United Church of Christ buys blogads
by henrycopelandTuesday, March 8th, 2005
The United Church of Christ placed a nice block of blogads today. You can read about the reasoning behind the order here.
Though we work with a growing list of religious blogs, both Christian and Jewish, this is, as far as I know, the first time a church has bought blogads. (This is also the first time I’ve seen a blog post written about a major blogad buy by the buyer.)
The blogads are part of the church’s attempt to end-run the TV networks who have rejected the church’s ad. As the UCC ad buyer put it:
In the tradition of this nation’s earliest pamphleteers, bloggers are sharing news and information as a mark of a truly free society, not as something that can be controlled and manipulated by multi-national corporations.
As well as being on the cutting edge of the evolution of media, there’s a certain historical symmetry in the church’s blogad order. The United Church of Christ represents America’s Congregationalist churches, which are the theological descendents of the Puritans. The Puritans came to America to speak their own minds and escape England’s rigid and heirarchical religious orthodoxy. And there’s more than a hint of the emphasis on personal autonomy and bottom-up truth-seeking in the blogging community.
This ad had a personal impact on me. When I mentioned my experience to the UCC’s ad buyer, he asked me to post to the UCC’s blog. You can read that post here.



April 10th, 2005 at Apr 10, 05 | 4:14 am
Hi, Henry — How fitting that you provided the audience for the UCC ads when the networks wouldn’t. Did you see the nice write-up in the current edition of United Church News? (http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/apr05/blog.htm).
Glad to hear you’re happy at your Chapel Hill parish.
I am more and more grateful for the UCC’s focus on inclusion and justice. See Jim Wallis’s *God’s Politics* for a right perspective on the role of faith in politics.
At South, we’re sad to be saying goodbye to Fran in late May. But we’re looking forward to welcoming Rev. Carolyn Keene and her family in the fall. She sounds wonderful.
All the best to you and your family.
– Lee Barstow