trying to give you a little quick update, some housekeeping stuff. Uh, I wanted to dive into a couple of ideas. So let's go, let's make this happen. All right. Idea number one, we live in an on demand world. So is social media and is email marketing the most effective way to communicate? Think about this. Uh, we live in a Netflix as opposed to a cable TV centric world. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (04:54):&lt;br&gt;
10 years ago, maybe even 15 years ago, the only way to consume your favorite TV show, if you wanted to watch Seinfeld, you had to tune in on Thursday evenings at 8:00 PM I'm not actually sure if that's true or not. Actually, what I do know is true is the Office, right? Every Thursday night, sometime between eight or 9:00 PM I remember, cause I was in college and we didn't, we weren't, um, allowed, We were at a Christian university. We were not allowed to have, uh, televisions in our room. And streaming, um, was available, but it wasn't available until the next day. And so the only way to watch the office at my Christian university was to go find a lounge with a tv. The lounges were allowed to have TVs and cable, uh, or satellite, but none of the rooms were. And so Thursday night was on demand viewing opportunities. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (05:48):&lt;br&gt;
People would come in and flood the lounges. It, there was literally not a seat in the house. If you wanted to sit and watch the office, you had to get there a couple of hours early in the anticipation of it. And you probably had to sit through the NBC Nightly news and you probably had to sit through a couple other sitcoms like community or something like that before the office ever even came on. Now, I compare that to the idea of the way that Disney Plus is releasing things. Like if I wanna watch the newest episode of She Hulk, I can get up at three o'clock in the morning the day that it releases and watch it from the comfort of my own house. But in the fact that I've been moving and traveling and I took my family to Disney World last week, two weeks ago, like, I'm not caught up on She Hulk, but I will, I'll get caught up on it or Stranger Things, right? &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (06:38):&lt;br&gt;
When Stranger Things comes out, it is a all day viewing experience. It is an on-demand, it is a binge worthy experience. Uh, so much so that Netflix has recently adjusted the way that they released it. And so they released it now in two different parts. Now, I just wanna think about how that behavior there, the Netflix versus the cable experience, how that behavior has changed the way that we as humans, um, expect to consume content, right? Like, think about it. I, in a Netflix world, I want information when I want it. How many of you in ministry have sent some sort of email newsletter and then you still get the question from a teenager or a parent, Hey, when is the deadline again? And you're like, I communicated this. Like, this has been so clear, This has been so obvious. The reason why I think is when you send it to them, you're sending it to them in a, a cable centric mentality. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (07:47):&lt;br&gt;
Like, I will send you this email every Tuesday at 9:00 AM That's if you are even that discipline, a lot of us, we're not, we're not sending emails with that amount of consistency and regularity, and I don't know that I'm ready to abandon the whole email idea, But what I do know is that we don't live in a cable TV centric world where Thursday night at 8:30 PM is on demand, uh, must watch tv. Very few people live that way. And that's gonna be the same way with your emails. And that's gonna be the same way with your stage announcements. And that's gonna be the same way with your social media announcement posts. And so how do we switch to a more on demand way to consume content or way to find community? Again, I think another beautiful example of this is joining a small group outta church. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (08:44):&lt;br&gt;
I think a lot of churches have the small group process basically be, Hey, if you wanna join a small group, go talk to Carl. And then Carl plays matchmaker. And I like, if I want to sign up for a small group, I wanna just go browse the available options and I wanna sign up for a small group. You may call that consumer of me, but I, I actually appreciate it in and like to anticipate the control or the ability that I have to make that happen on my own. I, I will, if I'm finding a new veterinarian or if I'm finding a new doctor, if I'm finding a new dentist, if I'm finding a new counselor, like I prefer to find those things by going to those people's websites and creating my own appointment. Like one of the things that I absolutely hated, this may be the millennial me, I don't know, but when I was looking for quotes to move, um, I would find these websites and they're like, click through here to get an instant quote. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (09:49):&lt;br&gt;
And I was like, Oh, awesome. And so I put in on my info, you know, four bedroom house, this estimated amount of stuff, whatever. And then they would say, Awesome, your quote is ready. Call one 800, whatever, whatever, whatever, to get your quote. That's not on demand. No, it's not. No. Now I have to talk to a customer service representative. And the problem is that the, when the default is you, hey, you gotta talk to customer service representative. Yes, I'm not trying to hit away from the, uh, talking to other people the importance of that, right? We know that human connection and human conversation is important, but what I am trying to say is we can, we live in a world and we have tools, digital tools and things that can make it possible for people to find those resources and come to that on their own. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (10:41):&lt;br&gt;
So how can we do that in churches? What are ways that we can make that happen? A couple of ideas I have, I talked about this a couple podcasts to go where I said, Hey, here's what I'm pitching for my new church. Um, create a central hub strategy. And I don't wanna take any sort of credit for this. Like Brady Sheer and the guys over at Pro Church Tools, they have been preaching this for years. And they have, they have a website tab, boot nucleus, uh, called nucleus.church, check out their product and you can build your own central hub style website where, and it's a, it's super easy to edit. It's one of my all-time favorite website editors. Uh, but b it looks so good, it's so sleek, it's mobile friendly. Like that is, that is where you can, um, send emails still and send social media things, but you can direct and drive everything back to the website where it's consistent every single time. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (11:33):&lt;br&gt;
And you're saying, Hey, for more information, head to fill in the blank. And that creates, um, that puts the, that puts the onus back on the user. And you're saying, Hey, if you want this information, if you want it on demand, if you wanna watch it like you consume Netflix, here's where to go. And that, what that does then is that makes it the impetus beyond you or on us as the church leaders to make sure that those websites are updated. I think more often than not, the um, the, the website is one of the last things that we think to edit. And I think in this new world that we're moving into, and in this on demand world, websites almost need to be the first thing that we edit. It's interesting, like I said, I'm starting a new job, but with an old boss and just before him and I both left, um, we were both working at, at my last church, I was like, we need to, we need to tighten up the website. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (12:30):&lt;br&gt;
And he said, Ah, I, he's like, I always think of the website as a last, last ditch effort. He's like, But you're right. We need to switch. We need to make that first. And so here we are now in our new gig and he asked me yesterday, What's your, what's your digital strategy? Do you have one? And I said, Yeah, but it's gonna be contingent independent on the website. And you know, if you're a pastor or you work in church ministry, you know how this is, right? And I said, So that, that requires us to have a conversation with communications and get them on the same page cuz we're, we're, uh, dependent upon them to kind of get some of this stuff that we want flushed out, finished out. All right, take number two. Social media is not worth it unless you're willing to try some new things. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (13:22):&lt;br&gt;
I think a lot of churches are just doing social media as an announcement extension. And man, I would just say if that's all you're doing with social media, just keeping the ship afloat, just doing things because it's what you feel like you should do need to do. Everyone else is on social media. They're telling you to do social media, but you're really, you don't have anyone invested in it. You don't have anybody tracking it. You don't have anybody watching the metrics to see what's growing, what needs to be having port gas pour onto it, what needs to be cooled and slowed and changed. Who's watching trends? Who's listening to the Pro Church Tools podcast? Who's listening to the Hybrid Ministry podcast to stay up to date on what's going on on social media and to you, like, as a church, you have to be willing to try things that are gonna be different because social media, digital ministry is a new way to reach people. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (14:19):&lt;br&gt;
And I think it's effective. And so I I would actually push back and say, I do think it's worth it, but I, but the reason I don't think it will be worth it is if you're, if you're just gonna stick it on autopilot. I think there are very few ways to, uh, post and, and do social media type things without, um, being willing to be a mold breaker, without being willing to take some risks, without being willing to rethink some of the old ways of doing things. A lot of the traditional methods on social media are not effective anymore, right? Like when, when right now, um, the entire focus on all of social media is discoverability, right? TikTok brought into this, brought into us this advent of finding content from people that you don't know. And so when people at your church, um, want to follow you or your account, uh, but you're posting reels or tos, things that are needing to be discovered by hopefully them, but also other people, like what are you gonna do? &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (15:33):&lt;br&gt;
Like, how, how then what's the call to action out of a real, out of a TikTok, right? Like, and so we gotta figure out as church, um, digital hybrid marketing people what our win is and what the purpose of doing it is, because it is, is just a really bad announcement extension. Like it can be that, but it's gonna be pretty lame and it's gonna be pretty ineffective. And people are really not on social media now. Um, or I, I should, I should watch what I say. I was gonna say, people are not on social media to follow people that they're friends with, and I don't think that's true. Um, but I think that the most popular form of social content right now is to consume videos, short form videos in particular of people that you're not friends with. Like when I'm on TikTok, I spend 95% of my time on the four UAB and I'm only over on the friends tab to clear that pesky red notification. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (16:43):&lt;br&gt;
And then if I'm over there, I might see a video or two of some friends I follow and then I'll, or I'll see a few videos in a row of friends I follow and I'm like, Huh, this is crazy. Or friends I know like my sister and my friend Isaac. Um, and then I'm like, Oh, that's cuz I'm on the friends tab. Of course back over for you, right? Like, I don't know about you, but that's how I am behaving with it. And so I just, what I'm saying with this is, I'm not saying social media's not worth it, but I am saying you gotta be willing to take risks. And I think if you're unwilling to take risks or you don't have somebody who's willing to take risks and, and look at your individual church data, I don't know that it's gonna be worth it. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (17:28):&lt;br&gt;
I don't know that it's gonna yield for you the results that you're looking for. Sure you can post some stuff, you can have some announcement adjacent stuff and you can just do some, you know, Facebook page type things. But, but is it really gonna be worth it? And are we really like gonna see the results that we're looking for? So get out there, break some stuff, stuff, try some stuff, be creative, be willing to take risks and don't put the breaks on your creatives or don't put the breaks on the people who are interested in this because listen, like this avenue in particular is going to be, um, the way and wave of the future and the way that you've been doing church and particularly the way that you've probably been doing social media is not gonna be what's a part of the next wave. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (18:18):&lt;br&gt;
So let somebody who is comfortable with taking risks and comfortable with trying things, let them go fly, try and do some things, um, and don't get stuck in a rut and don't get stuck on autopilot because when you do, that's when things become far less, uh, interesting and far less effective. I take number three today in our final one. Big events are for the pastor, not the people. All right, now hear me out on this one, right? I think that a big event, filling a giant room is really a win for the person on the stage because it helps the pastor. And I'm a pastor and I would agree with this, it helps me feel successful. I look out across the landscape of the room and I say, Man, there's so many people here. Look how effective this event is. Look how many people are here. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (19:16):&lt;br&gt;
I think the reality is though is that man, we really like, we are seeing a shift away from that like big event idea and that big event desire. Like we actually just, uh, talked to some of our juniors and seniors last week at the church I'm in. And um, you know, the church I'm in like, is, man, it is, is much different than the, the church as in before church as in before, is very, very much in a post-Christian world. Now we're in the Bible belt. Um, but what's fascinating is these students who are Gen Z are basically saying the same things. And they said like, we don't, we don't need this like, big event. It feels very, um, like almost forced, like what we want really for like our friends. Like we wanna just like invite them to like our small group and like if they're like exploring faith, like we wanna actually explore faith and give them something actually challenging, um, and have a hard conversation, not just a like Christian platitude. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (20:24):&lt;br&gt;
And I was, I was actually, I was watching a show last night, uh, a house flipping show, um, and this couple is having a smaller wedding, um, and they're doing it in like a newly renovated and remodeled house. And so, you know, of course like the, the whole premise of the show is will these people renovate in this house, get it done in time for the wedding? And um, they were talking about like how this house, it's an old, is gonna be a renovated Victorian style house. So for those of you who are not super up on your HGTV of Victorian is, um, smaller rooms, um, and like just really ornate and elaborate kind of like decor. Um, but like not the whole open concept kind of idea. And so as these people were touring through the house, like, Oh, this would be good for our friends to have these smaller rooms, these smaller, more intimate gatherings so that people can actually stop and pause and have conversations with one another. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (21:37):&lt;br&gt;
And that, that honestly was kind of the impetus for this hot take this morning cuz I was like, Wow, like those, I mean, they're, they're younger, right? Like they're probably in their twenties getting married, maybe thirties. Um, and they, you know, they got a little bit more of like an eclectic kind of vibe to 'em. But the reality is, is as like, I do think that that is far more what people are looking for. They're looking for intimacy, they're looking for connection over content. And so the big room gatherings were a content dump. It would get everybody in. And so that the pastor could deliver his content in the most efficient way possible, the most efficient way possible was to have a large auditorium and crams many people into that large auditorium as you can so that they all could hear what the pastor has to say. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (22:34):&lt;br&gt;
Guys like that is, that is no longer the most efficient way possible. Is it effective still? Perhaps? Uh, but there's a greater efficiency out there, right? A pastor can talk into a microphone in his closet much like I'm doing right now and deliver that same level of content. So then if that has more efficiency, then what is the purpose of the Sunday morning gathering? And I know like, I'm a pastor, I get it theologically, Hebrews 10, 24 and 25, let us not give up meeting together as somewhere in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another and all the more as you see the day approaching and you're like, that's the, that's the reason for the church gathering. And I would agree. I honestly though, like I'm not, no offense, like I've been at this church now for a month. Um, so I've been to, uh, I think a total of three, maybe four weekends, Sunday morning services. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (23:34):&lt;br&gt;
Like I don't, I have to work, right? So like, uh, soon as the first service is over, I'm actually, I've, I've actually never been in the service long enough to be dismissed from it. I've slipped out every single week, uh, because I need to get over to student ministry section of the building to be ready for our thing, right? I don't talk to anybody really in the service. Like that encouragement, that admonishment that spurring me on like the, the Sunday morning gathering is, is not when that is taking place. Listen, I'm also, I'll be honest with you too, I'm a traditionalist. I enjoy that. But what is, who is it for? I think in a lot of ways it might actually be for the ego of the pastor. Um, I think I've mentioned this on here before, but at our last church, um, we saw a higher, um, percentage of engagement with students when we offered a smaller gathering. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (24:36):&lt;br&gt;
Um, and we saw a better value in conversation with students in their smaller groups as opposed to in a large, a large scale gathering. I think, you know, we still saw success in the larger scale gatherings because kids like to come together. They still like to have fun together, they still like to play games together. Um, and so that obviously that's important. That fun is a value too, right? Um, but I, I remember telling a friend of mine who said, if I want to come back together, um, and bring everyone back together in the room, like I want to do that if I'm honest, like that's a value of mine. Like I enjoy that. However, if this talking about the small group system and setting is more effective, more efficient, um, and more what students want than I need to put my ego and my pride on the alter and be willing to offer to students what's better for them, even if it's a not, not what I want. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (25:42):&lt;br&gt;
Alright? So let's put purpose over preference and then b um, I have to be willing to level up and train my, my leaders and my volunteer team to execute this plan or this play. Um, and it's gonna take more work on my part to develop them as leaders, uh, than just bring them all back together and we preach a message at them from, from the stage, right? Again, if that's what I want and that's what's easier, but it's not. What's better then? Let's actually give our students what's best. Why not? Because we're trying to be effective grow numbers. Look at metrics because we want students to have a meaningful encounter with the God of the universe to come to a knowing, saving knowledge and relationship with Jesus Christ, who is the way back to the Father is he says in John chapter 14, He's the way, he's the truth, he's the wife. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nick Clason (26:44):&lt;br&gt;
And if big events are hindrance to that or a Gen Z eye roll, like, uh, another one of these again, then let's not give it to him. Let's give them what they're going to use for the betterment of their faith in the betterment of the, their friends' faith as their friends try to explore what it looks like and means to follow Christ. Well, hey everyone, uh, hope you enjoyed today's episode. Tried a little bit of a different format here. It's, it's tough. Hang on to alo pod, like I said. So I wanted to give a couple of kind of hot takes and just, uh, express what to my heart where I'm coming from. So if you enjoyed it, let us know. Um, rate review. You can go to hybridministry.xyz. We are also on Twitter. I'm gonna try to start, um, being a little more active on there beyond just posting when episodes drop. So come over, give us a follow, come hang out with us. It's at hybrid ministry on Twitter. And, uh, love hanging out with you guys. Uh, let us know, uh, reach out, let us know if there's anything you'd like to hear specifically. And, um, until the next time, talk soon. Bye. &lt;/p&gt;
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Digital, Media, Social, Social Media, Church Ministry, Pastors, Big Events, Email, On Demand, Netflix, Cable TV, Innovative, Creative</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this solo pod Nick explores three big ideas. Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on-demand world and culture that we currently live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it Especially if you just are using it as an extension of your announcements? And are Big Events only for the Pastor&#39;s Ego? Or do they still have a place in our churches? All that and more on this week&#39;s episode of the Hybrid Ministry Podcast!</p>

<p>Follow along at <a href="http://hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Or come hang out on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://twitter.com/hybridministry</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-04:34 - Intro<br>
04:34-13:07 - Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on demand world we live in.<br>
13:07-18:39 - Is Social Media worth it in your church?<br>
18:39-27:09 - Big Events are for the Ego of the Pastor, not the People<br>
27:09-27:50 - Outro</p>

<p><strong>SHOWNOTES</strong><br>
<a href="http://Nucleus.Church" rel="nofollow">http://Nucleus.Church</a></p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. I am your host, Nick Clason, this morning solo pod from my new house in Dallas, Texas, and my guest bedroom closet because, uh, none of my stuff is in the house yet. And so every single place I go is gonna be echoy and the least echoy place is the guest bedroom closet. As best as I can tell, you&#39;ll have to let me know, cuz honestly, you&#39;re on the hearing side of this. I&#39;m on the talking side of this. And so, uh, this is my best attempt. Um, I&#39;ve mentioned it in previous episodes, Uh, gonna be a solo pod today. Uh, both me and Matt are actually in the middle of moves. Uh, we, my wife and I, uh, we got a little bit of a jumpstart on him and his wife, and so they, I believe his truck is maybe coming today. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:07):<br>
Um, and so anyway, so today on this episode, I wanted to just chat about a couple of hot takes. Um, three in particular. I wanted to do three hot takes. And number one, I wanted to talk about how we now live in a more on demand world and how social media, um, or email marketing may not be the best way to approach some of that on demand world. Wanted just chat through and brainstorm some stuff with you guys. The second hot take was, um, social media might not actually be worth it, um, in your churches, uh, if you do some of these things I&#39;m gonna talk about. And then number three, I think that big large scale events are actually more for the pastor&#39;s ego than for the actual people who are going to be consuming them. So we&#39;ll dive into those a little bit, um, here in just a second. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (02:04):<br>
But like I said, uh, just a quick like, update. So when, when we got this sucker up, up and rolling off the ground, I, uh, recorded, uh, pre-recorded five podcasts. And so I had five in the queue before we ever even launched episode one. With all the hustle and bustle moving and just the absolute impossibility has seemed for Matt and I to be able to coordinate our schedules. Um, I am now recording this episode one day before it will release tomorrow, Thursday morning, October 6th. And so, um, I to keep things rolling, to remain consistent, my goal is to give you something every single Thursday morning. Um, it&#39;s, it, you know, I&#39;m just letting you know like that. That&#39;s sort of why, like, I could wait and Matt and I could get on the same page, but we&#39;re gonna miss a couple posts. Um, and so I&#39;m gonna keep bringing you guys some stuff. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:02):<br>
Um, and when life settles down for the both of us, we will make this happen. But like I said, I&#39;m on the tail end of a move. Um, my family and I rolled into town last Friday, closed on a house here in, uh, Fort Worth, Texas, uh, to start a new job at church in the DFW metroplex area. Love it. Super excited working with, um, former boss of mine who, uh, so it&#39;s, you know, it&#39;s a great ex experience, um, and also feels incredibly familiar even though I&#39;m in a new church. I&#39;m in a similar youth ministry environment, so that&#39;s really exciting. Um, and then Matt&#39;s actually gonna be stepping into a different role as well, and I&#39;ll let him talk a little bit more about that. But his first, uh, day on the job is actually gonna be in Spain. And so, uh, who knows, you know, how soon we&#39;ll be able to be together on the podcast again. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:56):<br>
But our goal is to continue to bring something to y&#39;all, um, and continue to bring both of our voices. I I&#39;m not a gigantic fan of these solo pods. It feels like just a lot of rambling into an empty microphone with very little feedback, pushback, conversation. Um, but I&#39;m gonna do my best in learning and I&#39;m trying to make it something that is gonna be worth everybody&#39;s while. So without any anymore explanation for all that, um, I&#39;m just trying to give you a little quick update, some housekeeping stuff. Uh, I wanted to dive into a couple of ideas. So let&#39;s go, let&#39;s make this happen. All right. Idea number one, we live in an on demand world. So is social media and is email marketing the most effective way to communicate? Think about this. Uh, we live in a Netflix as opposed to a cable TV centric world. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:54):<br>
10 years ago, maybe even 15 years ago, the only way to consume your favorite TV show, if you wanted to watch Seinfeld, you had to tune in on Thursday evenings at 8:00 PM I&#39;m not actually sure if that&#39;s true or not. Actually, what I do know is true is the Office, right? Every Thursday night, sometime between eight or 9:00 PM I remember, cause I was in college and we didn&#39;t, we weren&#39;t, um, allowed, We were at a Christian university. We were not allowed to have, uh, televisions in our room. And streaming, um, was available, but it wasn&#39;t available until the next day. And so the only way to watch the office at my Christian university was to go find a lounge with a tv. The lounges were allowed to have TVs and cable, uh, or satellite, but none of the rooms were. And so Thursday night was on demand viewing opportunities. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:48):<br>
People would come in and flood the lounges. It, there was literally not a seat in the house. If you wanted to sit and watch the office, you had to get there a couple of hours early in the anticipation of it. And you probably had to sit through the NBC Nightly news and you probably had to sit through a couple other sitcoms like community or something like that before the office ever even came on. Now, I compare that to the idea of the way that Disney Plus is releasing things. Like if I wanna watch the newest episode of She Hulk, I can get up at three o&#39;clock in the morning the day that it releases and watch it from the comfort of my own house. But in the fact that I&#39;ve been moving and traveling and I took my family to Disney World last week, two weeks ago, like, I&#39;m not caught up on She Hulk, but I will, I&#39;ll get caught up on it or Stranger Things, right? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (06:38):<br>
When Stranger Things comes out, it is a all day viewing experience. It is an on-demand, it is a binge worthy experience. Uh, so much so that Netflix has recently adjusted the way that they released it. And so they released it now in two different parts. Now, I just wanna think about how that behavior there, the Netflix versus the cable experience, how that behavior has changed the way that we as humans, um, expect to consume content, right? Like, think about it. I, in a Netflix world, I want information when I want it. How many of you in ministry have sent some sort of email newsletter and then you still get the question from a teenager or a parent, Hey, when is the deadline again? And you&#39;re like, I communicated this. Like, this has been so clear, This has been so obvious. The reason why I think is when you send it to them, you&#39;re sending it to them in a, a cable centric mentality. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (07:47):<br>
Like, I will send you this email every Tuesday at 9:00 AM That&#39;s if you are even that discipline, a lot of us, we&#39;re not, we&#39;re not sending emails with that amount of consistency and regularity, and I don&#39;t know that I&#39;m ready to abandon the whole email idea, But what I do know is that we don&#39;t live in a cable TV centric world where Thursday night at 8:30 PM is on demand, uh, must watch tv. Very few people live that way. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your emails. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your stage announcements. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your social media announcement posts. And so how do we switch to a more on demand way to consume content or way to find community? Again, I think another beautiful example of this is joining a small group outta church. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (08:44):<br>
I think a lot of churches have the small group process basically be, Hey, if you wanna join a small group, go talk to Carl. And then Carl plays matchmaker. And I like, if I want to sign up for a small group, I wanna just go browse the available options and I wanna sign up for a small group. You may call that consumer of me, but I, I actually appreciate it in and like to anticipate the control or the ability that I have to make that happen on my own. I, I will, if I&#39;m finding a new veterinarian or if I&#39;m finding a new doctor, if I&#39;m finding a new dentist, if I&#39;m finding a new counselor, like I prefer to find those things by going to those people&#39;s websites and creating my own appointment. Like one of the things that I absolutely hated, this may be the millennial me, I don&#39;t know, but when I was looking for quotes to move, um, I would find these websites and they&#39;re like, click through here to get an instant quote. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:49):<br>
And I was like, Oh, awesome. And so I put in on my info, you know, four bedroom house, this estimated amount of stuff, whatever. And then they would say, Awesome, your quote is ready. Call one 800, whatever, whatever, whatever, to get your quote. That&#39;s not on demand. No, it&#39;s not. No. Now I have to talk to a customer service representative. And the problem is that the, when the default is you, hey, you gotta talk to customer service representative. Yes, I&#39;m not trying to hit away from the, uh, talking to other people the importance of that, right? We know that human connection and human conversation is important, but what I am trying to say is we can, we live in a world and we have tools, digital tools and things that can make it possible for people to find those resources and come to that on their own. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:41):<br>
So how can we do that in churches? What are ways that we can make that happen? A couple of ideas I have, I talked about this a couple podcasts to go where I said, Hey, here&#39;s what I&#39;m pitching for my new church. Um, create a central hub strategy. And I don&#39;t wanna take any sort of credit for this. Like Brady Sheer and the guys over at Pro Church Tools, they have been preaching this for years. And they have, they have a website tab, boot nucleus, uh, called nucleus.church, check out their product and you can build your own central hub style website where, and it&#39;s a, it&#39;s super easy to edit. It&#39;s one of my all-time favorite website editors. Uh, but b it looks so good, it&#39;s so sleek, it&#39;s mobile friendly. Like that is, that is where you can, um, send emails still and send social media things, but you can direct and drive everything back to the website where it&#39;s consistent every single time. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (11:33):<br>
And you&#39;re saying, Hey, for more information, head to fill in the blank. And that creates, um, that puts the, that puts the onus back on the user. And you&#39;re saying, Hey, if you want this information, if you want it on demand, if you wanna watch it like you consume Netflix, here&#39;s where to go. And that, what that does then is that makes it the impetus beyond you or on us as the church leaders to make sure that those websites are updated. I think more often than not, the um, the, the website is one of the last things that we think to edit. And I think in this new world that we&#39;re moving into, and in this on demand world, websites almost need to be the first thing that we edit. It&#39;s interesting, like I said, I&#39;m starting a new job, but with an old boss and just before him and I both left, um, we were both working at, at my last church, I was like, we need to, we need to tighten up the website. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (12:30):<br>
And he said, Ah, I, he&#39;s like, I always think of the website as a last, last ditch effort. He&#39;s like, But you&#39;re right. We need to switch. We need to make that first. And so here we are now in our new gig and he asked me yesterday, What&#39;s your, what&#39;s your digital strategy? Do you have one? And I said, Yeah, but it&#39;s gonna be contingent independent on the website. And you know, if you&#39;re a pastor or you work in church ministry, you know how this is, right? And I said, So that, that requires us to have a conversation with communications and get them on the same page cuz we&#39;re, we&#39;re, uh, dependent upon them to kind of get some of this stuff that we want flushed out, finished out. All right, take number two. Social media is not worth it unless you&#39;re willing to try some new things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:22):<br>
I think a lot of churches are just doing social media as an announcement extension. And man, I would just say if that&#39;s all you&#39;re doing with social media, just keeping the ship afloat, just doing things because it&#39;s what you feel like you should do need to do. Everyone else is on social media. They&#39;re telling you to do social media, but you&#39;re really, you don&#39;t have anyone invested in it. You don&#39;t have anybody tracking it. You don&#39;t have anybody watching the metrics to see what&#39;s growing, what needs to be having port gas pour onto it, what needs to be cooled and slowed and changed. Who&#39;s watching trends? Who&#39;s listening to the Pro Church Tools podcast? Who&#39;s listening to the Hybrid Ministry podcast to stay up to date on what&#39;s going on on social media and to you, like, as a church, you have to be willing to try things that are gonna be different because social media, digital ministry is a new way to reach people. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:19):<br>
And I think it&#39;s effective. And so I I would actually push back and say, I do think it&#39;s worth it, but I, but the reason I don&#39;t think it will be worth it is if you&#39;re, if you&#39;re just gonna stick it on autopilot. I think there are very few ways to, uh, post and, and do social media type things without, um, being willing to be a mold breaker, without being willing to take some risks, without being willing to rethink some of the old ways of doing things. A lot of the traditional methods on social media are not effective anymore, right? Like when, when right now, um, the entire focus on all of social media is discoverability, right? TikTok brought into this, brought into us this advent of finding content from people that you don&#39;t know. And so when people at your church, um, want to follow you or your account, uh, but you&#39;re posting reels or tos, things that are needing to be discovered by hopefully them, but also other people, like what are you gonna do? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:33):<br>
Like, how, how then what&#39;s the call to action out of a real, out of a TikTok, right? Like, and so we gotta figure out as church, um, digital hybrid marketing people what our win is and what the purpose of doing it is, because it is, is just a really bad announcement extension. Like it can be that, but it&#39;s gonna be pretty lame and it&#39;s gonna be pretty ineffective. And people are really not on social media now. Um, or I, I should, I should watch what I say. I was gonna say, people are not on social media to follow people that they&#39;re friends with, and I don&#39;t think that&#39;s true. Um, but I think that the most popular form of social content right now is to consume videos, short form videos in particular of people that you&#39;re not friends with. Like when I&#39;m on TikTok, I spend 95% of my time on the four UAB and I&#39;m only over on the friends tab to clear that pesky red notification. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (16:43):<br>
And then if I&#39;m over there, I might see a video or two of some friends I follow and then I&#39;ll, or I&#39;ll see a few videos in a row of friends I follow and I&#39;m like, Huh, this is crazy. Or friends I know like my sister and my friend Isaac. Um, and then I&#39;m like, Oh, that&#39;s cuz I&#39;m on the friends tab. Of course back over for you, right? Like, I don&#39;t know about you, but that&#39;s how I am behaving with it. And so I just, what I&#39;m saying with this is, I&#39;m not saying social media&#39;s not worth it, but I am saying you gotta be willing to take risks. And I think if you&#39;re unwilling to take risks or you don&#39;t have somebody who&#39;s willing to take risks and, and look at your individual church data, I don&#39;t know that it&#39;s gonna be worth it. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (17:28):<br>
I don&#39;t know that it&#39;s gonna yield for you the results that you&#39;re looking for. Sure you can post some stuff, you can have some announcement adjacent stuff and you can just do some, you know, Facebook page type things. But, but is it really gonna be worth it? And are we really like gonna see the results that we&#39;re looking for? So get out there, break some stuff, stuff, try some stuff, be creative, be willing to take risks and don&#39;t put the breaks on your creatives or don&#39;t put the breaks on the people who are interested in this because listen, like this avenue in particular is going to be, um, the way and wave of the future and the way that you&#39;ve been doing church and particularly the way that you&#39;ve probably been doing social media is not gonna be what&#39;s a part of the next wave. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (18:18):<br>
So let somebody who is comfortable with taking risks and comfortable with trying things, let them go fly, try and do some things, um, and don&#39;t get stuck in a rut and don&#39;t get stuck on autopilot because when you do, that&#39;s when things become far less, uh, interesting and far less effective. I take number three today in our final one. Big events are for the pastor, not the people. All right, now hear me out on this one, right? I think that a big event, filling a giant room is really a win for the person on the stage because it helps the pastor. And I&#39;m a pastor and I would agree with this, it helps me feel successful. I look out across the landscape of the room and I say, Man, there&#39;s so many people here. Look how effective this event is. Look how many people are here. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (19:16):<br>
I think the reality is though is that man, we really like, we are seeing a shift away from that like big event idea and that big event desire. Like we actually just, uh, talked to some of our juniors and seniors last week at the church I&#39;m in. And um, you know, the church I&#39;m in like, is, man, it is, is much different than the, the church as in before church as in before, is very, very much in a post-Christian world. Now we&#39;re in the Bible belt. Um, but what&#39;s fascinating is these students who are Gen Z are basically saying the same things. And they said like, we don&#39;t, we don&#39;t need this like, big event. It feels very, um, like almost forced, like what we want really for like our friends. Like we wanna just like invite them to like our small group and like if they&#39;re like exploring faith, like we wanna actually explore faith and give them something actually challenging, um, and have a hard conversation, not just a like Christian platitude. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (20:24):<br>
And I was, I was actually, I was watching a show last night, uh, a house flipping show, um, and this couple is having a smaller wedding, um, and they&#39;re doing it in like a newly renovated and remodeled house. And so, you know, of course like the, the whole premise of the show is will these people renovate in this house, get it done in time for the wedding? And um, they were talking about like how this house, it&#39;s an old, is gonna be a renovated Victorian style house. So for those of you who are not super up on your HGTV of Victorian is, um, smaller rooms, um, and like just really ornate and elaborate kind of like decor. Um, but like not the whole open concept kind of idea. And so as these people were touring through the house, like, Oh, this would be good for our friends to have these smaller rooms, these smaller, more intimate gatherings so that people can actually stop and pause and have conversations with one another. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:37):<br>
And that, that honestly was kind of the impetus for this hot take this morning cuz I was like, Wow, like those, I mean, they&#39;re, they&#39;re younger, right? Like they&#39;re probably in their twenties getting married, maybe thirties. Um, and they, you know, they got a little bit more of like an eclectic kind of vibe to &#39;em. But the reality is, is as like, I do think that that is far more what people are looking for. They&#39;re looking for intimacy, they&#39;re looking for connection over content. And so the big room gatherings were a content dump. It would get everybody in. And so that the pastor could deliver his content in the most efficient way possible, the most efficient way possible was to have a large auditorium and crams many people into that large auditorium as you can so that they all could hear what the pastor has to say. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (22:34):<br>
Guys like that is, that is no longer the most efficient way possible. Is it effective still? Perhaps? Uh, but there&#39;s a greater efficiency out there, right? A pastor can talk into a microphone in his closet much like I&#39;m doing right now and deliver that same level of content. So then if that has more efficiency, then what is the purpose of the Sunday morning gathering? And I know like, I&#39;m a pastor, I get it theologically, Hebrews 10, 24 and 25, let us not give up meeting together as somewhere in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another and all the more as you see the day approaching and you&#39;re like, that&#39;s the, that&#39;s the reason for the church gathering. And I would agree. I honestly though, like I&#39;m not, no offense, like I&#39;ve been at this church now for a month. Um, so I&#39;ve been to, uh, I think a total of three, maybe four weekends, Sunday morning services. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (23:34):<br>
Like I don&#39;t, I have to work, right? So like, uh, soon as the first service is over, I&#39;m actually, I&#39;ve, I&#39;ve actually never been in the service long enough to be dismissed from it. I&#39;ve slipped out every single week, uh, because I need to get over to student ministry section of the building to be ready for our thing, right? I don&#39;t talk to anybody really in the service. Like that encouragement, that admonishment that spurring me on like the, the Sunday morning gathering is, is not when that is taking place. Listen, I&#39;m also, I&#39;ll be honest with you too, I&#39;m a traditionalist. I enjoy that. But what is, who is it for? I think in a lot of ways it might actually be for the ego of the pastor. Um, I think I&#39;ve mentioned this on here before, but at our last church, um, we saw a higher, um, percentage of engagement with students when we offered a smaller gathering. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (24:36):<br>
Um, and we saw a better value in conversation with students in their smaller groups as opposed to in a large, a large scale gathering. I think, you know, we still saw success in the larger scale gatherings because kids like to come together. They still like to have fun together, they still like to play games together. Um, and so that obviously that&#39;s important. That fun is a value too, right? Um, but I, I remember telling a friend of mine who said, if I want to come back together, um, and bring everyone back together in the room, like I want to do that if I&#39;m honest, like that&#39;s a value of mine. Like I enjoy that. However, if this talking about the small group system and setting is more effective, more efficient, um, and more what students want than I need to put my ego and my pride on the alter and be willing to offer to students what&#39;s better for them, even if it&#39;s a not, not what I want. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (25:42):<br>
Alright? So let&#39;s put purpose over preference and then b um, I have to be willing to level up and train my, my leaders and my volunteer team to execute this plan or this play. Um, and it&#39;s gonna take more work on my part to develop them as leaders, uh, than just bring them all back together and we preach a message at them from, from the stage, right? Again, if that&#39;s what I want and that&#39;s what&#39;s easier, but it&#39;s not. What&#39;s better then? Let&#39;s actually give our students what&#39;s best. Why not? Because we&#39;re trying to be effective grow numbers. Look at metrics because we want students to have a meaningful encounter with the God of the universe to come to a knowing, saving knowledge and relationship with Jesus Christ, who is the way back to the Father is he says in John chapter 14, He&#39;s the way, he&#39;s the truth, he&#39;s the wife. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (26:44):<br>
And if big events are hindrance to that or a Gen Z eye roll, like, uh, another one of these again, then let&#39;s not give it to him. Let&#39;s give them what they&#39;re going to use for the betterment of their faith in the betterment of the, their friends&#39; faith as their friends try to explore what it looks like and means to follow Christ. Well, hey everyone, uh, hope you enjoyed today&#39;s episode. Tried a little bit of a different format here. It&#39;s, it&#39;s tough. Hang on to alo pod, like I said. So I wanted to give a couple of kind of hot takes and just, uh, express what to my heart where I&#39;m coming from. So if you enjoyed it, let us know. Um, rate review. You can go to hybridministry.xyz. We are also on Twitter. I&#39;m gonna try to start, um, being a little more active on there beyond just posting when episodes drop. So come over, give us a follow, come hang out with us. It&#39;s at hybrid ministry on Twitter. And, uh, love hanging out with you guys. Uh, let us know, uh, reach out, let us know if there&#39;s anything you&#39;d like to hear specifically. And, um, until the next time, talk soon. Bye.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong><br>
In this solo pod Nick explores three big ideas. Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on-demand world and culture that we currently live in. Is Social Media for your church even worth it Especially if you just are using it as an extension of your announcements? And are Big Events only for the Pastor&#39;s Ego? Or do they still have a place in our churches? All that and more on this week&#39;s episode of the Hybrid Ministry Podcast!</p>

<p>Follow along at <a href="http://hybridministry.xyz" rel="nofollow">http://hybridministry.xyz</a><br>
Or come hang out on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/hybridministry" rel="nofollow">http://twitter.com/hybridministry</a></p>

<p><strong>TIMECODES</strong><br>
00:00-04:34 - Intro<br>
04:34-13:07 - Why Email and Social may not satisfy the on demand world we live in.<br>
13:07-18:39 - Is Social Media worth it in your church?<br>
18:39-27:09 - Big Events are for the Ego of the Pastor, not the People<br>
27:09-27:50 - Outro</p>

<p><strong>SHOWNOTES</strong><br>
<a href="http://Nucleus.Church" rel="nofollow">http://Nucleus.Church</a></p>

<p><strong>TRANSCRIPT</strong><br>
Nick Clason (00:00):<br>
What up everybody? And welcome to another episode of the Hybrid Ministry podcast. I am your host, Nick Clason, this morning solo pod from my new house in Dallas, Texas, and my guest bedroom closet because, uh, none of my stuff is in the house yet. And so every single place I go is gonna be echoy and the least echoy place is the guest bedroom closet. As best as I can tell, you&#39;ll have to let me know, cuz honestly, you&#39;re on the hearing side of this. I&#39;m on the talking side of this. And so, uh, this is my best attempt. Um, I&#39;ve mentioned it in previous episodes, Uh, gonna be a solo pod today. Uh, both me and Matt are actually in the middle of moves. Uh, we, my wife and I, uh, we got a little bit of a jumpstart on him and his wife, and so they, I believe his truck is maybe coming today. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (01:07):<br>
Um, and so anyway, so today on this episode, I wanted to just chat about a couple of hot takes. Um, three in particular. I wanted to do three hot takes. And number one, I wanted to talk about how we now live in a more on demand world and how social media, um, or email marketing may not be the best way to approach some of that on demand world. Wanted just chat through and brainstorm some stuff with you guys. The second hot take was, um, social media might not actually be worth it, um, in your churches, uh, if you do some of these things I&#39;m gonna talk about. And then number three, I think that big large scale events are actually more for the pastor&#39;s ego than for the actual people who are going to be consuming them. So we&#39;ll dive into those a little bit, um, here in just a second. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (02:04):<br>
But like I said, uh, just a quick like, update. So when, when we got this sucker up, up and rolling off the ground, I, uh, recorded, uh, pre-recorded five podcasts. And so I had five in the queue before we ever even launched episode one. With all the hustle and bustle moving and just the absolute impossibility has seemed for Matt and I to be able to coordinate our schedules. Um, I am now recording this episode one day before it will release tomorrow, Thursday morning, October 6th. And so, um, I to keep things rolling, to remain consistent, my goal is to give you something every single Thursday morning. Um, it&#39;s, it, you know, I&#39;m just letting you know like that. That&#39;s sort of why, like, I could wait and Matt and I could get on the same page, but we&#39;re gonna miss a couple posts. Um, and so I&#39;m gonna keep bringing you guys some stuff. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:02):<br>
Um, and when life settles down for the both of us, we will make this happen. But like I said, I&#39;m on the tail end of a move. Um, my family and I rolled into town last Friday, closed on a house here in, uh, Fort Worth, Texas, uh, to start a new job at church in the DFW metroplex area. Love it. Super excited working with, um, former boss of mine who, uh, so it&#39;s, you know, it&#39;s a great ex experience, um, and also feels incredibly familiar even though I&#39;m in a new church. I&#39;m in a similar youth ministry environment, so that&#39;s really exciting. Um, and then Matt&#39;s actually gonna be stepping into a different role as well, and I&#39;ll let him talk a little bit more about that. But his first, uh, day on the job is actually gonna be in Spain. And so, uh, who knows, you know, how soon we&#39;ll be able to be together on the podcast again. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (03:56):<br>
But our goal is to continue to bring something to y&#39;all, um, and continue to bring both of our voices. I I&#39;m not a gigantic fan of these solo pods. It feels like just a lot of rambling into an empty microphone with very little feedback, pushback, conversation. Um, but I&#39;m gonna do my best in learning and I&#39;m trying to make it something that is gonna be worth everybody&#39;s while. So without any anymore explanation for all that, um, I&#39;m just trying to give you a little quick update, some housekeeping stuff. Uh, I wanted to dive into a couple of ideas. So let&#39;s go, let&#39;s make this happen. All right. Idea number one, we live in an on demand world. So is social media and is email marketing the most effective way to communicate? Think about this. Uh, we live in a Netflix as opposed to a cable TV centric world. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (04:54):<br>
10 years ago, maybe even 15 years ago, the only way to consume your favorite TV show, if you wanted to watch Seinfeld, you had to tune in on Thursday evenings at 8:00 PM I&#39;m not actually sure if that&#39;s true or not. Actually, what I do know is true is the Office, right? Every Thursday night, sometime between eight or 9:00 PM I remember, cause I was in college and we didn&#39;t, we weren&#39;t, um, allowed, We were at a Christian university. We were not allowed to have, uh, televisions in our room. And streaming, um, was available, but it wasn&#39;t available until the next day. And so the only way to watch the office at my Christian university was to go find a lounge with a tv. The lounges were allowed to have TVs and cable, uh, or satellite, but none of the rooms were. And so Thursday night was on demand viewing opportunities. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (05:48):<br>
People would come in and flood the lounges. It, there was literally not a seat in the house. If you wanted to sit and watch the office, you had to get there a couple of hours early in the anticipation of it. And you probably had to sit through the NBC Nightly news and you probably had to sit through a couple other sitcoms like community or something like that before the office ever even came on. Now, I compare that to the idea of the way that Disney Plus is releasing things. Like if I wanna watch the newest episode of She Hulk, I can get up at three o&#39;clock in the morning the day that it releases and watch it from the comfort of my own house. But in the fact that I&#39;ve been moving and traveling and I took my family to Disney World last week, two weeks ago, like, I&#39;m not caught up on She Hulk, but I will, I&#39;ll get caught up on it or Stranger Things, right? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (06:38):<br>
When Stranger Things comes out, it is a all day viewing experience. It is an on-demand, it is a binge worthy experience. Uh, so much so that Netflix has recently adjusted the way that they released it. And so they released it now in two different parts. Now, I just wanna think about how that behavior there, the Netflix versus the cable experience, how that behavior has changed the way that we as humans, um, expect to consume content, right? Like, think about it. I, in a Netflix world, I want information when I want it. How many of you in ministry have sent some sort of email newsletter and then you still get the question from a teenager or a parent, Hey, when is the deadline again? And you&#39;re like, I communicated this. Like, this has been so clear, This has been so obvious. The reason why I think is when you send it to them, you&#39;re sending it to them in a, a cable centric mentality. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (07:47):<br>
Like, I will send you this email every Tuesday at 9:00 AM That&#39;s if you are even that discipline, a lot of us, we&#39;re not, we&#39;re not sending emails with that amount of consistency and regularity, and I don&#39;t know that I&#39;m ready to abandon the whole email idea, But what I do know is that we don&#39;t live in a cable TV centric world where Thursday night at 8:30 PM is on demand, uh, must watch tv. Very few people live that way. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your emails. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your stage announcements. And that&#39;s gonna be the same way with your social media announcement posts. And so how do we switch to a more on demand way to consume content or way to find community? Again, I think another beautiful example of this is joining a small group outta church. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (08:44):<br>
I think a lot of churches have the small group process basically be, Hey, if you wanna join a small group, go talk to Carl. And then Carl plays matchmaker. And I like, if I want to sign up for a small group, I wanna just go browse the available options and I wanna sign up for a small group. You may call that consumer of me, but I, I actually appreciate it in and like to anticipate the control or the ability that I have to make that happen on my own. I, I will, if I&#39;m finding a new veterinarian or if I&#39;m finding a new doctor, if I&#39;m finding a new dentist, if I&#39;m finding a new counselor, like I prefer to find those things by going to those people&#39;s websites and creating my own appointment. Like one of the things that I absolutely hated, this may be the millennial me, I don&#39;t know, but when I was looking for quotes to move, um, I would find these websites and they&#39;re like, click through here to get an instant quote. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (09:49):<br>
And I was like, Oh, awesome. And so I put in on my info, you know, four bedroom house, this estimated amount of stuff, whatever. And then they would say, Awesome, your quote is ready. Call one 800, whatever, whatever, whatever, to get your quote. That&#39;s not on demand. No, it&#39;s not. No. Now I have to talk to a customer service representative. And the problem is that the, when the default is you, hey, you gotta talk to customer service representative. Yes, I&#39;m not trying to hit away from the, uh, talking to other people the importance of that, right? We know that human connection and human conversation is important, but what I am trying to say is we can, we live in a world and we have tools, digital tools and things that can make it possible for people to find those resources and come to that on their own. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (10:41):<br>
So how can we do that in churches? What are ways that we can make that happen? A couple of ideas I have, I talked about this a couple podcasts to go where I said, Hey, here&#39;s what I&#39;m pitching for my new church. Um, create a central hub strategy. And I don&#39;t wanna take any sort of credit for this. Like Brady Sheer and the guys over at Pro Church Tools, they have been preaching this for years. And they have, they have a website tab, boot nucleus, uh, called nucleus.church, check out their product and you can build your own central hub style website where, and it&#39;s a, it&#39;s super easy to edit. It&#39;s one of my all-time favorite website editors. Uh, but b it looks so good, it&#39;s so sleek, it&#39;s mobile friendly. Like that is, that is where you can, um, send emails still and send social media things, but you can direct and drive everything back to the website where it&#39;s consistent every single time. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (11:33):<br>
And you&#39;re saying, Hey, for more information, head to fill in the blank. And that creates, um, that puts the, that puts the onus back on the user. And you&#39;re saying, Hey, if you want this information, if you want it on demand, if you wanna watch it like you consume Netflix, here&#39;s where to go. And that, what that does then is that makes it the impetus beyond you or on us as the church leaders to make sure that those websites are updated. I think more often than not, the um, the, the website is one of the last things that we think to edit. And I think in this new world that we&#39;re moving into, and in this on demand world, websites almost need to be the first thing that we edit. It&#39;s interesting, like I said, I&#39;m starting a new job, but with an old boss and just before him and I both left, um, we were both working at, at my last church, I was like, we need to, we need to tighten up the website. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (12:30):<br>
And he said, Ah, I, he&#39;s like, I always think of the website as a last, last ditch effort. He&#39;s like, But you&#39;re right. We need to switch. We need to make that first. And so here we are now in our new gig and he asked me yesterday, What&#39;s your, what&#39;s your digital strategy? Do you have one? And I said, Yeah, but it&#39;s gonna be contingent independent on the website. And you know, if you&#39;re a pastor or you work in church ministry, you know how this is, right? And I said, So that, that requires us to have a conversation with communications and get them on the same page cuz we&#39;re, we&#39;re, uh, dependent upon them to kind of get some of this stuff that we want flushed out, finished out. All right, take number two. Social media is not worth it unless you&#39;re willing to try some new things. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (13:22):<br>
I think a lot of churches are just doing social media as an announcement extension. And man, I would just say if that&#39;s all you&#39;re doing with social media, just keeping the ship afloat, just doing things because it&#39;s what you feel like you should do need to do. Everyone else is on social media. They&#39;re telling you to do social media, but you&#39;re really, you don&#39;t have anyone invested in it. You don&#39;t have anybody tracking it. You don&#39;t have anybody watching the metrics to see what&#39;s growing, what needs to be having port gas pour onto it, what needs to be cooled and slowed and changed. Who&#39;s watching trends? Who&#39;s listening to the Pro Church Tools podcast? Who&#39;s listening to the Hybrid Ministry podcast to stay up to date on what&#39;s going on on social media and to you, like, as a church, you have to be willing to try things that are gonna be different because social media, digital ministry is a new way to reach people. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (14:19):<br>
And I think it&#39;s effective. And so I I would actually push back and say, I do think it&#39;s worth it, but I, but the reason I don&#39;t think it will be worth it is if you&#39;re, if you&#39;re just gonna stick it on autopilot. I think there are very few ways to, uh, post and, and do social media type things without, um, being willing to be a mold breaker, without being willing to take some risks, without being willing to rethink some of the old ways of doing things. A lot of the traditional methods on social media are not effective anymore, right? Like when, when right now, um, the entire focus on all of social media is discoverability, right? TikTok brought into this, brought into us this advent of finding content from people that you don&#39;t know. And so when people at your church, um, want to follow you or your account, uh, but you&#39;re posting reels or tos, things that are needing to be discovered by hopefully them, but also other people, like what are you gonna do? </p>

<p>Nick Clason (15:33):<br>
Like, how, how then what&#39;s the call to action out of a real, out of a TikTok, right? Like, and so we gotta figure out as church, um, digital hybrid marketing people what our win is and what the purpose of doing it is, because it is, is just a really bad announcement extension. Like it can be that, but it&#39;s gonna be pretty lame and it&#39;s gonna be pretty ineffective. And people are really not on social media now. Um, or I, I should, I should watch what I say. I was gonna say, people are not on social media to follow people that they&#39;re friends with, and I don&#39;t think that&#39;s true. Um, but I think that the most popular form of social content right now is to consume videos, short form videos in particular of people that you&#39;re not friends with. Like when I&#39;m on TikTok, I spend 95% of my time on the four UAB and I&#39;m only over on the friends tab to clear that pesky red notification. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (16:43):<br>
And then if I&#39;m over there, I might see a video or two of some friends I follow and then I&#39;ll, or I&#39;ll see a few videos in a row of friends I follow and I&#39;m like, Huh, this is crazy. Or friends I know like my sister and my friend Isaac. Um, and then I&#39;m like, Oh, that&#39;s cuz I&#39;m on the friends tab. Of course back over for you, right? Like, I don&#39;t know about you, but that&#39;s how I am behaving with it. And so I just, what I&#39;m saying with this is, I&#39;m not saying social media&#39;s not worth it, but I am saying you gotta be willing to take risks. And I think if you&#39;re unwilling to take risks or you don&#39;t have somebody who&#39;s willing to take risks and, and look at your individual church data, I don&#39;t know that it&#39;s gonna be worth it. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (17:28):<br>
I don&#39;t know that it&#39;s gonna yield for you the results that you&#39;re looking for. Sure you can post some stuff, you can have some announcement adjacent stuff and you can just do some, you know, Facebook page type things. But, but is it really gonna be worth it? And are we really like gonna see the results that we&#39;re looking for? So get out there, break some stuff, stuff, try some stuff, be creative, be willing to take risks and don&#39;t put the breaks on your creatives or don&#39;t put the breaks on the people who are interested in this because listen, like this avenue in particular is going to be, um, the way and wave of the future and the way that you&#39;ve been doing church and particularly the way that you&#39;ve probably been doing social media is not gonna be what&#39;s a part of the next wave. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (18:18):<br>
So let somebody who is comfortable with taking risks and comfortable with trying things, let them go fly, try and do some things, um, and don&#39;t get stuck in a rut and don&#39;t get stuck on autopilot because when you do, that&#39;s when things become far less, uh, interesting and far less effective. I take number three today in our final one. Big events are for the pastor, not the people. All right, now hear me out on this one, right? I think that a big event, filling a giant room is really a win for the person on the stage because it helps the pastor. And I&#39;m a pastor and I would agree with this, it helps me feel successful. I look out across the landscape of the room and I say, Man, there&#39;s so many people here. Look how effective this event is. Look how many people are here. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (19:16):<br>
I think the reality is though is that man, we really like, we are seeing a shift away from that like big event idea and that big event desire. Like we actually just, uh, talked to some of our juniors and seniors last week at the church I&#39;m in. And um, you know, the church I&#39;m in like, is, man, it is, is much different than the, the church as in before church as in before, is very, very much in a post-Christian world. Now we&#39;re in the Bible belt. Um, but what&#39;s fascinating is these students who are Gen Z are basically saying the same things. And they said like, we don&#39;t, we don&#39;t need this like, big event. It feels very, um, like almost forced, like what we want really for like our friends. Like we wanna just like invite them to like our small group and like if they&#39;re like exploring faith, like we wanna actually explore faith and give them something actually challenging, um, and have a hard conversation, not just a like Christian platitude. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (20:24):<br>
And I was, I was actually, I was watching a show last night, uh, a house flipping show, um, and this couple is having a smaller wedding, um, and they&#39;re doing it in like a newly renovated and remodeled house. And so, you know, of course like the, the whole premise of the show is will these people renovate in this house, get it done in time for the wedding? And um, they were talking about like how this house, it&#39;s an old, is gonna be a renovated Victorian style house. So for those of you who are not super up on your HGTV of Victorian is, um, smaller rooms, um, and like just really ornate and elaborate kind of like decor. Um, but like not the whole open concept kind of idea. And so as these people were touring through the house, like, Oh, this would be good for our friends to have these smaller rooms, these smaller, more intimate gatherings so that people can actually stop and pause and have conversations with one another. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (21:37):<br>
And that, that honestly was kind of the impetus for this hot take this morning cuz I was like, Wow, like those, I mean, they&#39;re, they&#39;re younger, right? Like they&#39;re probably in their twenties getting married, maybe thirties. Um, and they, you know, they got a little bit more of like an eclectic kind of vibe to &#39;em. But the reality is, is as like, I do think that that is far more what people are looking for. They&#39;re looking for intimacy, they&#39;re looking for connection over content. And so the big room gatherings were a content dump. It would get everybody in. And so that the pastor could deliver his content in the most efficient way possible, the most efficient way possible was to have a large auditorium and crams many people into that large auditorium as you can so that they all could hear what the pastor has to say. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (22:34):<br>
Guys like that is, that is no longer the most efficient way possible. Is it effective still? Perhaps? Uh, but there&#39;s a greater efficiency out there, right? A pastor can talk into a microphone in his closet much like I&#39;m doing right now and deliver that same level of content. So then if that has more efficiency, then what is the purpose of the Sunday morning gathering? And I know like, I&#39;m a pastor, I get it theologically, Hebrews 10, 24 and 25, let us not give up meeting together as somewhere in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another and all the more as you see the day approaching and you&#39;re like, that&#39;s the, that&#39;s the reason for the church gathering. And I would agree. I honestly though, like I&#39;m not, no offense, like I&#39;ve been at this church now for a month. Um, so I&#39;ve been to, uh, I think a total of three, maybe four weekends, Sunday morning services. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (23:34):<br>
Like I don&#39;t, I have to work, right? So like, uh, soon as the first service is over, I&#39;m actually, I&#39;ve, I&#39;ve actually never been in the service long enough to be dismissed from it. I&#39;ve slipped out every single week, uh, because I need to get over to student ministry section of the building to be ready for our thing, right? I don&#39;t talk to anybody really in the service. Like that encouragement, that admonishment that spurring me on like the, the Sunday morning gathering is, is not when that is taking place. Listen, I&#39;m also, I&#39;ll be honest with you too, I&#39;m a traditionalist. I enjoy that. But what is, who is it for? I think in a lot of ways it might actually be for the ego of the pastor. Um, I think I&#39;ve mentioned this on here before, but at our last church, um, we saw a higher, um, percentage of engagement with students when we offered a smaller gathering. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (24:36):<br>
Um, and we saw a better value in conversation with students in their smaller groups as opposed to in a large, a large scale gathering. I think, you know, we still saw success in the larger scale gatherings because kids like to come together. They still like to have fun together, they still like to play games together. Um, and so that obviously that&#39;s important. That fun is a value too, right? Um, but I, I remember telling a friend of mine who said, if I want to come back together, um, and bring everyone back together in the room, like I want to do that if I&#39;m honest, like that&#39;s a value of mine. Like I enjoy that. However, if this talking about the small group system and setting is more effective, more efficient, um, and more what students want than I need to put my ego and my pride on the alter and be willing to offer to students what&#39;s better for them, even if it&#39;s a not, not what I want. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (25:42):<br>
Alright? So let&#39;s put purpose over preference and then b um, I have to be willing to level up and train my, my leaders and my volunteer team to execute this plan or this play. Um, and it&#39;s gonna take more work on my part to develop them as leaders, uh, than just bring them all back together and we preach a message at them from, from the stage, right? Again, if that&#39;s what I want and that&#39;s what&#39;s easier, but it&#39;s not. What&#39;s better then? Let&#39;s actually give our students what&#39;s best. Why not? Because we&#39;re trying to be effective grow numbers. Look at metrics because we want students to have a meaningful encounter with the God of the universe to come to a knowing, saving knowledge and relationship with Jesus Christ, who is the way back to the Father is he says in John chapter 14, He&#39;s the way, he&#39;s the truth, he&#39;s the wife. </p>

<p>Nick Clason (26:44):<br>
And if big events are hindrance to that or a Gen Z eye roll, like, uh, another one of these again, then let&#39;s not give it to him. Let&#39;s give them what they&#39;re going to use for the betterment of their faith in the betterment of the, their friends&#39; faith as their friends try to explore what it looks like and means to follow Christ. Well, hey everyone, uh, hope you enjoyed today&#39;s episode. Tried a little bit of a different format here. It&#39;s, it&#39;s tough. Hang on to alo pod, like I said. So I wanted to give a couple of kind of hot takes and just, uh, express what to my heart where I&#39;m coming from. So if you enjoyed it, let us know. Um, rate review. You can go to hybridministry.xyz. We are also on Twitter. I&#39;m gonna try to start, um, being a little more active on there beyond just posting when episodes drop. So come over, give us a follow, come hang out with us. It&#39;s at hybrid ministry on Twitter. And, uh, love hanging out with you guys. Uh, let us know, uh, reach out, let us know if there&#39;s anything you&#39;d like to hear specifically. And, um, until the next time, talk soon. Bye.</p>]]>
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