'He Gets Us': A Kansas campaign spent $20 million on Super Bowl ads to rebrand Jesus Christ (2024)

The black-and-white video opens with a young Black man, surrounded by followers, an “influencer” moving in a scene that looks like it's taken from the 2020 #BlackLivesMatter protests.

Then the man is shown hugging a white police officer and a voice says that “one day he stood up for something he believed in.” But the establishment tried to shut him up. The words “Jesus was canceled” flash on screen.

“They nailed him to a cross,” the voice says.

Titled “The Influencer,” the 30-second video was posted on YouTube in April and has racked up nearly 12.2 million views so far. It’s just one piece in the billion-dollar “He Gets Us” ad campaign, funded by what had been a quiet, wealthy non-profit called the Servant Foundation, an Overland Park entity that does business as The Signatry.

This Sunday, the “He Gets Us” campaign will air two ads during the Super Bowl,spending $20 million to spread the brand of Jesus as a guy who had empathy for the poor, was an activist, or who was just as sick of politics as the rest of us.

The campaign, which its creators say will ultimately cost $1 billion, attempts to remove the idea of Jesus as being owned by conservatives or a religious denomination, replacing the hate with a human who loves and forgives.

“This is a rebranding of Christ as a revolutionary,” said Gerard J. Tellis, the Neely Chaired Professor of American Enterprise at the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business.

The effort began in March 2021 with a question, said Jason Vanderground, president of Haven Creative Hub, a branding and marketing firm working on the campaign.

“It was a very troubling question, and it said, ‘How did the world's greatest love story become known as a hate group?’” he said.

“Actually, the brand of Jesus performs very well among the American people,” Vanderground said. “It's that his brand has become associated with some of these other things.”

Vanderground said the campaign was built around market research targeted at “spiritually open skeptics.”

“We found that when they look at Christianity, they see, unfortunately, hypocrisy and judgmentalism and discrimination many, many times,” he said. “And sometimes that's because those things have happened. Other times it's because that's really what's perpetuated through media, sometimes through tech, through academia, that to hold a belief is inherently to hate the other.”

Who’s funding "He Gets Us?"

So far, the only donor who has claimed ownership of the campaign is billionaire David Green, the founder and CEO of Hobby Lobby, which won a 2014 U.S. Supreme Court case that exempted some companies with strong religious beliefs from providing employees some contraceptive care.

Donors to The Signatry want to remain anonymous, Vandergroup said, though he confirmed that Green and another 50 families are funding the effort.

Green mentioned the “He Gets Us” campaign in November to Glenn Beck, the conservative TV and radio host, saying the government is coming for Christians, who are seen “as the haters.”

“So we're wanting to say — we being a lot of different people — that he gets us. He understands all of us. He loves who we hate,” he said. “We have to let the public know and create a movement, really.”

Since the beginning of 2022, the “He Gets Us” ads have shown up online, on billboards, and during televised sporting events like NASCAR races and baseball and football games. The ads offer viewers the ability to connect with Bible reading groups, get supportive text messages or contact a local church, Vanderground said.

Tellis, the marketing professor, said he was impressed with the campaign because it does two things he tells his students to do: tell a story and be controversial, because both will bring attention to the ads. The campaign’s target audience is younger people who have more liberal views and often watch a lot of sports, he said.

But ultimately, Tellis thinks the campaign will not succeed, despite its religious underpinnings.

“I don’t think it’s going to happen,” Tellis said, “because when these people go to these conservative places and hear the homilies, they’ll be turned off and they won’t go a second time.”

The campaign also risks turning off those who already believe. Natasha Crain, a popular Christian blogger and podcaster, was critical of the campaign because she says in emphasizing Jesus' relatable humanity, it minimizes that Christians also consider him to be divine.

“The Jesus of this campaign is nothing more than an inspiring human who relates to our problems and cares a whole lot about a culturally palatable version of social justice,” she wrote on her blog. “Because of this, He Gets Us has the potential to actually harm the public understanding of Jesus,” Crain wrote. “People need to know that Jesus is our Savior, not a compassionate buddy.”

How is the money spent?

According to its latest tax filing, the Signatry reported net assets in 2021 of nearly $977 million, and the group's $20 million for the “He Gets Us” campaign is hardly its only — or even its largest — donation.

By far its largest recipients are various donor-advised funds, which allow individuals to contribute to a non-profit that disburses the funds. One of its largest gifts in 2021 was $51 million to the National Christian Foundation, the nation’s largest Christian charity. Another $48 million went to Every Home for Christ, an international missionary organization.

The list of smaller grant recipients includes multiple individual churches, organizations devoted to spreading the gospel, Christian universities, anti-abortion counseling centers — often called crisis pregnancy centers — and anti-abortion groups, assorted faith-based museums, publishers, legal organizations and Christian fellowship groups.

A small donation, $5,000, went to the Academy for Climate and Energy Analysis Inc. in Shawnee, Kansas, a climate-change-denying group whose spokesperson is former meteorologist Mike Thompson, now a Republican Kansas state senator in Johnson County.

Assorted non-sectarian groups also received grants, including Children’s Mercy Hospital, the Kansas City Symphony, the Kansas Humane Society, the University of Kansas Endowment and the Jewish Community Center.

Other large grants include:

  • $20.8 million toOne Hope Inc., an international ministry based in Pompano Beach, Florida. One Hope has partnered with Toy Gun Films, which Servant helped fund with $6.2 million.
  • $16.7 million to Alliance Defending Freedom, which is behind the campaign to limit legal protections for LGBTQ people.
  • $10.5 million to Answers in Genesis, a Kentucky group that takes a strict creationist view of the Bible and is known for its Noah’s Ark-themed amusem*nt park and its Creation Museum, which promotes Young-Earth Creationism (the view that the Earth is only about 6,000 years old).
  • $8.5 million to the Life Church of Edmond, Oklahoma, one of the largest churches in the country.
  • $5.4 million to Maranatha Christian Academy in Shawnee, Kansas.
  • $2.4 million to Mid-American Christian University in Oklahoma City.
  • $2 million to Human Condition, an anti-abortion group.
  • $1 million to Live Action, an anti-abortion group.
  • $1 million to Campus Crusade for Christ.
'He Gets Us': A Kansas campaign spent $20 million on Super Bowl ads to rebrand Jesus Christ (2024)

FAQs

How much did the Jesus Gets Us Super Bowl commercial cost? ›

He Gets Us, a campaign to revamp the reputation of Jesus, the central figure in Christianity, ran its first of two Super Bowl ads in the first quarter of the 2024 Big Game. Together, the two ads total 75 seconds of in-game advertising, costing an estimated $17.5 million.

What is the Jesus He Gets Us Super Bowl commercial? ›

The “He Gets Us” ad campaign, in its second year running ads for the big game, has a simple goal, on the surface: It's about getting Christians and non-Christians alike to think about how to love our neighbors, in the form of a quizzical message about washing feet.

Who is funding the Jesus gets us campaign? ›

As many journalists have carefully detailed, the "He Gets Us" campaign is funded in large part by the Green family, who owns Hobby Lobby. Their life mission, besides getting rich by selling cheap tchotchkes, is to push their brand of far-right Christianity on the country.

What is the point of He Gets Us? ›

“One of the main purposes for 'He Gets Us' is to try and invite anyone, no matter what they believe, to explore the story of Jesus,” Miller said. “The audience of the Super Bowl allows us to do that with the greatest potential reach.”

What church is He Gets Us affiliated with? ›

Although the campaign's public-facing website states that it is not affiliated with any particular sect or church, an outreach website intended for churches and other partners states that it is inspired by the Lausanne Covenant.

Who is behind the He Gets Us ads? ›

Who is behind He Gets Us? A newly formed nonprofit organization, Come Near, is now fully managing He Gets Us initiatives. Come Near has a growing, expert-led staff and dedicated network of partners and supporters.

What is the controversy with the He Gets Us ad? ›

Critics of the advertisem*nt say the welcoming message is deceptive. Some claim it does not line up with the campaign's Christian funders, who they say have supported anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-abortion causes.

What was the Jesus Super Bowl commercial in 2024? ›

“Foot Washing” is one of two “He Gets Us” commercials in the 2024 Super Bowl. “He Gets Us,” the ad campaign centered around rebranding Jesus for the contemporary world, returned to the Super Bowl with two commercials.

What religion are Hobby Lobby owners? ›

It owns a chain of arts and crafts stores with a volume of over $5 billion in 2018. The chain has 1,001 stores in 48 U.S. states. The Green family founded Hobby Lobby to express their Christian beliefs and the chain incorporates American conservative values and Christian media.

What denomination sponsors the chosen? ›

The creators have received an array of criticisms, including the production's association with the LDS Church, as well as accusations of injecting Mormon theology into the scripts.

Did the LDS Church fund the chosen? ›

“The Chosen” is distributed by partner Angel Studios, a streaming video company that was co-founded by brothers Neal and Jeffrey Harmon, who are Latter-day Saints. Angel Studios raised millions through crowdfunding to fund the multiseason series about the life of Jesus Christ.

Who sponsors the Jesus commercials? ›

What is the Servant Foundation? As for the organization that initially launched the campaign in 2022, Servant Foundation, also known as The Signatry, is a Kansas-based nonprofit. The "He Gets Us" campaign switched ownership to Come Near in the past year.

How much did the He Gets Us commercial cost? ›

The ads ran for a total of 75 seconds and together cost an estimated $17.5 million, according to AdWeek. Critics have noted the campaign's welcoming and progressive messages seem at odds with some of its Christian funders, who have also supported anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-abortion causes.

Who is Ken Calwell and He Gets Us? ›

Ken Calwell is the CEO of Come Near, the nonprofit that ran two Jesus-focused Super Bowl ads as part of the 'He Gets Us' campaign.

What is the most expensive commercial in Super Bowl history? ›

Most expensive Super Bowl ads 2021

Google's "Loretta" and Amazon's "Before Alexa" Super Bowl 2020 ads tied as most expensive Super Bowl commercials ever as of January 2021, with a cost of 16.8 U.S. million dollars.

How much does each Super Bowl commercial cost? ›

“Super Bowl ad costs have nearly doubled over the past decade, from $4M in 2014 for a 30 second ad, to more than $7M in 2024, for a similar audience size of around 113 million viewers.

What church spent $20 million on a Super Bowl ad? ›

$20.8 million to One Hope Inc., an international ministry based in Pompano Beach, Florida.

How much did it actually cost for one 30 second Super Bowl commercial in the year 2015? ›

CharacteristicAverage advertisem*nt cost in million U.S. dollars
Super Bowl 50 (2016)4.5
Super Bowl XLIX (2015)4.25
Super Bowl XLVIII (2014)4
Super Bowl XLVII (2013)3.8
9 more rows
Feb 7, 2024

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