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Effective Church Communications provides Timeless Strategy and Biblical Inspiration to help churches create communications that fully fulfill the Great Commission

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Q & A: Where can you find Free PowerPoint resources, artwork and templates?

30 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn 2 Comments

Question:

"Our church has recently added a video screen to our sanctuary. We are in the beginning stages on learning how to use it for announcements and other parts of our church service. We have found some resources for slide backgrounds, videos and countdowns. Most of the video and countdown sites have a fee to use these. We are a small church and just wondering where the best sites are for these things, and possibly free usage sites also. Any suggestions?"

Answer:

Though there are many excellent companies that create PowerPoint presentations for churches, many do charge a hefty fee for their materials. As someone who creates resources for churches, I know everyone needs to make a living, but at the same time, I as someone who is married to a bi-vocational pastor and whose work at the church is done for no compensation, I do know that church resources can be very tight, while ministry demands can be challenging.

I did a good bit of research on this and found the following websites have some excellent FREE resources! Rather than simply telling you about them, I did 3 video reviews, so you can actually see the sites. Following are video reviews of the sites I found most useful with preliminary comments and direct links to them.

PLEASE respond in the comments section if you have other sites that you use either free or paid for. Any extra comments would be very helpful. Thanks so much!

Free PowerPoint Templates from Christian sources

Heartlight.org
http://www.heartlight.org/powerpoint/2262.html
This site is just WONDERFUL! Lots of free materials, really good quality, and I found the overall attitude of the site encouraging and uplifting. Not only PowerPoint, but lots of other materials you'll find very useful for church communications.

Ebibleteacher.com
http://www.ebibleteacher.com/
I didn't find this as useful for worship-type PowerPoint as some, but I really like their teaching materials. Good graphics and maps section and OK background images. I use a lot of maps and historical images in my Bible teaching to remind people that the Christian faith is rooted in real history that took place in real places.

Hyperpixels Media
http://www.hyperpixelsmedia.com/motion-background-loops/fire-flow
I really liked the materials here. This site has mostly materials that cost, but they also have some free materials, that change and that are wonderful. Their quality is excellent and their prices are very reasonable. This does cost, but their video: A Man's Thesaurus had me laughing out-loud. Check it out when you need a bit of humor.

Free PowerPoint Templates for Churches Video Review

Free PowerPoint templates from Secular Sources

PowerPoint Styles.com
http://www.powerpointstyles.com
This is a weird site—but useful weird. Be sure to look at the video before you go to it. It has some GREAT material and it's all FREE, but what is weird about it is all the junk ads, software download boxes and other stuff that clutter up the site. But if you take a few minutes with it, you'll be rewarded with some really great PowerPoint Templates.

Microsoft.com
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates/results.aspx?qu=presentations
The link above goes directly to the free PowerPoint templates from Microsoft. As you'll see the best ones they offer don't come from Microsoft themselves, but from companies that give free resources to them. It is a little tricky to find and access these resources, but the video that follows shows you how.

Free Templates and Clipart for Churches from Secular Sources

Free Power Point Training Resource

Indezine.com
http://www.indezine.com/
This is a very interesting site—it does have lots of free templates for PowerPoint and the video below shows you how to access them, but it also has lots of educational information on all sorts of topics related to PowerPoint, such as an extensive tutorial about presenting on the iPad. There are lots of links to books and other resources related to PowerPoint and links to downloads of software trials. Their religious templates feature ones for non-Christian religions, which could be very useful for world religion classes. Bookmark this site as the offering and education materials change often.

Free PowerPoint Templates and Training, a video review of Indezine

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Filed Under: Father's Day, Graphics, Images, PowerPoint, Videos Tagged With: Free PowerPoint templates, PowerPoint how-tos, PowerPoint in church, PowerPoint templates

Father’s Day Post cards, a great set, ready-to-use

22 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Here is a set of postcards for Father's Day, that can also be used as stand-alone images in PowerPoint, websites, newsletters or however else you want to use them. These publications and images come in a ZIP file you can download in these formats:

  • A PDF of postcard size publications that is ready-to-print as is, but that you can also personalize on the back side with your church information.
  • An editable MS Publisher file of the images that you can modify however you choose.
  • A graphic image in either png or jpg format that you can use any way you want, in newsletters, on the web, however, you'd like.
Word Cloud image 3
These images for Fathers Day can be used for postcards, inserts into bulletins and invitations to celebrate Father's Day.

The images above illustrate only some of what is available for Father's day. All of the files on this page are FREE for ECC MEMBERS, some of the other files will be available for everyone. Members can download the ZIP FILE, at the end of this. If you are not a Members of Effective Church Communications, CLICK HERE for membership information --it is only $9.99 a month for many free resources and training available 24/7.

The images and postcards were created with Word Clouds, created with http://www.tagxedo.com.

These are illustrations only, the zip file containing all the files, PDFs, etc., is available at a link below the images.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD the ZIP file containing the PDFs, graphic images, and editable MS Publisher files.

 

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Filed Under: Father's Day, Men's Ministry Tagged With: Church Father's Day, Church men's ministry, Fathers day advetising, fathers day church marketing, Fathers Day postcards, Fathers Day publications

5 things that don’t work and 5 that do to start a Men’s Ministry at Father’s Day or anytime

22 May, 2012 By Yvon Prehn Leave a Comment

Like Father Like Son True story here: a growing church of 1800 (from 300 only three years earlier) decided to start a Men's Ministry with a Bible Study for men. Lots of prayer and encouragement from the pulpit, plus a splashy PowerPoint show, encouraged men to come. The night of the study the staff set up 200 chairs in anticipation. Three men showed up.

What went wrong? Following are five staff assumptions about their advertising approach to this even and why they didn't work.

#1 The staff assumed men would do what the Power Point® told them to do.

The colorful, eye-catching PowerPoint® slide show ended with a call to "sign up in the church lobby." What they wanted to be a call to action was in reality the kiss of death to any event sign-up.

After church is over, does any man to say to his wife (please forgive any implied sexism in this illustration), “Honey, would you please wait for me in the car while I find out where to go sign up for the men’s Bible study?”  It doesn’t happen. I know my own husband’s most pressing thought after church is–where are we going for lunch? Following the thought of food is football, basketball, or hockey, depending on the time of year. Most men I know, godly guys that they are, are similar in their after-church priorities. Trying to find a table in the church lobby to find out information about something that you may or may not be interested in simply is not a priority, even if by chance a man remembers he was told to do that.

Any time you require people to take a second step (call the church office for more information, sign up in the lobby, etc.) to find out essential details that they need to show up for any event, you will drastically cut down attendance.

#2 The staff assumed that men would remember the connecting details from the PowerPoint® announcement presented every Sunday.

Most men don’t. PowerPoint® is great for song lyrics, to set a specific mood for worship, or for graphics to reinforce a story or theme, but few men (women or teenagers) sit in worship, pencil in hand, ready to take notes off of a PowerPoint® presentation. A bulletin insert, ready to post on the refrigerator with all the details on it, would have been much more useful. Wives and girlfriends post it and remind the significant men in their lives about it. Yes, it might seem retro, old-fashioned, a bother to produce, but it works.

#3 The staff assumed that having the pastor encourage the men to come to the event meant something to the men and would make them want to come.

It usually doesn’t. Pastoral leadership doesn’t have the influence it once did. We live in an irreverent age, an age that doesn’t admire authority. A personal invitation can be powerful, but pleas from the pulpit to attend events that aren’t particularly appealing to uninvolved church members, men or women, are seldom heard, let alone acted upon. [Read more...]

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Filed Under: Misc. Advice and Articles Tagged With: Father's Day, Men's Ministry communications, what doesn't work

Giving emotional first aid and what to do when people need more than you can give

15 May, 2012 By grhilligoss@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Gayle Hilligoss Picture
Article by Gayle Hilligoss

Ed. note: Work in the church office is always challenging, but sometimes, what is needed in the church office goes way beyond your job description. When people come in with hurting hearts, Gayle Hilligoss has some wise and practical advice. At the end of the article is a description about and a link to the Stephen's Ministry, if you find your church needs more help in helping others.

“People wanting ‘counseling’ from the secretary became a problem when our pastor had a heart attack several years ago,” wrote a ministry assistant. “At first I was upset; I had no training in counseling. Then I realized people didn’t really want advice, but simply someone to talk to. The best thing I could do was listen. And, to keep the conversation confidential.”

While most people have occasional opportunities to offer comfort to others, the Christian professional may daily encounter people who are hurting. Secretaries need to be very cautious about overstepping their roles. We are not counselors and should never assume those responsibilities. But, if within the scope of your work you are faced a need, with a caring heart and a few basic techniques you can give constructive emotional first aid.

• Really listen. Listening is more than hearing a person out. An effective listener does not preach, scold, interrupt, analyze, judge, or show impatience. As you listen, acknowledge what you are hearing by nodding or saying “I understand” or the like. Give the person your full attention. Maintain eye contact.

• Express empathy. The hurting person is anxious for someone to understand her pain. “I know how you must feel” or similar phrases can be helpful—if you can truly relate to the situation. Sometimes sharing a problem allows the person to face her situation more realistically. Once faced, the hurt can begin to heal. Avoid becoming emotionally involved yourself. Your purpose is to minister, not to take on the problem as your own.

• Never minimize. The hurt may not seem like much to you, but to the person experiencing it the pain is real. Telling about your own or someone else’s bigger problem is never helpful. Avoid “It’s really not that important” or “Why let it get to you?” Ultimately the person must assess the situation for herself.

• Don’t awfulize. Just as you should not make light of a situation, avoid making the problem bigger than it really is. Don’t give opinions regarding others who are involved in the problem: “You’re right. Joe is a terrible husband. I don’t know how you’ve put up with ...”

• If I were you ...  Never let those words cross your lips. Don’t make suggestions or affirm the intentions of others: “Yes, it’s a good idea to tell Joe ...” It is not necessary, nor your responsibility, to come up with solutions.

• Ask constructive questions. The goal of emotional first aid is to help people formulate their own solutions to their problems. You can ask leading questions to point people toward answers: “What are your options?” or “Do you know about our support group?”

• Point others toward prayer. Assure your troubled friend that if she needs someone to talk to, you are there for her. Once the problem is shared, encourage her to turn it over to God. Give assurance that while you don’t know the answers, God does. Close your conversation by praying together. You have offered first aid; God will do the healing.

______________________________________

If more is needed, consider the Stephen's ministry:

From many years of seeing this ministry at work in many churches where I did seminars. My church has recently started a program--we are a small church and have had to cut back on staff because of big financial challenges, but with the Stephen's Ministry we don't have to cut back on caring for people.

The best way to explain them is to let their website explain them:

What Is Stephen Ministry?

The Stephen Series, also called "Stephen Ministry," provides congregations with the training, resources, and ongoing support to organize and equip a team of lay caregivers--called Stephen Ministers--in the congregation.

Stephen Ministers provide high-quality, confidential, Christ-centered care and support to people experiencing grief, divorce, cancer, job loss, loneliness, disability, relocation, and other life difficulties.

Since 1975, the Stephen Ministries organization, based in St. Louis, Missouri, has helped more than 11,000 congregations implement Stephen Ministry. These congregations represent more than 150 denominations and come from all 50 states, 10 Canadian provinces, and 23 other countries.

The Stephen Ministry Difference

With Stephen Ministry--

  • Pastors don't carry the burden of being the congregation's sole caregivers. They have a team of gifted, trained, committed lay caregivers ready to minister to hurting people inside and outside the congregation.
  • Laypeople have a chance to use and strengthen their leadership and caregiving gifts in meaningful ministry--serving others while experiencing tremendous spiritual growth.
  • People who are hurting no longer suffer alone. A caring Christian friend comes alongside them to provide emotional and spiritual care for as long as the need persists.
  • Congregations have a practical, powerful way to:
    • "Equip God's people for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ." (Ephesians 4:12)
    • "Love one another as I have loved you." (John 13:34)
    • "Bear one another's burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." (Galatians 6:2)
    • "Go make disciples." (Matthew 28:19)

For more information, go to: http://www.stephenministries.org/

 

 

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Filed Under: Columnist Gayle Hilligoss, Contributors Tagged With: church office, counseling in the church office, Listening Skills

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