I was speaking with a colleague and mentor about my camp
research a few weeks ago. We were talking about the unique educational model of
summer camp and how that model might be transferrable to congregational
ministry. We were reflecting on the role of the camp counselor, who is
oftentimes a college student. These young adults are engaged in intentional
ministry with campers who are usually only a few years younger than they are.
My colleague posed a question: “So what if we thought of our
congregational pastors as camp counselors?”
I chewed on that for a little while, and I realized that it
tasted funny.
“I don’t think we want our pastors to be camp counselors,” I
reflected. “I think they are more like the camp directors.”
“Okay,” he said. “Then who are the counselors?”
In last fall’s survey of over 300 mainline Protestant camps,
86% said they agreed or strongly agreed with the statement, “Our camp
emphasizes summer staff formation as much as camper formation.” One of the most
important roles of a camp director is to recruit and train others to be the
primary ministers of the camp. Many camp professionals spend the better parts
of February-May recruiting summer camp staff and preparing for the summer
season. Many camps have two full weeks of dawn to dusk staff training before
the first campers arrive in June. The ministry with these young people
continues throughout the year with frequent check-ins, reunions, and campus
visits. Summer staff members turn to their camp directors for advice and
spiritual guidance throughout the year. Ministry to summer staff members may
occupy more time than any other role of some camp directors. Yes, it is
ministry. The training itself is ministry, and the ongoing communication and
interaction is ministry.
What if our pastors, priests, and presbyters envisioned
their role as training the church members to be the primary ministers of the
congregation? What if we thought of our church members as camp counselors?
Community
Have you ever seen camp counselors greet one another? Hugs, smiles,
incessant talking. They have shared experiences and mutual love that forms an
incredibly strong bond. Staff training sessions often feature a great deal of group
building activities. Camp directors know that the summer staff community is the
foundation for the entire summer’s ministry. When was the last time you did
intentional group building in your congregation? This does not have to be a
silly game or activity (though I highly recommend low ropes initiatives for
church councils/boards). How about intentional one-on-one conversations?
Cooperative activities or projects?
Hospitality
Camps take hospitality seriously. Counselors are trained to
welcome campers and visitors into the community and engage them in
conversation. When you arrive at camp, it seems like everyone was anxiously
awaiting your arrival, and they are genuinely happy to see you. Are your church
members trained in hospitality? Imagine if everyone who stepped on your church
property was welcomed into the community like a long-lost sibling by all of
your members, not just the ones assigned as “greeters” for the day.
Faith Stories
Camps are some of the few places where testimonies are alive
and well. Camp counselors share their personal faith stories with each other
and with their campers. As campers share their own stories, counselors help
them identify God’s activity. Putting theological language to our own personal
life stories is incredibly powerful. How often do your church members practice
sharing their faith stories? Is testimony a regular part of your worship
service? Do you encourage and set aside time for one-on-one sharing of faith
stories, especially across generations?
Interpretive Guides
Camp counselors are not known for their great theology. They
are not unlike our church members. Some have more biblical literacy than others,
and few have formal theological training. But camp counselors are trained to
use theological language in situational learning. Are your church members
trained to do this? Camps recognize that the best learning happens through
experience, not through formal instruction. Camp counselors are trained to help
the campers identify where God is at work in the mundane, everyday affairs of
life. It is wonderful that churches have pastors to preach from the pulpit and
lead worship services. But the deepest faith formation happens outside of the
formal worship environments. What if we taught our members to identify God’s
activity in the world? Might they help non-members outside of the formal church
environment identify where God is at work in the world?
Worship Leadership
Camp counselors are trained in worship leadership. Camp
directors are fully capable of leading worship, and many of them participate in
worship leadership, but the summer staff members are the primary leaders. Too
many of our churches operate under the assumption that the pastor should be the
one up front all the time. What if the pastor’s role was to train others to be
the leaders? This is about more than reading scripture or leading a song. With
the pastor’s training and guidance, members could be planning and leading the
worship services.
An Integrative Role
These and so many other aspects of camp counseling work as
an integrative whole. The same people that campers play games with, work with,
and eat with also lead Bible study, worship, and interpret activities through a
theological lens. Imagine a community in which neighbors, co-workers, and
dinner companions were also trusted worship leaders and theological
interpreters of life events. Imagine a church community that does not fret when
the pastor is gone on Sunday because dozens of members are fully capable of
leading the worship service.
Remember: the pastor is not a camp counselor. Maybe that is
why this is so difficult. Pastors want to be up front. They think they are the
most capable. And to be truthful, it is a lot easier to do it themselves than to train others to lead. Training
others is hard. And those that are
trained are bound to mess up or to espouse bad
theology at some point. Just ask camp directors. They spend countless hours
preparing, recruiting and training just so other people can take credit for the
amazing ministries happening at the camp.
Train your church members to be camp counselors. They will mess up. They will embarrass you. But they will also point the way to Christ in a way that you could never hope to do on your own. They will create a thriving community where the Holy Spirit is present and active through trusted relationships, a place where all are welcome.
Train your church members to be camp counselors. They will mess up. They will embarrass you. But they will also point the way to Christ in a way that you could never hope to do on your own. They will create a thriving community where the Holy Spirit is present and active through trusted relationships, a place where all are welcome.