Born to Camp When 55-year-old Dick O'Ferrall went to camp for the first time in 1947, he was twelve years old, and his parents never thought he would make it for eight weeks. Not only did he stay, but he made camping his life's work. This year he celebrates forty years in the camping business. Dick was young -- a mere 23 -- in 1959 when he and a friend bought Alpine Lodge Camp for Girls in Mentone, Alabama. They changed the name to Alpine Camp for Boys, and, in 1963, Dick bought out his friend's interest. That first summer, 114 campers registered; this year there were 625 campers, with a waiting list for some sessions. Part of the reason for such success could be Dick's own exuberance about camping. "I have never been happier than the times I was in camp," he reveals. "I know first-hand that camp experiences can have a tremendous impact on the life of a child. A camp situation is made-to-order for youth ministry. You have children twenty-four hours a day for several weeks in a controlled environment -- minus television, radio, and other distractions. That's a lot of concentrated time to work through problems, change attitudes, and build relationships." Ric Cannada (RTS '73), senior pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Macon, Georgia, won't argue with that. It was at Alpine Camp one summer after the eighth grade that he reached a turning point in his walk with the Lord. "I was already a Christian," says Ric, "but friends were pulling me in different directions and the tension was mounting. I was asking myself, 'Can I be a Christian and still have fun?' That summer at Alpine, I met sincere and committed Christian counselors who could hold their own in the biggest shaving cream wars and water fights, and then sit quietly with us during cabin devotions and talk to us of God. I saw that summer that a Christian can have a lot of fun -- the right kind of fun. After camp, the tension was gone; I was a Christian and proud of it." Says Ric, "The key to a camp is the quality of its counselors. Almost any camp can come up with a fun program to get the kids there, but, in terms of spiritual influence, a counselor who cares and wants to build a relationship is vital." Dick feels the same way. "I wanted to have a Christian camp from the very beginning," Dick explains. "The Lord taught me very early that the only way to operate one was to have a Christian staff. I didn't know where we would find that many Christian college-age boys. God taught me that if I would be faithful and patient, waiting for His guidance, He would raise them up. That first summer He provided fifteen guys; this past summer we hired fifty." Dick is very selective, hiring much of his staff through Reformed University Fellowship. He looks for counselors who can live their faith daily and love the campers. "We tell the staff that our campers are going to learn more about the love of Jesus Christ through their day to day relationships with the staff than they will in cabin devotions. They will note the way the staff loves and cares for them, as well as how the staff relate to each other." "We have a one week training program for the staff," says Dick. "Luder Whitlock, who spent many years as a camp director and staffer, has assisted with our staff training, plus RTS alumni and Christian psychologists." In addition to superior training, Alpine puts a high priority on ministering to its staff. Over the years, some ten RTS students have served in the important post of camp minister, whose number one priority is to take care of the staff's spiritual needs. Dick is quick to point out that Alpine is not a church camp. A low-key evangelistic thrust seeks to minister to children who want a quality camping experience and would never go to a church camp. About eighty per cent of Alpine's campers are churched --not necessarily from evangelical churches --and a small percentage are not churched; Alpine could be their only chance to hear the Gospel. During each session, Dick and his staff want to give each child a chance to:
- develop a healthy sense of independence
- develop an appreciation and acceptance of self and others
- learn new skills and strengthen old skills
- nurture a love and understanding of God and His creation
- experience fun, excitement, and adventure, but never at the expense of others.
To would-be professional campers Dick says, "Strive for excellence; do your best to provide a quality camping experience. I'll tell you what a friend once told me: if you intend to operate a camp in the name of Jesus Christ, make it a first-rate organization because there are already too many second-rate organizations operating in His name." |