Christian Camps Get Creative to Attract Youth in a Tech-Distracted Age
Christian Camps Get Creative to Attract Youth in a Tech-Distracted Age
By Bede

At camp, kids are part of a temporary community that can help them re-evaluate their choices back home and give them a chance to establish new patterns and ways of thinking about their future. Photo courtesy Word of Life Camps
- Horsemanship camps at Miracle Ranch in Washington state
- Redwood Canopy Tour in Mount Hermon, Calif., which transports campers on zip lines 150 feet above the forest floor
- Character Camp, which offers robotics camps for mostly African-American campers in Texas
- Deerfoot, an all-boys camp in the Adirondacks, which focuses on outdoor skills and canoe-building.

Melinda Trotti. Photo courtesy Pilgrim Lodge
Working from a consultant’s sustainability plan, Pilgrim Lodge is continuing to reach out to new audiences. In addition to hosting camps for families, grandparents and their grandchildren, and a camp for those 55 and over called Vintage Ventures, they have also launched Camp Pride for high school students who are gay, lesbian, transgender or transitioning. “They come here and are not just welcomed and understood, but are affirmed,†said Trotti.Pilgrim Lodge is also partnering with other organizations to offer camps to serve children of refugees and migrant farm workers, adults with AIDS and groups leading anti-racism training and education.“People need places where we sing together, eat together, serve food to each other and participate in worship together, especially at a time when we see increasing social media use and greater loneliness, anxiety and depression among young people,†said Trotti.

Gregg Hunter. Photo courtesy CCCA
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