Sunday, May 13, 2012

Christian Camps




In the earlier years of my ministry I spent several summers working with Christian camping programs.  My first camping experience was at Camp Sunset, which was located at Fort Parker State Park between Mexia and Groesbeck, Texas.   A lot of our life experiences were forged at Camp Sunset.  That’s where we first got acquainted with Charles Williams.   Out of that experience came the plan to do “mission” work in Jamestown, New York.  

In many ways Charles is everything I’m not.  He’s methodical, deliberate, well organized and quiet.  Sometimes I think I wake up in a new world every day.  I tend to respond more to the situation at the moment.  I need better organizational skills and I’m anything but quiet.   We ended up going with Charles and his wife Joyce, Joyce’s brother – Jim Sheerer and his wife, Nona Sue to start the church in Jamestown.  Jim was probably somewhere in the middle between Charles and me in terms of being outspoken.   Often Jim and I would talk for a long time, and Charles would never say a word.   But all the time, we knew he was analyzing every word we said.   When he did speak it was a good idea to listen.

While in New York, we helped start Camp Agape, which is still in operation today.  I’ve written about that in a previous blog.  When I moved to Kansas City, I was asked to direct a camp session at Tonganoxie.  After one year I stepped down.   I was 34 years old, and the next oldest staff member was 24.   I remembered a fellow at Camp Sunset, whom I considered to be something of a “stick-in-the-mud,” because he often questioned some of the enthusiastic ideas being propagated by those of us who were younger.   At Tonganoxie I felt myself thinking like him, so I decided it was time for me to step aside from camp work and I didn’t plan on going there again.  I retired from camp work at age 34.

That all changed when we moved to Iowa and I got involved with Midwest Bible Camp.  My children were camp age and I began to see camp work in a different light. I’ll talk about that in the next blog.

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