ÚNASE A NOSOTROS EL 20 Y 21 DE MAYO PARA LA CONFERENCIA DE RESTORE

María
De Muth

escocés
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
panahi

Reportando la Verdad.
Restauración de la Iglesia.

Super Bowl Viewers Can Meet Jesus, Boost Their Prayer Life and Confront Antisemitism

Por Bob Smietana
he gets us super bowl
A “He Gets Us" football display ahead of the Super Bowl on Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas. (Photo courtesy He Gets Us)

For the second year in a row, Jesus will make an appearance during the Super Bowl.

The Christian savior will be featured in a pair of ads during the big game, both with the tagline “He Gets Us.” Those ads — one set to run in the first quarter, the other in the second half — are part of an ongoing billion-dollar ad campaign aimed at redeeming the Jesus brand at a time when people are losing faith in organized religion.

This year’s He Gets Us ads will focus on loving your neighbor, a core Christian teaching, said Greg Miller, a spokesman for Come Near, a new nonprofit set up to oversee the He Gets Us campaign. The group’s name is drawn from a passage from the New Testament Book of James, which reads, “Come near to God and he will come near to you.”

Theirs aren’t the only Super Bowl ads that will feature religion this year — in addition to the He Gets Us spots, there will be an ad for Hallow, a popular Catholic prayer app, and an ad for a new campaign called “Stand Up to Jewish Hate,” aimed at confronting the rise of antisemitism.

Alex Jones, the CEO and co-founder de Hallow, said the timing of the Super Bowl, which will be played on the Sunday just before Ash Wednesday, was too good to pass up. The app is currently promoting a campaign to get people to pray every day during the season of Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday and leads into Easter.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, haga clic aquí.

hallow super bowl
Part of the Hallow prayer campaign. (Image courtesy Hallow)

Jones said the 30-second ad for Hallow will be “a simple invitation to pray together.”

“Our hope is that it reaches out to someone who maybe hasn’t prayed in a long time,” he said in an email. “That it might just allow someone somewhere an opportunity to let Christ into their hearts for the first time. If we can reach out to just one person like that — someone in a tough place, someone lost — and help them to begin a journey back to God, then yes, it will have been worth it.”

The antisemitism ad, sponsored by the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism, which was founded by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, will feature Clarence Jones, an attorney who was a speechwriter and adviser to Martin Luther King Jr. A clip of the ad features Jones in his office writing on a legal pad as a photo of King looks on.

“Sometimes I imagine what I would write today for my dear friend, Martin,” Jones says in a preview clip of the ad.     

“With this ad, we hope to continue to spread Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s message of unity and equality at a time in which the country needs it most,” Kraft said in announcing the ad with Jones. “And our goal is to reach a wide audience of people and inspire all Americans to stand up together, arm in arm, and fight this horrific rising hate.”

super bowl antisemitism
Clarence Jones in an antisemitism ad sponsored by the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism. (Photo courtesy FCAS)

The ad, entitled “Silence,” will encourage Americans to speak up in the face of hatred, claiming that “hatred thrives on the silence of others,” and will point out the rise in antisemitism. It’s part of an ongoing campaign called “Stand Up to Jewish Hate,” according to organizers.

Ken Calwell, the CEO of Come Near, said this year’s He Gets Us ads are also meant to address polarization and isolation rampant in American culture.

“We have a loneliness and isolation epidemic,” said Calwell, a former marketing executive for Wendy’s, Domino’s Pizza and Compassion International, the Christian humanitarian nonprofit that focuses on child poverty around the world. With a divisive election coming up, things are unlikely to get better, he said, and Americans are more likely to withdraw from one another.

In that environment, the best message to share is one about love, said Calwell.

“What I see in the gospels about Jesus is that he would seek out hurting people,” he said. “He would stop everything he was doing and make them the center of attention. They would feel seen by him — very valued and very loved.”

Calwell had been consulting for the He Gets Us campaign as it ramped up over the last few years. He became the full-time CEO of Come Near this past fall. The campaign had been run during its start-up phase by the Signatry, a Kansas City-based donor-advised fund for Christians, and recently became an independent nonprofit. The Signatry also funded Christian groups that focus on culture war issues, which has caused some controversia for the campaign, whose major funders include the founders of the Hobby Lobby craft store chain.

he gets us super bowl
A scene from one of the “He Gets Us” commercials. (Image courtesy of He Gets Us)

Another concern about “He Gets Us” is that the company behind the campaign is getting the personal data of people who respond. Church resource group Gloo collects massive amounts of data, analyzes it, and sells its services to churches based on that data, as El Informe Roys previamente reportado. The campaign’s opaque privacy policies have raised questions about how the data is being used.

The 61-year-old Calwell seems well-fitted to the new role. A long-time marketing pro, he had a spiritual awakening as a young adult after being hit by a car while on a training ride for a triathlon. Calwell said he’d grown up going to church but hadn’t taken faith seriously until that accident.

After recovering, he became more active in his nondenominational church, volunteering and going on mission trips, eventually leaving his corporate career behind to work in the nonprofit world. Faith, it appears, is not another product he is selling but something he passionately believes in.

Calwell is in Las Vegas this weekend, helping organize a “Hey Neighbor” outreach event, including a grocery giveaway and programs for kids led by NFL players. The idea is to demonstrate the kind of love that the ads will advocate for, he said.

As for the big game, Calwell isn’t sure if he will make it into the city’s recently built Allegiant Stadium, where the Kansas City Chiefs will take on the San Francisco 49ers for the NFL championship. But the Kansas City native knows who he will be rooting for.

“I’ve been a Chiefs fan since I was 5 years old,” he said.

Jones, the CEO of Hallow, was a little more coy about his rooting plans. When asked who he will be cheering for, he had a one-word reply.

“Jesus.”

Josh Shepherd contribuyó a este informe.

Bob SmietanaBob Smietana es reportero nacional de Religion News Service.

COMPARTIR ESTE:

¡OBTÉN ACTUALIZACIONES POR CORREO ELECTRÓNICO!

¡Manténgase en contacto con Julie y reciba actualizaciones en su bandeja de entrada!

No te preocupes, no te enviaremos spam.

Más para explorar
discusión

3 Respuestas

  1. “Those ads — one set to run in the first quarter, the other in the second half — are part of an ongoing billion-dollar ad campaign aimed at redeeming the Jesus brand at a time when people are losing faith in organized religion.”
    IMHO, the “Jesus Brand” will never be redeemed until Christians abandon the culture wars and simply become good neighbors, responsible citizens and genuinely concerned about the common good. If the overwhelming majority of Christians simply became decent human beings, God would be honored and we’d see the results.

  2. ” redeeming the Jesus brand”

    What an abomination.

    “Alex Jones, the CEO and co-founder of Hallow, said the timing of the Super Bowl, which will be played on the Sunday just before Ash Wednesday, was too good to pass up.”

    Mr. Jones revealed the true motivation of the ads.

  3. I don’t have a problem with the ad campaign; I actually see it as geared more towards professing believers than unbelievers. I hope these ads are reminders to all those “cultural Christians” about the actual message and meaning of the life of the Christ they claim (while often out in the world acting quite ugly).
    I also agree with the posters above, and hope that the ads are a reminder that we are the key to redeeming and protecting “the Jesus brand” and reputation of the church.

Deja una respuesta

El Informe Roys busca fomentar el diálogo reflexivo y respetuoso. Con ese fin, el sitio requiere que las personas se registren antes de comenzar a comentar. Esto significa que no se permitirán comentarios anónimos. Además, se eliminarán todos los comentarios con blasfemias, insultos y/o un tono desagradable.
 
Artículos MÁS RECIENTES
Artículos MÁS populares
es_MXSpanish

Donar

Hola. Vemos que este es el tercer artículo de este mes que ha encontrado que vale la pena leer. ¡Estupendo! ¿Consideraría hacer una donación deducible de impuestos para ayudar a nuestros periodistas a continuar informando la verdad y restaurar la iglesia?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.