Good News about the Religion Page Although many people in the church can direct the church's publicity program, a religion column is the province of the pastor. Thomas Minnery
July 1, 1980
Religion pages are the pits of American journalism. Nearly every editor knows it, only most aren't willing to be honest about it. The reason is that most newspaper readers seem to be a lot more interested in the things of God than do most newspaper editors, who by nature are a cynical lot. I know. I was one once. But this can be the best news a pastor could ever hope to hear, because a pastor is in a lot better position to know what people want and need to hear about the faith than is an editor. And what that means is simply this: as far as religious news goes, an editor needs the pastor and other church leaders more than he realizes. See, I told you this was good news. Now, how do you capitalize on it? First of all, a church interested in expanding its horizons through local newspaper publicity needs to realize that this is as much a ministry as anything the church does. Think of what you're really after. You're trying to get people to learn about your church so you can present them the gospel and win them to Christ. There is no other medium in the community so readily available to those who know how to use it than the local newspaper. If you're interested in more newspaper publicity, the person in charge needs to give it the dedication and prayer which any ministry demands. In a large or medium sized city the newspaper editor is apt to be buried in news releases. Many are legitimate news items, but if every release that deserved to be printed were printed, there would be no room for anything else. So who decides what gets in, and how are the decisions made? I think it was Benjamin Franklin who first said that we're better off not knowing how two things are made: sausages and laws. I would add a third category: news story decisions. ...
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