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Faiths Ad Campaigns Chase After The Great 'I Am'

I Am A Mac Ad

First Posted: 01/26/2011 12:19 am Updated: 05/25/2011 7:25 pm

By Peggy Fletcher Stack
Salt Lake Tribune

(RNS) To many viewers, the "I'm a Mormon" ad blitz from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seemed hip, refreshing and original.

The campaign, launched last year in nine U.S. cities, generated a lot of national buzz. Its short videos featured regular folks talking about their lives as doctors, skateboarders, tax attorneys,
environmentalists, surfers or former felons before announcing that they are Mormons.

Turns out, lots of other faiths take a similar tack.

Scientologists, with longtime connections in Hollywood, have produced personal-story videos for a marketing effort known as "Meet a Scientologist." The Episcopal Church has an "I am Episcopalian" series. A Muslim agency links modern believers with their founder in an "Inspired by Muhammad" push.

Catholics reach out to lapsed members in their "Catholics Come Home" drive. Methodists seek the younger crowd by redefining what church is.

The styles and motivations for all these campaigns vary -- some clearly are proselytizing; others are correcting mistaken impressions. But all of them follow the "I Am" national trend in advertising.

As Americans became less religious, they began to look to consumer goods for their identities, explained Mara Einstein, a professor of media studies at Queens College in New York. They saw themselves as the person who used a "PC" or a "Mac," drove a Volkswagen or a BMW or sipped a Starbucks latte.

That personal approach eventually circled back to spirituality. Religious groups began trying to tell potential members that theirs was a faith for someone who looked and acted like themselves, Einstein said.

The message of these ads is not just that we -- Mormons, Methodists, Muslims -- are normal, said Einstein, who wrote Brands of Faith: Marketing Religion in a Commercial Age. It's that "we are you."

Scientologists

The Church of Scientology International launched its "Meet a Scientologist" series in the early 1990s, putting personal descriptions on T-shirts, brochures and magazines.

The movement started by devotees of science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard claims more than 8 million members but has faced stiff criticism in several countries, in the media and by some former followers.

In 2008, the church posted video profiles on its own YouTube channel. Today, the site features more than 200 Scientologist testimonials, including ones from educators, teens, skydivers, a golf instructor, a hip-hop dancer and engineers, Scientology spokesman Tommy
Davis said. They tell their stories, what attracted them to the faith and how it has helped them.

The church is not motivated by bad press or critics, Davis said. "To the degree that there's any sort of misunderstanding of Scientology, it comes from ignorance and lack of firsthand experience."

Since the videos began airing in 14 U.S. markets, the number of people wanting more information about the church has skyrocketed.

"Frankly, (our) interest is in proselytizing," Davis says. "We want people to see what Scientology does and the tools for people to use to improve their lives."

Episcopalians

The Episcopal Church, meanwhile, has been around for centuries and believes it has much to offer religious seekers. But, like many mainline Protestant churches, its numbers are shrinking. Plus, it has no marketing budget.

"We are seen as a normal, old denomination and kind of forgotten," said Anne Rudig, the church's director of communications. "I wanted a way to show that even though we have an ancient liturgy, our church is pretty contemporary. We are relevant."

She reasoned that the best way to spread that message would be to hear from longtime members such as Gail Bennett, who likes the church's emphasis on justice and peace, or new converts such as Diane Caruso, who finds beauty in the faith's music and liturgy.

"It's a place where I really could talk to God," Caruso says in a video.

The campaign started in 2000 with dozens of testimonials. So many Episcopalians logged on to the site it nearly crashed. The effort took off from there, with many members filming themselves and sending their videos to the New York headquarters.

"I still get e-mails from people who say, 'I had no idea the Episcopal Church was like this,"' she said. "It's not all old white men."

Now, Rudig says, if she only had a marketing budget as big as the Methodists.

United Methodists

The United Methodist Church took a different branding path -- describing what it does, not who is in it.

The $20 million marketing push began in May 2009 and targeted 18- to 34-year-olds, many of whom have rejected organized religion altogether. Creators dubbed the campaign "10,000 doors" to suggest the myriad ways to become engaged with the church.

"Whether it's helping to provide an anti-malaria bed net for a child in Africa, volunteering to help in the community, or joining a church's recreation league, we want you to feel welcome," the Rev. Larry Hollon, chief executive of United Methodist Communications, says in a news
release. "There is a doorway through which you can approach The United Methodist Church."

The effort, part of a grander scheme known as "Rethink Church," uses "nonchurch language" and "positive land mines" to attract young people by inviting them to look at the faith with fresh eyes, Einstein writes in a forthcoming essay, "The Evolution of Religious Branding." "These 'land mines' are issues like Darfur, theology of ecology, homelessness and so on."

Some of the messages, sprawled across billboards, asked questions such as: "What if church were a literacy program for homeless children? What if church considered ecology part of theology? What if church could bring sides together? Would you come?"

Muslims

Muslims in the United States and Britain clearly have faced perception problems and misunderstandings -- if not outright hostility -- of their faith. Hoping to counter such negativity, a group known as the Exploring Islam Foundation created an ad campaign for subway walls and taxis in central London, as well as video interviews on its website,
inspiredbymuhammad.com.

The spots contain messages such as: "I believe in social justice. So did Muhammad; I believe in women's rights. So did Muhammad; I believe in protecting the environment. So did Muhammad."

British values are "synonymous with Islamic values," Remona Aly, the foundation's campaigns director, said in a release, "those of being committed to social justice, caring for the environment, of mutual respect and tolerance, and contributing positively to your society."

In other words, they say, Muslims are us.

Mormons

The Mormon effort sprouted from research, too, showing that many Americans either know nothing about the faith or harbor stereotypical, even false impressions.

Several recent studies, including one by the authors of American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us, rank Mormons among the least liked U.S. faiths.

To modify that impression, producers of the "I'm a Mormon" series sought members who were atypical, articulate and photogenic.

"Mormons are doing an impressive job using new media to reach people and connect with individuals in a way that ... works for them," Catholic blogger Matthew Warner writes at National Catholic Register.

The Latter-day Saints were "smart in their approach," he writes, building on two basic facts: lots of people think Mormons are weird, and once people get to know a Mormon personally, that impression changes.

Warner believes the campaign will be effective "for actually improving the public perception of Mormons for many people," he said in an e-mail.

Peggy Fletcher Stack writes for The Salt Lake Tribune.

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By Peggy Fletcher Stack Salt Lake Tribune (RNS) To many viewers, the "I'm a Mormon" ad blitz from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seemed hip, refreshing and original. The campaign...
By Peggy Fletcher Stack Salt Lake Tribune (RNS) To many viewers, the "I'm a Mormon" ad blitz from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seemed hip, refreshing and original. The campaign...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZENNEPHI
08:44 PM on 02/02/2011
I sojourned the better part of 6 months {circa' 1984}, in Antelope Oregon-USA attending to the
Spiritual "Overseerer" of [Bhagwan OSHO Rajneesh]. I Worshipped as a Christian farm hand
on "Land Husbundary" on the F.A.R.M.'s vast expance. I and 2000+ "fellowers-travelers" were
invited guests. Media protocal termed it as Rajneeshpuram ore "Share A Home".
The project "had its run" and disbanded after the election of President Reagon.
OSHO, a Buddhist Contemplative was from "ancient stock". Of ancient [Jane] lineage that is
the foremost Judeo-Tribal/Aryian culturalities in Centralist India. This linguist literally spoke
out of "both sides of his mouth", in this Former-Mormons' theologists' conjecture.
The Commune was a Compound. He was, to those who invibed, "A Sex-guru". To the vast
majority of the "Chosen-Few"...A "Sects" tutorial. A Spiritual Coach.
"Wearing a Robe of Red, didn't Mean that we were Always in Bed."
Bhagwans' ontrage' Jet made refueling in Salt Lake City, fleeing "Puram OR.", & the onslaught of "fundamentalists" {circa 1986}. Before traversing on to the Charolette N. Carolinas', OSHO
Spoke briefly and concisley of the World Wide Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints: ...:"The membership pays an "Old Testement" tithe/offering/good-will, that the David-
ical seed of Christ springs from Judeo/Ariyan India, and that the [Mormon] Church is the
Wisest Branch of Christian-dom. {DOM=Dominion of Melchezedek}
..."Choose the Right, When a Choice is Placed Before You..."
04:54 PM on 02/01/2011
@
11:49 PM on 01/28/2011
And the former Mormons are showing what decent people they are with their I am an Ex-Mormon ads. http://www.iamanexmormon.com/ There is no monopoly on good people within any faith or group of individuals. Churches that need ads have a big image problem and the Mormon Church certainly does.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
05:06 AM on 01/29/2011
WHY? When this guy is their #2 man, why would many of us wonder who molested him in 1950, the year in which his brain froze?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zZ5YYfuSZQ

WHY? When they are still doing this
http://nomexposed.org/test-home-page/

WHY WOULD WE NOT THINK THAT THEY BELIEVE GOD TOLD THEM TO CONTROL THE REST OF US?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Douglas Campbell
08:14 PM on 01/28/2011
I always thought that Episcopalian was the Church of England or Anglicanism. I always noticed that they have beautiful gardens, lawns and well kept architecture. Much more than other denominations.
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Indigo1941
Time traveler.
03:08 PM on 01/28/2011
Advertising. Selling. Simony. I don't see a whole lot of difference there.
Hey, kid! Wanna buy an indulgence (or a religion or a spiritual value)?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Funkstronaut
The Prince of Wassoon
10:28 PM on 01/27/2011
Yes, we are saturated with religious proselytizing... But if an atheist hangs a sign on the side of a bus, out come the protest songs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PMJ79
06:25 PM on 02/11/2011
Atheism can proselytize , as well. And it does. With all the zeal of its religious opponents.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Saidas
07:25 PM on 01/27/2011
How about we just leave it at I AM.
04:47 PM on 01/27/2011
The human race that feels a need to worship a higher being is quickly learning that they need a relationship with their god/s and not with their religious organization. And this places the religious organization (all of them) in a bad situation ... the well is drying up and the money is running low. But try all they want, the cat is out of the bag and it won't go back inside it. More and more, the human race is abandoning their religious organizations ... they don't need them anymore. So they can advertise all they want, but people just won't buy something that is seen as worthless, useless, or harmful. And religious organizations are all three of those things ... and more.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Saidas
07:23 PM on 01/27/2011
I understand your sentiment and agree with you on that, however, you are factually incorrect. All religions are growing with the possible exception of Christianity. Britain has become a secular population and many are leaving the Catholic church for understandable reasons, but I think those numbers are made up with the increase in Evangelicals unfortunately.

In fact just today, an announcement was made that Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world now and soon 25% of the world's population will be Muslim. Another article on HP just a few days ago was about the growth of religion in China.
10:41 AM on 01/28/2011
I stand corrected. But I say watch and wait. If you look at Christians who leave on religion for another, you will find the majority are leaving strict religions for more inclusive and less-controlling ones ... a sign the people are taking back their lives and spirituality (with baby steps perhaps). China is a vacuum ... the people are rushing towards anything that their communist government denied them ... they will tire of their new "toys" eventually. And already there are disagreements occurring between the various Catholic groups there. The projected future growth for people of the Muslim world is based on past trends. But if you look at what is happening in India (Hindus), you will see that population growth is declining rapidly as people climb the economic ladder. This will happen with the Muslim countries as well. And Muslim youth, as they have more and more access to the world via the internet and such, will become rebellious against their societies and religion ... a trend that happens with youth all over the world. So I'm going to watch and wait ... I hold out great hope for humans and their ability to mature and grow.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
04:23 PM on 01/27/2011
"I'm a mormon"
"I look the other way when my church spends tens of millions to obliterate the rights of some citizens, and pretends God's will is the reason"
http://nomexposed.org/test-home-page/
"I am doing well, I'm prosperous, I don't want to rock this comfy boat"
"I pretend that I am not as bad as Boyd K Packer, because my demeanor is more pleasant, but I am the one who allows his prejudice to hurt millions of mormons and non-mormons"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zZ5YYfuSZQ

"I'm a mormon"
"I'm not a German in 1935, don't tell me that"
"Have a nice day, God loves you, but YOU don't get to express the love God put in your heart if WE dont approve of it"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allen Reed Jensen
10:04 AM on 01/28/2011
Comparing Mormons and Nazis? How civil of you. Obama would be proud
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Douglas Campbell
08:17 PM on 01/28/2011
Care to try again, this time address the point, not the one detail you cherry picked to create a red herring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
07:59 PM on 01/29/2011
OBFUSCATION seems to be a mormon way of arguing

It was clear that I referred to the Germans who allowed the horrible events, because their economy was better with Adolf H, and they needed to blame other groups.

If you would like to compare Boyd K Packer with the heartless dicatator -- that would be pretty easy -- but you do not get rid of him
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ted Bouklos
U can have ur own opinions but not ur own facts
01:57 PM on 01/27/2011
well at least they're treating religion for what it really is... a product that they're trying to sell you. next we'll be seeing ads like "Catholicism: Now with 30% less guilt!"
04:36 PM on 01/27/2011
... or "Catholicism: Now only 20% of the boys are molested ... and then only 35% of the time".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
11:30 AM on 01/27/2011
Ive seen atheist ad campaigns. The fact is all of us have had different experiences in life, so advertizing religion seems pointless. For example, my husband's best friend was a JW until he met Zeus, I ve chatted to people that have had experiences with Fenrir, Baphomet, but when it comes to Jesus experiences, I shy away from those people because my experiences are not like theirs, and Ive never met, nor do I care to meet Jesus. Ares is a god i resonate with, and so are Horus, Anubis and others, but not Ra.
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
04:06 PM on 01/27/2011
Forsooth, what do you have against Ra???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
07:45 PM on 01/27/2011
Ra, is a lot like Jehova in personality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sweendoggedly
Science. It works.
08:11 AM on 01/28/2011
You seriously need to check out His Noodly Greatness. Best offer on afterlife yet.
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Indigo1941
Time traveler.
03:05 PM on 01/28/2011
Marinara!
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squat6971
59 *was* divine -- 60? 61? not so much
11:11 AM on 01/27/2011
the great confluence of Hoohah and viral marketing --gah!
09:39 AM on 01/27/2011
SCIENTOLOGY -- it's not just for high school dropout movie stars anymore.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ManuOB1
A voice crying in the wilderness
06:49 AM on 01/27/2011
Certain people in here seem to have twice the zeal and less than half the IQ of most fundamentalists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Douglas Campbell
08:19 PM on 01/28/2011
Less than 1/2 of Zero?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:29 AM on 01/27/2011
"Tired of dancing? Join the methodists".
"Extra arms you don't want? Spend more time at the islamic thieves club"
"Bored with machines on Saturday? Orthodox judaism beckons"