The Impact Of TV On Church Ministry
By: Gary L. McIntosh, D.Min.,
Ph.D.
The first flickering images hit the airwaves on April 30,
1939. President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave a short speech declaring open
the New York World’s Fair. It was the first public broadcast of an
electronic medium called television.
The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) aired Roosevelt’s
speech. Fewer than 100 sets of the new “picture radio,” had been sold. The
screens ranged from five to 12 inches.
The Early Years
The first daily broadcast was from Radio City in Manhattan.
The first portable back and white TV was introduced in 1956. The first
battery-powered set in 1960. NBC became the first network to televise all
programs in color in 1966. Here are few other interesting “firsts.”
• First televised sporting event – a college baseball game
between Columbia and Princeton on May 17, 1939.
• First televised major league baseball game – the
Cincinnati Reds and Brooklyn Dodgers on August 26, 1939.
• First televised newscast – December 7, 1941 as the
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) reported the events of Pearl Harbor.
TV’s Boom
Over 700 million people, at the time the largest TV audience
ever, watched the first men walk on the moon July 20, 1969.
By the early 1980s, 98% of U.S. households were equipped
with at least one TV set, a majority with two or three. In 1989 American
households averaged 1.9 sets.
In 1989, the average American family was spending seven
hours and five minutes per day watching TV. The average individual watched
TV for 30.5 hours per week.
Color TV was found in about half of American homes in 1970.
Today over 90% have color TV. Over half of all U.S. households were
“wired” for cable TV by the end of last century, giving access to about
120 million viewers.
The Future
The 2000s has brought high-definition television (HDTV).
These sets offer twice the sharpness of current sets, richer color and
compact-disk (CD) sound quality. HDTV sets represented $1.5 billion in
yearly sales in the early 2000s.
Fiber-optic cables are being attached to phone lines
resulting in a universal system whereby subscribers may run errands and
choose a myriad of programs. It potentially could make network and cable
TV obsolete.
Almost science fiction, some predict we will see (1) Imaging
– a system whereby viewers could see themselves in clothes without leaving
their seats. (2) Holograms – a system whereby small, three-dimensional
figures might act out a scene on the living room floor.
TV’s Impact on Ministry
In the 70+ years since its formal debut, television has
emerged as a primary entertainment medium, chronicler of history,
wellspring of popular culture, major force for political and social
change, coercive commercial vehicle and powerful spreader of information.
Here is a checklist of ways television has influenced people
and ideas on responding in a positive manner.
√ Immediate Satisfaction: Products are sold, complex issues are solved and
victory is won within 30 minutes on TV. People tend to expect that life
will give the same immediate results. The ideas of delayed gratification
and a process of spiritual growth are not well accepted. People want
patience. And . . . they want it now!
A Positive Approach: Preach character sketches of biblical people. Point
out the process each took to mature in their faith. Share examples of
people who waited for prayers to be answered, personal problems to be
solved and personal growth to occur.
√ Increasing Boredom: TV gives the impression that life moves at a faster
pace, which has produced boredom and lack of determination when it comes
to staying with tasks and learning mundane lessons. People subconsciously
compare the real world with the fast paced action-oriented pulse beat of a
TV series.
A Positive Approach: Speed up worship services. Schedule classes, small
groups and Bible studies in shorter time blocks. Preach shorter sermon
series. A six-week series is better than a 13-week series.
√ Consumer Mentality: Spending on TV advertising soared from $171 million in
1950 to more than $1.6 billion in 1960. It increased to $3.6 billion in
1970, $11.4 billion in 1980 and $32 billion in 1989. Americans have been
conditioned to buy what they can and charge what they can’t.
A Positive Approach: Stress biblical stewardship of time, talent and
treasure. Encourage worshippers to give to eternal values. Provide
practical workshops on managing money. Preach a minimum of six stewardship
messages a year.
√ Common Knowledge: I Love Lucy, The Honeymooners, The Ed Sullivan
Show, Gunsmoke, American Bandstand, The Mickey Mouse Club, Father Knows
Best and Leave It to Beaver all provided for a common base of symbols,
fads and experiences unknown in time past.
A Positive Approach: Illustrate a sermon from TV shows rather than
illustration books. Use stories from the Cosby Show, Roseanne and Life
Goes On rather than from devotional books.
√ Short Attention Span: TV commercials have created short attention spans.
Chase scenes and rapidly changing action shots have created a climate
where people tend to concentrate for only about 30 seconds.
A Positive Approach: Move away from the pulpit. Preach without notes. Vary
your volume and pitch. Use visuals. Organize your worship service into
blocks of 7 minutes each changing to something entirely different each
block.
√ Personal Touch: Relational aspects of communication are up and
transfer of content is down. Letter writing is diminishing with the phone
call taking its place. The motto “Reach Out and Touch Someone” reinforces
typifies this fundamental change in the area of communication.
A Positive Approach: Deliver your sermon from the floor, close to the
people, rather than from the platform, removed from the people.
Communicate content in one-to-one fashion through stories that touch the
lives of people.
√ Multiple Story Lines: TV often weaves two or three story lines in a
30-minute episode. Sermons usually follow a sequential 1-2-3 format. We no
longer live in a sequential world. People carry on many activities at one
time.
A Positive Approach: Weave at least two story lines in your teaching.
Use personal stories weaved together with “What would Jesus Say” is the
answer.
√ In-n-Out Mentality: TV has taught us that we can step into an episode and
it will stand-alone. Even the SOAPS with their continuing story lines from
week-to-week, have weekly stories that can stand alone.
A Positive Approach: People hate “To Be Continued” endings. Preach a series
but keep it short (6 weeks). Make sure each sermon can stand-alone.
√ Concern for Causes: A new word “dramady” has been coined to name a new
form of comedy and drama which addresses topics like AIDS, drugs and sex.
TV has started facing tough issues and trying to provide answers. For
example, Down’s Syndrome – Life Goes On.
A Positive Approach: Face current issues tastefully. Don’t make a habit of
dealing with heavy issues each week but don’t be afraid of facing them
either.
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