Thanks to everyone who participated in this year's Internet Evangelism Day (IED)! By way of report, visits to the IED website (www.internetevangelismday.com) have continued at a similar level to that reported several weeks ago - i.e. 600-900 unique visitors a day, with 4000-6000 pages viewed each day. In the few days surrounding IE Day, visitors were over 1000 a day.
In the week before IE Day, several online and radio news outlets covered it. Thanks to Craig von Buseck for several pages within CBN covering web evangelism as a topic, including: http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/146258.aspx.
We are also grateful to Christianity Today for running the IED advertisement in a number of their enewsletters in March April; to Gospelcom for a front-page feature all through May; to Campus Crusade for Christ for exposure in a variety of ways; to TriMedia for a feature in their high circulation news promo; to ATS Tracts for site promotion; to Naomi with Lausanne and IEC enewsletters; Moody Broadcasting and Northwestern College Radio and many others who helped promoted IED.
To see just how many people blogged about IED, visit http://www.technorati.com/ and search for "internet evangelism day" within quote marks. You'll find well over 100 blogs which covered this year's IED and the IED church site self-assessment tool. If you search instead for our root URL ied.gospelcom.net you will find even more references - some 545!
A number of groups have taken up the partnership idea suggested by Dave Hackett and placed a button graphic on their websites, which creates a link back to them permanently for their visitors. Around 50 sites have asked to do this, the majority being smaller sites, but a few are bigger - e.g. Zondervan, and the UK-based Deo Gloria Trust and Contact for Christ ministries. These and other links resulted in about 500 impressions a day of the button graphic.
Other sites continue to use the diagonal graphic option and that is producing 2000+ impressions a day.
I have received a very few reports of people doing specific meetings on 29 April itself. I can only hope that far more will have done something than ever tell us! My guess is that a number of churches, even if they did not choose to put on a specific program during a service, will nevertheless have run a short item in their newsletters on IED, and thereby encouraged members to consider web evangelism and look at the site that way instead. (I know this is what my home church in south-west UK did this time.)
Here are several of those that did report:
"We used the clip of Kevin and Cathy during worship with a brief introduction about IEDay. It was very powerful on many levels. I don't know if it had as much impact on the congregation's feelings about IE as on evangelism in general. I heard reports of many teary eyes, and the congregation was absolutely silent during the film (not normal for us). The person speaking next (to introduce the offering) commented on the difficulty of following on from that clip." From a church in Pennsylvania, USA.
"I just want to express publicly my thanks to you for all you've done to publicize IED and make resources available for people to use for their IED events. Seems like news of IED is starting to break through into 'mainstream' Christian circles." Paul Steinbeck of Ourchurch.com.
Paul also blogged about IE Day here: http://blog.ourchurch.com/2007/04/19/what-are-you-doing-for-internet-evangelism-day/
"I put IE Day posters up in several locations of the church, in the announcements for the preceding couple of weeks and talked about it on our church website at http://cadurham.org/beta/?p=336 as well as on my MyChurch site at http://www.mychurch.org/blog/13373/Internet-Evangelism-Day-is-April-29th" Tom Minton, Deacon - Technical & Media Ministries, Christian Assembly Church, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
"As God arranged it, I was in Wallingford, England on April 29th. As part of an evening praise and worship service at Wallingford Baptist, I was asked to pray and speak about the importance of IED. It was a blessing to be sure, and one that only God could have ordained. My time followed a sharing time by missionaries who spoke of translating God's Word into one of the Togo dialects. God led me to share some statistics on how the Internet is being used by people seeking faith-based experiences and a short overview on PhotoMission was given." Connie Wragge, PhotoMission.
Please continue to do all you can to promote Internet Evangelism and Internet Evangelism Day.
Next year's Internet Evangelism Day is 27 April 2008.