Showing posts with label camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camp. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

CAM Campmeeting 2015

Just a couple of weeks ago, we were swarmed with people on the WPY campus... for campmeeting! It was the first campmeeting that the Cambodia Adventist Mission (CAM) has had in several years, so everyone was very excited. The theme was "Footprints of Grace," and we heard many good seminars on this topic.


The Friday before campmeeting, we ended classes early (we got a week-long holiday!) and pulled all of our desks and chairs outside and put them all in just a few rooms. It was a lot of fun because all of the students in the school and the teachers got a chance to work and laugh together for an hour or so.


As with any normal campmeeting, there were seminars in the main tent several times a day. In the morning we had a "777" time of prayer, followed by "Family Worship" which was conducted by different schools and organizations on different mornings.

The mission president, Dean Jackson,
leading out in one of the small groups during prayer time.

After morning worship, we had a break, then the adults, youth, and children split up into different places for their separate meetings. I attended the youth meetings, which were quite good. We had several different speakers: the mission president, Dean Jackson; a Khmer church planter who is a friend of mine; Scott Griswold from ASAP Ministries; Tim Maddocks from our own school; and various others.




We had a break for lunch, then while the adults went back to more meetings, the youth did activities in the afternoon. On Monday afternoon, we took several truckloads of youth and went and did various types of outreach in Siem Reap city. It was great to see so many of our kids getting involved!


This group attempted to trade fruit
for the cigarettes of tuk-tuk drivers.
There were a few successes!
All about NEWSTART, in Khmer.
My rubbish-collection group.
On Tuesday afternoon, we headed out into the nearby villages and handed out Bible study guides and more of the health tracts. It was really neat to be able to visit people in their homes and see some of the surrounding places that I've never been to before.

Wednesday afternoon, the youth split up into different groups to play games here on campus. They played volleyball and football (aka soccer), but I opted to stay at home and work on upcoming exams and other school stuff...


On Thursday, the youth took a trip to a nearby mountain (actually just a speedbump, but it really is beautiful) that has a few nice waterfalls. I stayed at home again, since I've been once before and the way they'd be going this time possibly included charging foreigners an exorbitant amount just for visiting. But I saw many pictures and heard many stories. They had a great time together!



These young ladies work as primary school teachers in our school.



The last weekday, Friday, we took an excursion to the "Baray," a big reservoir near Angkor Wat. It's a great place to swim (except for the stories of crocodiles we've heard...)! The junior-teens also went, so there were quite a few trucks and kids. It was a happy way to finish our week! But we didn't just swim: Before we got in the water, we were required to pass out at least 2-3 health tracts to the sellers in the tourist-trap areas. The juniors group also spent time picking up rubbish in those places. 






Of course, every evening we had a meeting all together. We had a visiting speaker from Indonesia, who was quite energetic. The kids all told me that they enjoyed listening to him. (He tried very hard to learn some Khmer while he was here, and at his last meeting, he prayed in Khmer. They loved that!)

A few of our kids and some short-term volunteers
sang a special song during the evening meeting.
Sabbath was a high day, but the afternoon was more relaxed than the other days. In the youth meeting, we split up into small groups for the Sabbath School lesson, then listened to the testimony of the mission youth pastor during church time. 




In the afternoon, we met together with the juniors for Bible games. In the evening, we had a Sabbath closing time, then a fun talent show featuring all of the different Cambodian provinces represented there at campmeeting. Each one definitely had their own twist!

A few of our cute dorm girls.
At the end of the talent show,
Chhorvy and Tim did a cute skit to advertise our upcoming
1-month medical missionary training course.

One last event: All the youth stayed up rather late cooking potatoes and corn over bonfires, playing games, taking pictures, and spending time with each other before everyone packed up and left early on Sunday morning. Many memories were made together!

A Khmer tradition - powder fights!
(I didn't have pictures of the ones with charcoal on their faces...)
Cute grade-6-ers.
A few more of my little guys.
And thus, campmeeting ended. We're hoping that it will happen again next year - Cambodians are very sociable people, in general, and it is fun to see people from all over the country. I really enjoyed being able to see and meet most of the foreigner missionaries who are working in different places around Cambodia, and catch up with how their work is going. I hope we'll have a reoccurrence in 2016!

Photo credits: Facebook - Shannon Maddocks, Khut Ney, etc; and my Instagram feed.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

It's over

Camp came... and went.

Registration...

Child Evangelism class

RC Airplanes class

Digital Photography class

Firebuilding class

Health Evangelism class

A few spare minutes...

Unit sharing - each person shares from their devotions 

Line call

Second week campfire

Fishers of Men unit

One of those who caught the fire :)

Sabbath afternoon outreach - Health Evangelism class

Listening...


Even though I was sequestered away up in my little office on the hill for most of camp, I had a few special opportunities to spend time with campers during the space of two weeks. Choir practice afforded me a spot next to a camper who made a very special decision by the end of the week (see her counselor's post here).  Two nights as a relief counselor put me in the youngest girls' unit one night and the oldest unit the next - very different!  One Friday afternoon I spent some time with the RC Airplanes class. With each wedge into the camp experience, I was able to spend quality time with individuals who were willing to talk and share their heart. It was so special!

Only three nights ago, I sat on a log bench and listened to teen after teen share how much Christ meant to them, how they had been changed because of camp, and how they were going to live their lives differently than before. More than one made a public 100% commitment to Christ - and I could tell they were serious.

Just imagine how quickly God's work could get done with consecrated young people like these sharing with everyone they know! Life is tough, and there are obstacles to overcome. But with God's strength, these youth can go anywhere and do anything for Him! I can't wait to see the way He leads their lives. :)

"With such an army of workers as our youth, rightly trained, might furnish, how soon the message of a crucified, risen, and soon-coming Saviour might be carried to the whole world! How soon might the end come—the end of suffering and sorrow and sin!"*

*Education, page 272
Photos by Jonathan Hill.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Rocks = hearts


On my way back up to my creekside office from Earth Lodge, I often stop at the rock garden, which records campers and counselors from years gone by at Young Disciple Youth Bible Camp. It's a lot of fun to examine the jumbled array of faded names, years, and creativity. Each one prompts a memory of the person it represents.



But when I walked by the other day, a different realization hit me. As I looked over the rocks, it dawned on me...

These represent hearts.

Each rock stands for one young person whose life has been influenced in some way or another by the camp(s) they attended.

It's not just a few rocks, either. There's a whole pile. Think about it: a minimum of 60 campers per week (usually many more than that). Multiply that by the number of camps held at YD since moving to Washington in 1999 (at least 24 if not more). It adds up!

These campers have left their mark at YD, but YD has left its mark on their hearts. And they will never be the same. God spoke to them at camp, and whether they listened or not, they were pointed toward the goal of establishing a living relationship with Jesus. It's our prayer that they will follow after that goal!

In just five days, counselors will arrive to begin orientation, to learn how to reach the hearts of their campers and draw them to Jesus. Pray that they will be able to consecrate their minds and hearts to God so He can use them to change lives.

Pray for the campers. Pray that their hearts will be touched by the words, the actions, the sights, the sounds, the messages of YD Camp. Pray that they won't pass up the opportunity to learn how to live a true, happy, and fulfilled Christian life.

Just pretty rocks? Not at all. They're so much more. And I want to be a part of the influence for eternity!

Won't you pray?

Young Disciple Youth Bible Camp: July 11-29, 2012