Competing with Netflix: The Church’s Struggle for Attention

The Rev. Wesley Arning

For the millions of Americans who aren’t saving lives in hospitals or stocking the shelves of the local grocery store right now, this is our reality. Saving lives for us means staying away from people, and at first, we thought that sounded great, but it’s now getting a little old.

Many are journeying through this quarantine haze like zombies who are just waiting for their next meal. And we fill the time between meals with Netflix, Hulu, Disney Plus, YouTube, and Facebook videos. The amount of content out there to be consumed is unfathomable.

We are all binging on shows like never before, just to pass the time.

Staying safe at home has created both opportunities and challenges for churches. Ministry has been shifted completely online. Worship services, prayer meetings, Bible studies, and everything else have moved to platforms like Zoom, Facebook, and YouTube. Some churches have fared better than others. Larger churches may have even been using these online platforms for years, and their members are comfortable with them.

For me, as a priest of a small parish, I expected there to be some good and some bad things to come with moving our ministries online. I thought the challenge would come from our older members. I worried that many of them wouldn’t know how or might be willing to learn to use something like Zoom. The only way we’d stay in contact would be through phone calls. And that has happened. Though they’ve missed our online services, our members have been great about calling one another.

The real opportunity I thought would come from engaging our members who live far from the church. I would say that most of our members drive 20 minutes or more to come to our parish. We haven’t had great attendance at formation activities during the week over the past few years, and the reason given by our folks is usually the long distance. People just don’t want to drive that far on a weeknight.

Now with the pandemic, we’ve moved our Bible study and one other short formation offerings to Zoom during the week. Distance is no longer the issue. Extra time is no longer an issue. But we are still struggling to get five people to attend these events.

I will be the first to admit there are a lot of factors--time of day, family commitments, and general interest in the topic among them--but I don’t think I’m the only one struggling with these issues. Every church, no matter the size, is fighting for the attention of its members. If the option is to sit on the couch and watch another episode of Tiger King or to get on Zoom for an hour-long Bible study, odds are on Tiger King nine times out of ten.

I’m not saying this because our church members are inherently lazy or that they don’t care about their faith; no, that’s not the issue.

The trouble is that we are creatures of habit.

While stuck at home, we have created habits--both good and bad. Personally, I’m running now more than I have in over a year, but I’m also eating terribly because I’m sitting around the house all day. This time at home is shaping our habits. It may be helpful to think about the good and bad habits that have sprung up over the past few weeks.

As for the church, we are competing for our members' attention. We are having to make the case for why they should tune in to what we have to say over and against everything else they could be watching. For the time being there is no sacred space. There is no walking into a church and knowing you’re dedicating the next hour to God, and nothing will distract you from that. We are in our homes, where phones ring, dogs bark, kids yell, and music is playing in the background.

And yet amid all of this, the church has a message to share. Though some of our members think they’re on vacation until the building is reopened, we must continue to tell the Good News of Jesus to anyone who will hear, and I mean ANYONE.

Though we may lose some of our longtime members until the church doors are unlocked again, we may also gain members from all of this. I think about the folks who would otherwise never step into our church but who have stumbled across our Sunday morning service on Facebook. Though we are fighting for the attention of our flock, we may gain the attention of a curious bystander. If that's the case, then maybe all this hassle with technology will be worth it. 

 

The Rev. Wesley Arning is a native Tennessean who regularly enjoys what he calls “boring books” and taking long walks up mountains. Fr. Arning continues to be amazed by what God is teaching him as he helps lead the Church of St. James the Less. “Along with my wife Megan, we continue to discover what life and marriage is all about,” he says. “We've found that life is just better with a golden retriever.” 

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