Last month I mentioned all of the changes that keep happening as we all try to use the Internet for evangelization. These are the “wonderful things” that Vatican II’s Inter Mirifica document on social communications, back in the 1960’s, could scarcely have envisioned.
I recently interviewed the technical director of the Vatican Web sites, Judith Zoebelein, F.S.E., for American Catholic Radio (www.FranciscanRadio.org). She concurred that the Church has kept responding to new ways to evangelize—the Vatican Web site (www.Vatican.va) enjoys enormous traffic, especially when there is a crisis in the world, she said. People want to be comforted, to know that the Church is there, watching and being with people. I share Sister Judith’s dream for the future of the Church on the Web: finding ways to help parishes everywhere use the Web to extend their reach, especially to those who have come of age during this Internet revolution.
That said, we’re starting our Web Catholic Blog right now, with this issue of Web Catholic (You’re here!). On it you’ll find a repeat of each column (we’ll still send them out by e-mail). You’ll also find the “Site of the Month” and “Worth-a-Click,” conducted by Assistant Webmaster Amanda Barton, compiled together from month to month, starting with this month, to help spur your ideas. (Our Webmaster, Dave Rudemiller, is hard at work behind the scenes!) But what’s really new is that we’ll provide a place FOR YOU, THE WEBMASTERS OF CATHOLIC SITES, to share ideas. It’s an experiment—let’s jump in together and see how it goes. Blogs take many shapes and forms—this one, we hope, will become a running list of comments and ideas from webmasters everywhere. Take a look and post an entry!
Also, many of you have seen your sites recognized as “Web picks” over the years—sites to show off great ideas with. We’d like to announce a new competition, the “Web Catholic Parish Site of the Year.” We’ll be announcing categories, a timeline and how to enter this new Web Catholic contest in next month’s issue. Meanwhile, feel free to post your ideas (and sites) at the Web Catholic Blog!







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