When we were younger, Greta and I often went to camp for as many as three weeks a year. We also did came several times in Africa. A few years ago we decided that camp was for younger people and we did not go to camp for many years. Then a friend called and talked us into being the camp missionaries at a camp called Wonder Valley Christian Camp located near Salem, Indiana. He was the dean for a week of camp for fifth and sixth grade youth. Reluctently we decided to try it again. We were assured we would just be the camp missionary and would do a one hour missions presentation once a day. We would have our own private room and bathroom and could participate in any other activities as we wanted.
This year, the first week of August was the fourth year we have attended this camp. Another week of hot August days days of almost 100 degree heat, campfires, hikes, games, even helping build solar ovens to bake cookies in the afternoon sun - it was hot enough to do that.
We have found this camp and this age group surprisingly refreshing. They are of an age that they are eager to learn and are able to learn quickly. Using some age appropriate videos and materials we were pleasanatly surprised to be able to teach them rather lofty mission ideas such as "What is a people group?", an "unreached people group", or the now famous "10/40 window". Through a simple memory idea, we were able to teach them the five major world religions. We called it the THUMB. So, the five religions are Tribal, Hindu, Unreligious, Muslim and Buddist. By the second or third day, all we needed to do was give the "thumbs up" gesture and they would recite the five major world religions. I know lots of adults: preachers, elders and church leaders who do not have good mission information. At the end of the week we had a "Bible Bowl' type quiz and were amazed at how much information the children had learned.
These children are the church of the future. Greta and I feel honored to help in the formation of their minds towards good missions planning in the church. These children already know that the church is spending 95% of its "missions" money on the parts of the world that are already largely Christian and the remaining 5% on the parts of the world that have no way to find out about Christ or the church. Our hope is that they will help change the way the church today does missions.
Even an inexperienced fisherman knows that if you want to catch fish, you must go to a place where there are fish. Why is that the church finds it difficult to understand that if we are to reach the lost, we must go to where the lost are living?