In a previous post, I challenged the use of mass mailings because of the negative impressions they leave with many people. I also noted that we could easily be confused with Jehovah's Witnesses. Little did I know that I would find such strong proof that this is the case.
The evangelistic series I was a part of used the slogan, "What's Next?" which played on the fact that this was the 100 year anniversary of the SF earthquake. We sent out copies of The Great Controversy to virtually everyone in SF as well as pamphlets advertising the series.
I came across this blog which features a group of people blogging about everyday life in San Francisco. Interestingly, someone actually posted about receiving our pamphlet in the mail and was obviously not impressed. The comments were also less than gracious. Just a sampling of what was written:
"Glad you told me what it was, I assumed it was the new Watchtower."
"wow, maybe it's a citywide sweep! should get an '06 award for "best regional exploitation of history and fear by a fundie group", then..."
"I got one in the mail, and thought "Great! This will tell me how to prepare for the earthquake/tsumami/swarm of locusts that try to kill me in the near future. I put it on my counter (this was, of course, after watching the Discovery Channel special "America's Tsumami - Are we next?") When I came home later, it was gone. My boyfriend said "I threw out that cult thing, guess you won't get saved." Silly me."
"Just a note, this booklet actually comes from the Seventh Day Adventist Church. After going to whats-next.org (from the back page) you can find a link to bibleinfo.com and eventually another link to the maker of the booklet, the Seventh Day Adventist Church. I wonder why they hide themselves so well? if it is really the truth they have, they would not have to hide themselves. comments?"
I'm not suggesting that this would be the majority position. I think most people threw it in the trash without even thinking twice. However, I think that we need to consider not only how many people we baptize through a series, but how many people we completely turn off through our methodology. In our case, we probably turned off a lot more people than we reached.
Comments
thats crazy!
If I got that flyer in the mail, I would agree with the SFers.
That mailer and GC send was tacky, full of wacky fear mongering, and a waste of thousands of dollars. For what? Much more bad press than good, and barely any success. I was there for the baptisms of the first night and that was one of the weirdest things I've ever seen in a church. The three folks barely had any idea of what they were doing and what they were joining.
I've worked in four evangelistic series - WA, MI, and Philippines - and it's clear to me that most of these campaigns are based on a fifty-year-old sense of what attracts attention.
BTW, do I remember you right Trevan, did that SF series cost the conference over a hundred thousand dollars?
Gordon
It is obvious that the designers of this terrible campaign didn't bother to consider their audience.
Many Christians, whenever the motivation to engage in evangelism comes along, immediately turn to propaganda techniques (radio, TV, print materials) instead of real ministry ("Christ's method"). It is a self-centered urge that thinks nothing of the other person (the intended receiver of the witness) and only of what I want to say, what I want them to hear. It is inherently unChristlike. And people who trot out the "foolishness of preaching" text from Paul to justify this kind of propaganda are simply misusing the Scriptures. The gospel is authentic only when it is conveyed with the compassion of Christ; when the words appear after deeds of unselfish caring and when they are carefully crafted to be heard and understood based on extensive, careful listening. The people who distribute all of this Christian propaganda are doing the work of the Devil, not the work of Jesus.