Sudbury priest takes his ministry online
Fr. Anthony Man-Son-Hing, pastor of the Church of Christ the King in Sudbury, Ont. is taking his homilies worldwide, using the internet as the latest communication tool to reach the unchurched.
A priest in the diocese of Sault Ste. Marie is taking his homilies
worldwide, using the internet as the latest communication tool to reach the
unchurched.
Fr. Anthony Man-Son-Hing, pastor of the Church of Christ the King in Sudbury,
Ont., has begun podcasting his homilies and posting them to the parish web
site. A podcast is a recorded media file than can be accessed through a
personal computer and portable devices such as iPods.
Each Sunday, Man-Son-Hing records his homilies and posts them to his parish
home page, www.christtheking.diocesessm.org.
His podcast, called "This foreign land," has already attracted more than 400
subscribers, with five new people signing up every day.
"Young people and younger adults are not in our churches, and by putting our
presence on the web, we can reach them where they are at" said Man-Son-Hing,
who is one of the first Roman Catholic priests in Canada to podcast his
Sunday homilies.
This is one of the many unique ways that Man-Son-Hing uses the internet as a
faith formation tool.
This past fall, he placed online his Confirmation program, which included
catechesis sessions, forum discussions, Scripture passages and a question
board encouraging young people to engage in dialogue.
Podcasting and online sacramental preparations are part of DeoWeb, an
internet site - www.diocesessm.org - that the diocese of Sault Ste. Marie
launched almost two years ago, allowing each parish to have its own web
site.
"We had a desire to attract more young people - not to mention the number of
professional and retired individuals that are gaining internet competency"
said Laurie Gagnon, the Internet Communications co-ordinator for the
diocese.
"The geography of our diocese is large and we have now shrunk that distance
through internet communication," said Gagnon.
Visitors to DeoWeb can find diocesan news and online discussions, as well as
a diocesan newspaper and web sites for every parish within the diocese.
"We wanted this to be a resourceful tool for our people," said Bishop
Jean-Louis Plouffe of the Sault Ste. Marie diocese. "We wanted to initiate a
more personal dialogue with our people on faith - it's a wonderful tool to be
used."
DeoWeb is the brainchild of Gerry Kirk, general manager of Faith Online in
Sault Ste. Marie. He said that it's part business and part ministry.
"The internet has evolved and there are new ways to communicate that the
church hasn't picked up on," said Kirk. "We are building relationships
between people and parishes."
Faith Online is looking to expand its potential by building online
communities for other dioceses. While the web sites are designed to fit the
pace and need of each diocese, the diocese must make a commitment to its own
success.
Costs of the project are not cheap and there must be an administrative staff
to keep up the services. But the outcome may be worth the investment.
"This has the potential to bring God's people together in ways that we
haven't discovered yet," said Man-Son-Hing, who explained that people from as
far away as England and the Bahamas are tuning into his podcasts.
Man-Son-Hing said the next step is to bring people into church from behind
their computer desk. "That's the next phase - I'm still trying to hook them,
to spark their interest in our faith."
DeoWeb, news and information, podcasts and other multimedia tools are just
the beginning for the diocese of Sault Ste. Marie as it plans to explore
other opportunities to bring people into dialogue.
"We are open to all kinds of options - whatever is necessary to continue to
spread the word of God," said Man-Son-Hing.
I was just showing someone your wonderful work and noticed this little thing.
Regards,
Paul (p.d.)