The Anti-Jesus Camp
Church camp, Bible camp, Jesus camp. Back in the days of shared cultural christianity it was not uncommon for most kids to spend a week or more at some sort of religious camp. My own youth was spent traveling up to Northern Grace Youth Camp in Shawano, WI. Recently church camps have been declining in popularity. Attendance is down 18% in the U.S. since 2000. I suspect the decline is much greater since the 50s, when many christian camps were established. In 2006 a documentary called “Jesus Camp” drew some controversy from both sides as it presented a very cultish picture of one particular summer camp. I can say from experience that while bible camps do certainly have an agenda (religious education), they are not all a bunch of crazy politicos brainwashing 8-year olds. Don’t get me wrong, some of them are a little odd — as odd as the denominations that host them.
Finally, the good news: if you like tetherball, crafts, and cooking “hobo dinners” over an open fire, but hate God – there is an alternative! Welcome to Camp Quest, whose stated purpose is
to provide children a residential summer camp dedicated to improving the human condition through rational inquiry, critical and creative thinking, scientific method, self-respect, ethics, competency, democracy, free speech, and the separation of religion and government guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States.
According to the BBC they have activities ranging from swimming, nature hikes, sing alongs and designing blind and double-blind experiments. I personally can’t wait to play “Invisible Pink Unicorn Hunt” where children practice proving a negative (ie. “There is no unicorn at the camp”). I’m not sure what’s more fun, that game or Bible Baseball.
While it seems a tad reactionary and maybe a little brainwashy, there have been atheists around for as long as there have been theists, so they’re due for a summer camp. It could backfire though. Take kids away from their tv and their video games and their internets and throw them out into the Blue Ridge Mountains for a week and there’s a chance they could see a Creator in all that nature.
BONUS: Recipe for a Hobo Dinner
- One large raw potato
- One large raw carrot
- 1/2 cup chopped raw onion
- A fist-sized chunk of raw hamburger
- Campfire burned down to hot embers
- Lowry’s Seasoning Salt
- Ketchup
- A 1′ square piece of aluminum foil
Flip your foil “shiny side down”. Using the Bite and Spit™ method bite off small hunks of potato and carrot and spit them into your foil*. Pull finger-tip sized pieces of meat from your burger and toss them in. Dump in the onion. Pour in ketchup. Shake some Lowry’s on that. Mix it around with a spoon or a stick. Seal up your foil into a packet and place onto hot embers. Wait approximately 20-30 minutes shifting as necessary. Thank God for your meal / think about the finitude of life (depends on which camp you’re at). Open and eat with a fork. There might be sand or a bug in there. That’s Ok.
* You may also use a pocket knife if you’re a cry baby.
“A real beaker of acid in the face of popular culture.”






Leave a Reply