M
aking new friends. Fishing in a mountain stream. Playing flag
football, soccer, softball and water sports. Going canoeing or hiking.
Climbing walls or towers or going through a challenge course. Serving meals
to the homeless. Participating in drama or playing paintball. Worshipping
around a campfire or spending time with teens in another country. Teaching
and playing games with kids in Ohio or the Bahamas or Mexico. Improving your
photography or learning arts and crafts.
These are just a few things offered in Generation Ministries
(GenMin) camps and short-term missions in 2010. Grace Communion
International sponsors 15 recreationally based camps scattered across the
U.S., as well as three short-term mission trips. What is camp all about?
Let’s answer a few questions:
What happens at camp?
Each camp is run a bit differently, but every day at camp is
filled with activity. You might start off with a sport, and then learn
archery or run a challenge course. Your dorm may want to work on a drama
that will be performed during chapel or worship. Lunch might be followed by
a paintball game or doing a bit of work around camp. The evening meal is
often followed by gathering around a campfire or playing games together.
If you are attending a mission camp, each day will be spent
teaching and playing games with children or feeding the homeless or teaching
VBS to a group. Regardless of the camp you choose, a focus during camp is
building new friendships and discovering more about the friendship you have
with Jesus.
Is it like a Bible camp?
We are not a Bible camp, though we do use the Bible to teach
about God’s love for us. The goal at a GenMin camp or mission is not to
teach you the Bible, but to teach you about your friendship with Jesus. For
example, this year’s theme scripture is Romans 5:11: "So now we can rejoice
in our wonderful new relationship with God because our Lord Jesus Christ has
made us friends of God" (The Message Bible). We will focus on this
friendship with God throughout the week during the activities and worship.
What is GenMin?
Short for Generations Ministries, GenMin is an arm of Grace
Communion International focused on families, leadership training, camps and
missions. We help congregations identify and train young leaders. We work
with churches to develop family ministries that bring generations and
cultures together, and we sponsor camps and missions to give young people
the opportunity to develop relationships with peers, staff and with God.
What do you mean by a mission camp?
Mission camps are hands-on experiences to introduce campers
to working with others. Word in the Street is a hands-on urban
mission in the inner city of Cincinnati, Ohio. The missionaries run a day
camp for children ages 4-12 who live in the inner city.
Crossing Borders is our longest-running mission camp.
The team of missionaries is housed in Laredo, Texas, and makes day trips
across the Mexican border into Nuevo Laredo. The activities might include
feeding large numbers of people, helping with adult and children’s teaching
services, praying with people, visiting orphanages and playing with the
children, a construction project and conducting a vacation Bible school for
children of "pallet city," a poverty-stricken shantytown with no electricity
or water that consists of hundreds of small shelters made of salvaged
materials.
We also offer a trip to another nation—this year the
Bahamas; next year, Zambia. In these trips we offer day camps for local
children and teens.
Where are your camps located?
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia,
Illinois, Louisiana, Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee,
Texas, and Washington State.
How much do they cost?
Cost depends on where you go and how long the camp runs.
Weekend camps usually cost from $75 - $150. The weeklong camps might cost
between $135 to $460, depending on location. The mission camps cost $395 for
Crossing Borders and $300 for Word in the Street; more in
other nations. These costs include all meals and activities and often a
T-shirt or two. Transportation costs to and from camp are not included.
How can we find out more?
Go to http://genmin.gci.org
for more information about each camp, including registration forms, costs
and contact information.
See you at camp!