Our forty-two children have all returned from summer camp in Brownwood and I am happy to report it was a great week. Forty-two kids are the most any of us can remember going with Second B to camp and we are all very excited about how well things worked out, even with that many heads to count.
I want to say thanks to our children's pastor Judy Bryant and all our adult leaders who gave up a week to make camp possible. Special thanks also to our Missions Division and numerous individuals for helping to pay the way for a number of kids who otherwise would not have been able to make the trip because of lack of funds. This year ten of our Kids Hope kids along with a number of kids from within our own church membership received partial or whole scholarships to camp. Without all you leaders and sponsors camp simply would not be possible. Thank you.
Though camp really is about fun; its also about growing our children in the faith. A week away at camp provides the time and space for our pastors and adult leaders to connect intentionally with our children and talk to them about life and about life with God. We simply don't have these same kinds of opportunities back at home.
This year one of the lessons we studied was from John 6:1-14 where Jesus feeds the five thousand. A multitude of people has followed Jesus up a mountainside and soon runs out of provisions. The disciples wonder where they are to get enough bread to feed so great a crowd. And then one of Jesus' disciples, Andrew, points out that a young boy has brought five barley loaves and two fish. I read Andrew's words with a certain degree of mocking, "Oh, isn't that cute," condescension. He responds to the boy's meager offering the same way I might respond if we had a flat and my son offered the spare from his Tonka truck. And yet, it turns out that the boy's meager offer really is enough. The next thing we know the whole multitude has been fed.
The point of our study and the subject of many conversations later in the week was that these kids are coming of age. They are old enough to see the needs of this world. And they are old enough to see that they have gifts that they might can share. And, above all, they are young enough to trust that Jesus might take their meager offerings and feed a multitude.
Let us be so young.
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