Pod casting allows people to take God everywhere
Religion News Service
KATHLEEN MURPHY
Issue date: 3/10/05 Section: TECHNOLOGY
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Using iPods or any portable MP3 player, podcasting lets people download audio programs that can be listened to whenever they like. It's a form of audio syndication that musicians, businessmen, tech talk show hosts and political commentators like Al Franken have already adopted.
There's lots more God on iPod than jazz, theater or movie reviews. Pod preachers, including Christians, Buddhists and Pagans, are among the most prolific users of the new technology. Just as sermons were among the first type of broadcasts when radio caught on in America in the 1920s, podcasting is creating a new form of wireless parson.
To get the audio feeds, listeners connect an MP3 player to a computer, go online and sign up for podcasting feeds. Audio content is then pushed from the original source and makes its way through an aggregator to a subscriber who can listen to it anytime -- in the same way VCRs time-shifted TV and services like TiVo have provided television programs on demand.
"Based on the number of religious-themed programs being distributed, though, it looks like Godcasting may be the podcast's first killer app," said Podcasting News, a Web site that features a directory of podcasts.
Kevin Seger, minister of youth and education at Pitts Baptist Church in Concord, N.C., said, "You don't normally see the churches on the cutting edge of technology. If we can utilize tools and technology to get the gospel out, the better we are. It's portable. It's compact. People can listen in the car or when they're working out. It fits like a beeper on the side of your belt."
Religious podcasters said they like the medium because it's an inexpensive way to reach the masses. Nick Ciske, media coordinator for Minneapolis Vineyard Church, said, "It takes a lot of money to run a TV show, it takes millions of dollars, and it seems a lot of the focus is on money. Podcasting is basically free. There is never a mention of asking for money. There's no need."
Podcasting also can connect a dispersed flock -- snowbirds, in particular. Part-time members of the Mount Pleasant Christian Church in Greenwood, Ind., listen to podcasts of sermons as they spend the winter in Florida, said Bill Todd, network administrator for the 2,400-member church just south of Indianapolis.

