A streamlined, consolidated, one-source hub for event details—resources, facilities, communication, reservations, registration, and workflow tracking—keeps everyone on the same page. Smart Church solutions allow you to centralize the management of your church events. Whether it's one event at a time, or multiple and back-to-back events, coordinators can rest easy with streamlined workflow routing and communication and all details consolidated in one place. A robust church reporting tool may be one of the most important features of a Church Management System, especially for those ministry leaders who understand that their church database is one of the most valuable ministry resources they have, second only to the individuals represented in it. Church reporting analytic allow you to track specific data over time and to identify trends you might not be able to see in person. Not only can you get church attendance statistics, a perpetually updated church directory, or a giving report, you can also discover deeper data insights, such as: Who is attending—and from where, What times of the year typically show offering declines or increases and many more.
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- This is a rap I wrote over a v a p o r w a v e beat produced by a guy in Italy named HUB. Please give a listen and let me know what you think, thank you <3 : appers
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I hear too many people saying "I'm not going back to life until there's a vaccine" — as if that will immediately eliminate the risk. It won't. Even if one of the current vaccine candidates works, it could be quite a while before it's widely distributed. And to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration, it has to protect only half of the people who take it from infection. For the foreseeable future we will be living in a world with some level of coronavirus out there. So if we want to get out of our bunkers, we all need to take stock of our risk tolerance. As a doctor, I worked in a New York City emergency room and in a remote coastal clinic in Kenya, and then I became a journalist covering disease. I've had to measure my risk tolerance for infection in different situations. Once, collecting blood from an AIDs patient, I couldn't feel the artery through my glove. The glove came off. Treating a patient with multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis, I pulled my surgical mask a little tighter, made sure the windows were open and — irrationally — tried to breathe in less.