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Jungles or Japan If It's News, It's 'Now'
By Don Meyer
CHICAGO, IL (December 2, 2004) - He's hiding in the jungle in fear of his
life. With his laptop computer and a satellite telephone at his side, he
dashes off an email. He thanks people in the United States and elsewhere
for their prayers that he believes are responsible for the safety of
villagers who fled their homes as four bombs struck Gemena in the
Democratic Republic of Congo.
Within the hour, the report is verified and a news story is published in
this online news report of the Evangelical Covenant Church so that
Covenanters know of the urgent need of prayer on behalf of the people of
Congo.
This is a true account from the online Covenant news report of January
1999. There was great unrest in Congo at that time as rebel forces
looted and destroyed everything in their path. The Covenant church at
large needed to know what was happening and needed to respond quickly.
The marvel of modern communications made that possible.
I have often stated my belief that the Internet is perhaps the most
powerful innovation since the Gutenberg press. It has revolutionized the
way in which we communicate and interact with one another. I was
reminded of that fact in writing the stories over the past two weeks of
the visit by an 11-member Covenant delegation to Congo in commemoration
of the death of medical missionary Dr. Paul Carlson in November 1964.
Within a very brief span of time, Covenanters worldwide were reading
accounts of the delegation's daily travels and viewing photographs of
the many events, thanks to the marvel of modern Internet/satellite
technology.
It was not always so. In the days when Paul Carlson and his family
served the medical station at Wasolo, it was not uncommon for mail
bearing the news of the day to require anywhere from three to six weeks
to reach individuals working in the dense jungles of Congo. The
challenges of communication were more than an inconvenience, as
reflected in the story of one Covenant missionary, Eileen Thorpe, who
with her husband Dr. Roger Thorpe served as Covenant missionaries at
Karawa in 1984 Roger as a medical missionary and Eileen as a music
teacher at the Ubangi Academy (UBAC).
"It was in May (1984) that I received a cable urging me to please come
home immediately," Eileen recalls. "My mother (Vivian Adell) was very
ill and was on life support. The family was telling me that we had to
make important decisions. That very same morning I got a flight to
Bangui, and upon arrival at Bangui, I immediately went to a telephone
and called home. I was told that the funeral had already taken place the
day before."
Such were the consequences of communications that took so long to
accomplish. It is difficult to appreciate the frustration of those times
in an age of instant messaging, where people can chat via Internet - and
satellite signals can reach even the most remote parts of the world in
real time.
Covenant Communications has come a long way since the first online news
reports were posted in April 1998. Not only do Covenanters read about
important events quickly, but at times they can join events like the
Annual Meeting worship services through the wonder of live broadcasting
via Internet. How does all this happen?
The accompanying (top) photo is a wonderful illustration of how various
Covenant entities partner to bring the news of the day online to
Covenant homes while it is still news. While the delegation was visiting
various ministries of the Congo Covenant Church (CEUM), Pete Ekstrand
and Keith Gustafson were busy taking photographs and jotting notes to
email to me in Chicago, where I wrote the stories and assembled the
photo pages and captions. Pete is Africa regional coordinator and Keith
is Congo country coordinator for the Department of World Mission and
serve as correspondents for our Covenant News Service.
Keith is seated in a lawn chair in one of the Congo villages, with
laptop computer and satellite telephone, transmitting photos and notes
to Chicago. I have a question or two and fire them back via email, with
the needed information returned just as quickly. They are in the middle
of the dense jungle, but it doesn't matter. We're communicating in real
time.
That is the same way in which much of our news report is generated. At
Annual Meetings, different Communications staff members are reporting on
meeting activities, taking photographs and writing and editing stories,
all connected with one another via Internet. Some stories are posted and
being read by Covenanters worldwide minutes after the gavel has recessed
a business session. Computers, satellites. Instant. (In the lower photo,
I am interviewing one of our Covenant development specialists while
traveling in the back of a vehicle on a dirt road in Laos. Stories can
be posted from wherever an Internet signal can be acquired.)
I remember participating in the 50th anniversary celebration of the
Japan Covenant Church in Tokyo with Donn Engebretson, executive vice
president, who preached during the worship service. I had prearranged
use of a small upstairs office in that church and had pretested the
telephone service to make certain I could obtain an Internet connection.
During the service, I wrote much of the news story and took a few
digital photographs. Immediately following the benediction, I retreated
to the small office where I processed the photos, finished the story and
posted the information to the Covenant website. Before Donn had finished
shaking hands in the reception line downstairs, Covenanters worldwide
had access to the story and photos from that service that was just
minutes old.
What does all of this prove? It's not technology for technology's sake.
It sends a message to the church at large that it is a new day we are
powerfully connected in ways never before possible. Day in and day out
pastors and lay people around the Covenant send information and photos
to our Covenant newsdesk so that we can write stories and share what God
is doing through the ministries of our churches, conferences,
institutions, departments and offices in every area. We're not only
informed, but our ministries are connected, providing opportunity for
people to share the "how to" of ministry with a wider audience.
The online Covenant news report is interested in all kinds of news from
every corner of the Covenant. Contributors need not be polished writers
we will do that work. What we need is information, to know an event is
taking place or a ministry is happening. Together we can develop stories
and photographs that share God's work with everyone else.
To contribute to the online report, email information to
newsdesk@covchurch.org, attaching photos in JPEG format if possible. Or,
the old-fashioned "snail mail" system works, too, by sending material to
Covenant Communications, Evangelical Covenant Church, 5101 N. Francisco
Avenue, Chicago, IL, 60625. Make certain to include some contact
information in the event we have questions.
To keep current with Covenant happenings in a busy world, we created a
free headline news service called Covenant Newswire that delivers one
email daily to a given email address that contains the headlines and a
few lines of copy for each story published to the online Covenant news
report during the previous 24-hour period. The service is free. To
subscribe, go to the Covenant home page at www.covchurch.org and select
the Newswire link from the "News Services" box at the upper right of the
page.
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