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Who is paying Jesus’s tab for His Superbowl Ads ?
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Feb 13, 2023 11:10:57   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
liberalhunter wrote:
Shut up..... he ain't selling faggotry so his message isn't in your limited wheelhouse.


He doesn’t get ME ?
His ad says he gets us all !!!!!!!!
And then you show up to poo poo it all !

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 11:12:32   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Milosia2 wrote:
He doesn’t get ME ?
His ad says he gets us all !!!!!!!!
And then you show up to poo poo it all !



It's reciprocal...... that's on you.

He made a good call ignoring you, waste of time.

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 11:14:01   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Milosia2 wrote:
——Update !—-
$2Billion was spent on SB ads.
For Jesus.
Am I the only one who can see a conflict of interest here ?




Billions in tax dollars being spent on wetbacks

Are you the only one not seeing where your crumbs are going?

Vote better, vote Republican.

Reply
 
 
Feb 13, 2023 11:14:24   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
Milosia2 wrote:
So , you don’t know either ?
Just saying $20 Million would have went a long way feeding the poor.

You sound like Judas... are you a thief just like him?

Six days before the Passover, Jesus came to Bethany, where Lazarus lived, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. Here a dinner was given in Jesus’ honor. Martha served, while Lazarus was among those reclining at the table with him. Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume.

But one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected, “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.” He did not say this because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it. John 12:1-6

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Feb 13, 2023 11:34:54   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
Parky60 wrote:
You sound like Judas... are you a thief just like him?

Six days before the Passover, Jesus came to Bethany, where Lazarus lived, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. Here a dinner was given in Jesus’ honor. Martha served, while Lazarus was among those reclining at the table with him. Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume.

But one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected, “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.” He did not say this because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it. John 12:1-6
You sound like Judas... are you a thief just like ... (show quote)


Oops !
Update !
$2Billion was spent on ads.
Is the thief who spent this money on ads casting his bread on the water , praying it will come back 10 Fold ?

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 11:35:49   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
liberalhunter wrote:
Billions in tax dollars being spent on wetbacks

Are you the only one not seeing where your crumbs are going?

Vote better, vote Republican.


Too Funny !!!!!!!

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 11:41:28   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Oops !
Update !
$2Billion was spent on ads.
Is the thief who spent this money on ads casting his bread on the water , praying it will come back 10 Fold ?

You, I won't call you my friend because you aren't, are a LIAR!

You're a few decimal points off just like your honesty. $20 million was spent on the pair of "Jesus gets us" ads.

Reply
 
 
Feb 13, 2023 11:42:49   #
Smedley_buzkill
 
Milosia2 wrote:
——Update !—-
$2Billion was spent on SB ads.
For Jesus.
Am I the only one who can see a conflict of interest here ?


Mega churches do little besides enrich their pastors and head honchos. There are several universes worth of difference between a small town church and one of these corporations. I make no claims to being a Christian so I have no dog in the fight, but I can see the hypocrisy of the mega churches who are basically making an investment same as any other advertiser. If the pastors of these churches had a few less cars and mansions I might be more inclined to be more charitable.

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Feb 13, 2023 11:45:01   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Oops !
Update !
$2Billion was spent on ads.
Is the thief who spent this money on ads casting his bread on the water , praying it will come back 10 Fold ?




So..... be wasted on you.

I'll teach you to fish so you can get off the system and feed yourself..... in lieu of the taxpayers carrying you...... excuse, instead of you stuck to them like a leach.

How many baby daddy babies do you have, and what colors? It matters.

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 11:46:54   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Too Funny !!!!!!!




Try it.... your life will improve.

Should met me for that polish boy at greedys..... I coukda splained it to ya over some food.

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 13:08:20   #
Rose42
 
Milosia2 wrote:
——Update !—-
$2Billion was spent on SB ads.
For Jesus.
Am I the only one who can see a conflict of interest here ?


It wasn’t two billion. You’re such a glib liar. You see a lot of things that aren’t there

Reply
 
 
Feb 13, 2023 13:12:09   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Rose42 wrote:
It wasn’t two billion. You’re such a glib liar. You see a lot of things that aren’t there




Blinder by the shine on her EBT card.... so glittery

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 13:45:35   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
EmilyD wrote:
The funny thing is.....YOU are paying for it!!! 😆😅🤣😅😆


Har harhar .
Your tax money at work.
advertising is 100% deductible.
I don’t know how you think you’re better off for it.
How did it really affect you ?
Or did it have any effect on you ?
Well,
$2Billion is a lot of money for what they got for it.
Or is there more we don’t know ?

He Gets Us’ organizers hope to spend $1 billion to promote Jesus. Will anyone care?
This year’s Super Bowl will feature a $20 million pair of pro-Jesus ads promoting the idea that Jesus ‘gets us,’ part of the larger ‘He Gets Us’ campaign. Organizers hope to spend a billion dollars in the next three years to redeem Jesus’ brand.

He Gets Us social media posts. Courtesy images
He Gets Us social media posts. Courtesy images
January 26, 2023
By Bob Smietana
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(RNS) — The first time she saw an ad for “He Gets Us,” a national campaign devoted to redeeming the brand of Christianity’s savior, Jennifer Quattlebaum had one thought on her mind.
Show me the money.
Daily religion news, straight to your inbox

A self-described “love more” Christian and ordinary mom who works in marketing, Quattlebaum loved the message of the ad, which promoted the idea that Jesus understands contemporary issues from a grassroots perspective. But she wondered who was paying for the ads and what their agenda was.
“I mean, Jesus gets us,” she said. “But what group is behind them?”
For the past 10 months, the “He Gets Us” ads have shown up on billboards, YouTube channels and television screens — most recently during NFL playoff games — across the country, all spreading the message that Jesus understands the human condition.
The campaign is a project of the Servant Foundation, an Overland Park, Kansas, nonprofit that does business as The Signatry, but the donors backing the campaign have until recently remained anonymous — in early 2022, organizers only told Religion News Service that funding came from “like-minded families who desire to see the Jesus of the Bible represented in today’s culture with the same relevance and impact He had 2000 years ago.”
But in November, David Green, the billionaire co-founder of Hobby Lobby, told talk show host Glenn Beck that his family was helping fund the ads. Green, who was on the program to discuss his new book on leadership, told Beck that his family and other families would be helping fund an effort to spread the word about Jesus.
“You’re going to see it at the Super Bowl — ‘He gets Us,’” said Green. “We are wanting to say — we being a lot of people — that he gets us. He understands us. He loves who we hate. I think we have to let the public know and create a movement.”
RELATED: A $100 million ad campaign wants to fix Jesus’ image. His followers remain a problem.
Jason Vanderground, president of Haven, a branding firm based in Grand Haven, Michigan, that is working on the “He Gets Us” campaign, confirmed that the Greens are one of the major funders, among a variety of donors and families who have gotten behind it.
Donors to the project are all Christians but come from a range of denominational backgrounds, said Vanderground.
Organizers have also signed up 20,000 churches to provide volunteers to follow up with anyone who sees the ads and asks for more information. Those churches are not, however, he said, funding the campaign.
A Vegas-themed He Gets Us campaign advertisement at Harmon Corner in Las Vegas. Photo courtesy of He Gets Us
A Vegas-themed “He Gets Us” campaign advertisement at Harmon Corner in Las Vegas. Photo courtesy of “He Gets Us”
The Super Bowl ads alone will cost about $20 million, according to organizers, who originally described “He Gets Us” as a $100 million effort.
“The goal is to invest about a billion dollars over the next three years,” he said. “And that is just the first phase.”
One of the ads that aired during the NFL playoffs was titled “That Day” and tells the story of an innocent man being executed.
“Jesus rejected resentment on the cross,” the ad says. “He gets us. All of us.”
A billion-dollar, three-year campaign would be on a par with advertising budgets for major brands such as Kroger grocery stores, said Lora Harding, associate professor of marketing at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.
“This is a really remarkable ad spend for a religious organization or just a nonprofit in general,” said Harding, who worked on the “Open hearts, open minds, open doors” campaign for the United Methodist Church.
Religious-themed ads have been relatively rare at the Super Bowl. The Church of Scientology has run ads in the past, and in 2018 Toyota ran an ad with the message “We’re all one team,” featuring a rabbi, a priest, an imam and a saffron-robed monk headed to a football game, where they sat next to some nuns.
Closer to the “He Gets Us” model was the Christian Broadcasting Network’s $5 million national campaign to promote “The Book,” a repackaged version of The Living Bible translation, with a catchy theme song sung by country legend Glen Campbell.
Lora Harding. Photo by Sam Simpkins/Belmont University
Lora Harding. Photo by Sam Simpkins/Belmont University
Harding said that despite the cost, advertising at the Super Bowl makes sense for “He Gets Us.” Organizers want to reach a mass audience that is paying attention. Super Bowl ads have become part of the pageantry of the big game.
“There just aren’t ways to reach an attentive, engaged audience that size anymore,” she said.
She also said that the anonymity of the group behind the ads plays to the group’s advantage. It would be easy for viewers to dismiss an ad coming from a faith-based organization or religious group. The “He Gets Us” ads wait until the end to mention Jesus and don’t point to any specific church or denomination.
“That makes it even more powerful, and hits the message home in a really compelling way,” she said. “I think it does make Jesus more relevant to today’s audiences.”
Some viewers, including some evangelical Christians, are skeptical. Author and activist Jennifer Greenberg supports the idea of trying to reach those outside the faith and wants people to understand that Jesus gets them. But that’s not the whole message of Christianity.
“Yes, Jesus can relate to you,” she said. “But what did Jesus come primarily to do? He came to die for our sins.”
Connecting emotionally with Jesus is great, she added. But that won’t save your soul.
“I can look at Buddha or Sarah McLachlan or Obama and I can find things in common with them,” she said. “But that does not mean they are going to save me.”
A He Gets Us campaign advertisement in New York's Times Square. Photo courtesy of He Gets Us
A “He Gets Us” campaign advertisement in New York’s Times Square. Photo courtesy of “He Gets Us”
Michael Cooper, an author and missiologist, agrees. While Cooper is a fan of the ads, saying they powerfully communicate the human side of Jesus, they leave out his divinity.
“I began to wonder, is this the Jesus I know?” he said.
Cooper and a colleague offer what he called a “constructive critique” of the campaign in an upcoming article for the Journal of the Evangelical Missiological Society. That article calls for clearer messaging about the divine nature of Jesus.
“This wasn’t just a great teacher or preacher who was incarnated,” he said. “This was God himself.”
Ryan Beaty, a former Assemblies of God pastor and current doctoral student at the University of Oklahoma, said he’s been fascinated by the ads and wonders how the country’s political polarization may affect how the ads come across.
His conservative friends, he said, see the ads — such as one depicting Jesus as a refugee — as too political. Other folks who are more liberal see the ads as not going far enough.
Beaty also wonders if people outside the church will find the ads more compelling than true believers.
“People of no faith — or moderate learnings toward faith — will find these more compelling than people who identify with the Christian faith or strongly identify with politics,” he said.
Seth Andrews, a podcaster, author and secular activist based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, said the campaign seems to be marketing a version of Jesus that’s more in touch with modern American culture than earlier, more dogmatic versions.
“They are latching on to this touchy-feely, conveniently vague, designer Jesus,” he said.
Jason Vanderground. Courtesy photo
Jason Vanderground. Courtesy photo
Andrews poses the question of what Jesus would think of the amount of money spent on the ads. Would he prefer that the money be spent on ministering to people’s physical needs or making the world a better place?
“Or would he say, no, go ahead and spend $100 million to tell everybody how great I am?”
While the ads are meant to reach what Vanderground called “spiritually open skeptics,” a secondary audience is Christians, whose reputations have fallen on hard times in recent years.
“We also have this objective of encouraging Christians to follow the example of Jesus in the way that they love and treat each other,” he said.
For her part, Quattlebaum said that in the end, she’s a fan of the ads, because they focus on the main message of Christianity.
“It all goes to Jesus,” she said. “ And if it all goes back to Jesus, it all goes back to love.”
RELATED: $100 million media campaign depicts human side of Jesus in outreach to skeptics

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Feb 13, 2023 13:50:33   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
liberalhunter wrote:
It's reciprocal...... that's on you.

He made a good call ignoring you, waste of time.


Jesus said he loves me .
Who are you ?

Reply
Feb 13, 2023 13:54:32   #
liberalhunter Loc: Your mom's house
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Har harhar .
Your tax money at work.
advertising is 100% deductible.
I don’t know how you think you’re better off for it.
How did it really affect you ?
Or did it have any effect on you ?
Well,
$2Billion is a lot of money for what they got for it.
Or is there more we don’t know ?



20 plus floors ar 500 a night per is alot of money. X that by 5 million wetbacks you voted in...... where is your bitch about that? Homeless vets don't get hotels or shelter cities with 3 meals and laundry service.... no time for laundry, paying games on the 50 flat-screens provided..... hmmmmm, your whine is waaaaaaay misplaced..... oh, it's the Jesus thing...tough shit!

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