Tuesday, July 16, 2013

I AM


I AM
The Being of God as the Ultimate Reality

“And God said to Moses, I AM THAT I AM; and He said, You shall say this to the sons of Israel, I AM has sent me to you.”  Exodus 3:14

“You shall not take vengeance, and not bear any grudge against the sons of your people; but you shall love your neighbor as yourself, I am Jehovah.”  Leviticus 19:18

“Hear, O Israel, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah.  And you shall love Jehovah your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.”  Deuteronomy 6:4-5

“And they shall know that I am Jehovah.”  Multiple times in Ezekiel

“Have good courage.  I AM!  Do not fear.”  Mark 6:50c

            The How-To reigns supreme in 21st century America.  This is grieving, as they are a deadly poison.  This is so for one simple reason—it places all on men.  This is legalism which is a cover for pride.  The proud man’s claim is that he is God.  (Isaiah 14:13)  This denies the ultimate reality, the Being of God.
            The Being of God is called the “Ultimate Reality” for many reasons.  For one, it makes common sense.  If God is not, then nothing is, for, “All things came into being through Him, and without Him not even one thing came into being that has come into being.”  (John 1:3)  Secondly, God’s Being is the Ultimate Reality because not only do all existing things trace their origin to Him, but all so all truth comes from Him.  On more than one occasion I have had a friend of mine ask me, “Why?” and then continue to press the same question on my answers over and over again.  The end result is the same every time, “Because God IS.”  No matter what subject is considered, the ultimate reason for its reality is the Being of God.
            Thirdly, and most prominently, God’s Being is presented as the Ultimate Reality in the Bible.  The most vivid example is Exodus 3:14, but the concept shows up over and over again throughout the Scriptures.  In the Law of the Old Testament it shows up as the foundational reason for Law.  Even the preface to the Ten Commandments highlights this truth, “I am Jehovah your God, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage, you shall have no other gods before Me.”  -Exodus 20:-3.  Throughout Leviticus it appears again, “I am Jehovah,” tacked onto many various laws and codes.  In Ezekiel the phrase, “And they shall know that I am Jehovah,” appears time and time again, as the very purpose for His judgement.  In Revelation He says, “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End, says the Lord, the One Being, and the One who Was, and the One who Is Coming, the Almighty.”   (Revelation 1:8)
            The Bible begins with, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth,” (Genesis 1:1) which assumes, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” (John 1:1)
            Obviously this is an extremely weighty topic.  It actually carries its weight over all facets of Reality, making it the weightiest topic of all.  The Scripture makes the due note of this via preponderance.  Repetition is the weight of ancient literature and men would do well not to overlook God when hastily searching for “how to” live their lives.  Interestingly, the answers are there, in the Bible, but rarely are they worded in the desired, obvious way.  They are contained in God’s Self-Revelation, not God’s Rulebook.  As with other things, the earthly comes not when the earthly is sought, but in search of the heavenly the earthly is also included.
            As mentioned above, the Being of God is cited as the purpose of the Ten Commandments.  This is far from arbitrary.  Webster (1828) defines Law, “A rule, particularly an established or permanent rule, prescribed by the supreme power of a state to its subjects, for regulating their actions, particularly their socials actions.”  The American Declaration speaks of the “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God,” which Webster defines, “Law of nature, is a rule of conduct arising out of natural relations of human beings established by the Creator, and existing prior to any positive precept.”  In other words, since it is natural law, it is binding whether or not it is known in writing, or enforced by a worldly government.  Why are these things natural, though?  Romans makes the truth known that even the nations without the written law have an inward knowledge thereof; “Who having known the ordinance of God, that the ones practicing such things are worthy of death, not only do them, but also approve the ones practicing them.”  -Romans 1:32 (He speaks here of the ignorant nations, see v.18-31).  Chapter 2 furthers this point.  (Romans 2:11-16)  Why, though, is this Law common and binding to all men?  Why are these “natural,” and we do not do them, yea, cannot without the Holy Spirit’s power?  Genesis 1:26-27, “Let Us make man in Our own image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the heavens, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over all the creepers creeping on the earth.  And God created the man in His own image; in the image of God He created Him.  He created them male and female.”  Since mankind is created in the image of God, men are to be like God.  This is the same concept at work in Acts 11:26, “And the disciples were first called Christians at Antioch,” and also in Romans 8:29, “because whom He foreknew, He also predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son, For Him to be the First-born among many brethren.”  We were made in the image of God, and in Christ, we are conformed to His image.  This bears an important distinction.  Because we are created in God’s image, we are made in such a way as we may only properly function as He does.  In other words, right morality, character, or behavior is when a man acts like God.  Of course, this does not mean that a man should act as if he is God.  This would be a flat denial of the very Ultimate Reality now under examination.  So when I say men are to be like God, I mean it in the sense of principle and character, not at all in the sense of station or essence.  Jesus Christ is indeed, “Very God and very man,” (Creed of Chalcedon, AD 451, see Hebrews 1:3), so it is true that Jesus Christ is God, but men are not God.  As our Savior Himself said, “It is enough for the disciple to become as his teacher.” –Matthew 10:25  So then, when God reveals His Law in the Old Testament, He is, in fact, revealing to us what He is like.  This comes out especially in the fourth commandment, “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy…for in six days Jehovah created the heavens and the earth and the sea, and all that is in them, and on the seventh day He rested.  It is on account of this that Jehovah blessed the Sabbath day, and sanctified it.” –Exodus 20:8,11.  He here outlines particularly for us the reason for His mandate on our behavior.  It follows the pattern,”You shall do or be this, because I am this way.”  The principle is highlighted in a much more straightforward way in the passage, “Be holy because I am holy.” –I Peter 1:16, quoting Leviticus 19:2.  Even before this, He says to Abraham, “I am the Almighty God!  Walk before Me and be perfect…” –Genesis 17:1b
            All this to say that who God IS forms the foundation for understanding right human behavior.  This principle is firmly rooted in the Old Testament Law.  The Ten Commandments with explanations as per God’s Being follow:
1.  And God spoke all these words, saying, I am Jehovah your God who brought you out from the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage; you shall not have any other gods before Me.
This commandment comes with its own explanation.  “I am Jehovah your God…” Considering that Jehovah is God makes having any other god positively absurd.  When the Israelites on Mt. Carmel saw the fire from Heaven come down on Elijah’s altar, notice their response, “And the people saw, and they fell on their faces, and said, Jehovah, He is the God, Jehovah He is the God.”  -I Kings 18:39
2.  You shall not make a graven image for yourself, or any likeness in the heavens above, or in the earth beneath, or in the waters under the earth, you shall not bow to them and you shall not serve them; for I am Jehovah your God, a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children on the third and on the fourth generation to those that hate Me, and doing kindness to thousands, to the ones loving Me and to the ones keeping My commandments.
This commandment is elaborated on in Romans 1, which describes the descent of the lost.  “Because knowing God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful.  But they became vain in their reasonings, and their undiscerning heart was darkened.  Professing to be wise ones, they became foolish, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into the likeness of an image of corruptible man, and of birds, and four-footed animals, and creping things.’ –Romans 1:21-23.  This command is again given with a built-in explanation: “For Jehovah your God is a jealous God.”  (In Hebrew, El Qana)  This word, which we translate as “jealous” nearly every time, is used sparsely throughout the Old Testament, and a few times the New Testament.  (47 and 5, respectively)  The word is quite frequently used justly, that is, jealousy is a good thing in most occurrences of the word.  Quite notably is the time that appears in Numbers 5, the Trial of Jealousy.  This passage describes the procedure for a husband to know whether his wife has cheated on him.  Thus jealousy is for the married.  The purpose of associating a marital behavior with the prohibition of idolatry will be discussed under marriage.
3.  You shall not take the name of Jehovah your God in vain, for Jehovah will not leave unpunished the one taking His name in vain.
The built–in reasoning of the third commandment appeals to the justice of God.  But why?  Because God IS, and He is worthy.  To take His name in vain means to esteem Him as worthless.  But He is not, in fact, worthless.  He is glorious, (Hebrew- heavy), and He is worthy, (Greek- deserving).  As such He will not tolerate those who refuse to recognize His worth, but in their discounting of Him, He will judge them.  And consider this: He calls Himself by name in this command twice.  I AM.  Think this of it: in proper consideration of who God IS, what man can take His name lightly?  What man can abuse the Name wherein is contained the summary of all truth?
4.  Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.  Six days you shall labor and do all your work, and the seventh day is a Sabbath to Jehovah your God; you shall not do any work, you, and your son, and your daughter, and your male slave, and you slave-girl, your livestock, and your stranger who is in your gates.  For in six days Jehovah created the heavens and the earth and the sea, and all that is in them, and on the seventh day He rested.  It is on account of this that Jehovah blessed the Sabbath day, and sanctified it.
The fourth commandment comes with the longest explanation, making it the longest command of the ten.  The pattern of, “Do or be this because I am this way,” as stated above, is greatly at work here. 
5.  Honor your father and mother, so that your days may be long on the land which Jehovah your God is giving to you. 
As Ephesians 6:2 says, “which is the first commandment with a promise.”  In this we see Jesus obeying, which (for He is God) demonstrates the origin of this commandment in the Divine Nature.  John 8:49-50 says, “Jesus answered, I do not have a demon; but I honor My Father, and your dishonor Me.  But I do not seek My glory; there is One who seeks and judges.”  The first four commandments deal with men and God, and the final six deal with man and his neighbor.  Thus we actually have a picture in these commandments of the inner workings of the Trinity.  Jehovah is the One God in three Persons, which means that He relates to Himself, which actually forms the foundation of all earthly interpersonal relations.  The concepts of love, respect, authority, and honor may all be seen within God Himself, providing the example and the Truth for those arenas in our own lives.  See this in John 17:1-5
6.  You shall not murder.
God is Life.  “Jesus says to him, I am the Way and the Truth and the Life.  No one comes to the Father but by Me.” –John 14:6 “For even as the Father has life in Himself, so He gave also to the Son to have life in Himself.” –John 5:26   The prohibition of murder is found even earlier when Jehovah speaks to Noah and his family.  “Whoever sheds man’s blood, his blood shall be shed by man.  For He made man in the image of God.”  - Genesis 9:6 Not to mention that God accused Cain, though no law was yet written down.  “What have you done? The voice of the blood of your brother cries to Me from the ground.”  -Genesis 4:10 It is evident that murder is wrong because it is contrary to God’s nature.  In Genesis 9 it cites that man was made in God’s image.  To murder then is to deny that truth.
7.  You shall not commit adultery.
“And know that Jehovah your God He is God, the faithful God, keeping the covenant and mercy to those who love Him, and to those who keep His commands, to a thousand generations.”  -Deuteronomy 7:9 “And the man said, this now at length is bond from my bone, and flesh from
my flesh, for this shall be called Woman, because this has been taken out of man.  Therefore, a man shall leave his father and his mother, and shall cling to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.”  -Genesis 2:23-24 Note also that adultery and idolatry are closely linked in the Scripture, the former being the fleshly version and the latter being the spiritual version.  Hosea 1:2 illustrates this point: “The beginning o the speaking of Jehovah by Hosea.  And Jehovah said to Hosea, Go take to yourself a wife of adultery, and children of adultery.  For fornicating she goes fornicating away from Jehovah.”  This parallel makes sense considering the plan for intimacy and covenant faithfulness in both relationships.  But the earthly is a shadow of the heavenly.  (See also Ezekiel 16, John 3:29, James 4:4, and Rev. 21)
8.  You shall not steal.
God gives.  “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variance or shadow of turning.” -James 1:17.  Who is man to take for himself what Almighty God has not given to him?  “The earth is Jehovah’s and the fullness of it.” –Psalm 24:1
9.  You shall not testify a witness of falsehood against your neighbor. 
God is Truth.  (John 14:6)  He cannot lie.  (Titus 1:2, Heb. 6:18)
10.  You shall not covet your neighbor’s house, you shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or his male slave, or his slave-girl, or his ox, or his ass, or anything that is your neighbor’s.
This commandment receives a very interesting commentary in Hebrews 13:5-6, “Set your way of life without money-loving, being satisfied with present things, for He has said, Not at all will I leave you, not at all will I forsake you, never! So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not be afraid, what shall man do to me?”  So it appears that knowing God makes covetousness absurd.  This stands to Scripture and reason.  Who, obsessing God in Christ, and the riches of His glory, would then instantly turn to his neighbor and want what he has?  Are these things not petty to him who knows God?  And consider this yet: God is not covetous.  He has everything!  Who are we to doubt and rebel against the All-Wise distribution of Providence?
            It is evident, therefore, even in only the Ten Commandments, that the Being of God is the driving force behind their existence.  Yet the Law must surely come into consideration from another angle: the Gospel.  Considering Law in light of Gospel was a particularly raging controversy in the Apostolic period, meaning that we now have a great host of literature on the topic: Galatians, Hebrews, and a fair chunk of Romans and James, and a representation in most other epistles.  And in our day we can see God’s wisdom for its great attention in the canon.
            When considering that the Law is a revelation of who God IS, the statement, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," (Romans 3:23) makes all the more sense.  Sin as falling short of the glory of God, and not merely,”Sin is lawlessness.”  (I John 3:4) or the defiance of a written code, but in fact, a denial of the Ultimate Reality, it is in fact all the more grievous.  God’s laws are far from arbitrary.  They are His very nature.  So beyond merely defying a code, mankind has defied GOD.  This is a serious problem.
            God created man in His own image to be like Him.  Now, that is, after the Fall, Man lost his communion with God.  Why?  Now he is stained, that is, part of him is no longer like God in any way.  In perfect purity and holiness God thrust man away.  Nothing unlike Himself, yea, defying Him, can remain in His presence.  Yet God still loves this peculiar creation of His, this Divine Image in rebellion.  No doubt the devil had a party for the Fall of Man.  “Now God will have to destroy all of them in His holy wrath.  Muahaha!”  Au Contraire, God has a plan.
            So off He goes on a four-millennium-long plan to rescue His peculiar men from their rebellious plight.  But lest we think that God had an obligation to us for this consider again His nature.  The men He loves have incurred His wrath.  His nature automatically toasts ungodliness and imperfection.  Now that is us.  What shall He do?  Toast us?  Or remain near us despite our sin?  He must do the former.  His nature demands it.  But His love is still in place.  And though we are under His wrath, He earnestly desires us to be reconciled to Him.  But how can this be?  Behold the glorious unfolding of history:
            He wipes the earth clean in Noah’s day and shortens men’s lives.  He picks Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob to father His chosen nation, Israel.  He shows His might to Israel in the Exodus.  He sets forth an entire code of laws for morality, justice, and sacrifice, revealing His holiness, man’s imperfection, and a type of what Messiah must do to reconcile men to God.  The sacrificial system gives the context needed to understand why why’s behind Jesus’ atonement, etc.  He demonstrates man’s imperfection and his might through Israel for a millennium.  Failed priests, judges, prophets, and kings leave want for a perfect One.  He sends Jesus.  Jesus is perfect, fulfills the law, becomes the Perfect One in several titles, and sheds His blood, reconciling man to God, yea, even reconciling God’s nature: His Holy Wrath with His perfect Love.  Now He may show His love to objects of His wrath: this is the Gospel.  Selah.
             So now what about the Law within the context of the Gospel?  This seems to be the secondary controversy in Church history, the first being who God is, which is indeed deserving of the primary place.  It ties in closely with the heart of the Gospel, and sanctification especially.  This is in fact the topic which drove this writing.
            In apostolic times, the question among Jewish Christians was whether the law was to be clung to or discarded in the salvation and sanctification processes.  That it has nothing to save us with was clearly debunked, “By works of the Law shall no flesh be justified,” –Galatians 2:16.   And then its role in sanctification is debunked shortly, “This only I desire to learn from you, did you receive the Spirit by works of Law or by hearing of faith?  Are you so foolish?  Having begun in the Spirit, are you now being perfected in the flesh?  Did you suffer so much vainly, if indeed it was vainly?  Therefore the One supplying the Spirit to you and working works of power in you, is it by works of Law or by hearing of Faith?  Even as Abraham believed God, and it was imputed to Him as righteousness.  Know, therefore, that the ones of faith, these are the sons of Abraham.”  -Galatians 3:2-7   Plainly, works of Law give neither salvation nor sanctification.  Selah.
            This has a meaning today just as it had two thousand years ago.  Same meaning, postmodern application.  Great error is rampant in this age, at the least in the USA, for I have greatly limited knowledge of other places.  Doubtless in Africa and China first generation Christian are freer from this vice than the entrenched post Christian culture and Church of the West.  But this is not the concern.  The postmodern Western application of these principles does in no way invalidate them to all others.  Behold men need Jesus!  This is universal.
            Two great erroneous camps exist which fight tooth and nail against one another for supremacy.  Yet both err and ignore the same truth.  They are the essential equivalent of the ancient Pharisees and Sadducees.  They are the Conservatives and the Liberals.  Conservatives make the case that Scripture is without error, hold to all the major doctrines, faithfully attend church and tithe, trying ever to perfect their walk with the Lord through any means they can find.  This is legalism.  A stinging aura of methodology and moralism is alive and well in conservatism.  Endless books on “how-to” perform the various facets of the Christian life, coupled with sermons that tell the believer what they ought to do a hundredfold more than who God IS, has left a culture of Christian who may as well be Mormons for all the world is aware.  The difference between Christianity and Mormonism is not a matter of a few moral technicalities.  Mormons worship a different god, not Jehovah.  The lives that are changed by this repugnant heresy demonstrate the current active power of legalism.  Yet the “changed lives” in many of these legalistic circles is no more than a farce.  Folks put on a happy, morally sound façade and go through life not with Christ, but with the power of a strictly moral social institution breathing down their necks.  This is legalism and hypocrisy.
            The other great camp now so strong is the Liberals.  They might have their share of legalism, but it is a different brand.  Their differences are marked by a “do not” attitude on the right, and a “do” attitude on the left.   While conservatism calls out social ills as sin, they largely ignore ministry at large (service to the poor, evangelism, world relief), and thus are characterized as “do not.”  The Liberals, on the other hand, ignore sin, allowing it, but adding that they are charitable and participate in “changing the world.”  All this seems to suggest the solution that all Christians should take sin seriously AND do charitable work.  Yet this is not the answer.
            What Christians need is Jesus Christ, Himself.  Christianity without Jesus would basically by Judaism, which in our present day offers no hope to its followers after the destruction of the temple.  Listen to how the Law works:  “But the Scripture shut up all together under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to the ones believing.”  -Galatians 3:22  The Law is good, and it describes to us the nature of God.  But the general principle of the Law, indeed of any law, is that good is rewarded and evil is punished.  The Gospel tells us that those who believe will never be punished, though they are evil, but will instead be rewarded, though they have never done enough good.  How can this be?  Only through Jesus!  He took our punishment and gave us His reward.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Joseph Finished Strong

            Joseph was the eleventh of Jacob’s twelve sons, and he was Jacob’s favorite.  He was rather spoiled as a child and didn’t know when to shut up.  His father gave him an expensive multi-colored coat, and his brothers envied him.  So they sold him to slavery.  He went to Egypt and worked so well for his master that his master set him in charge of the entire household, until his wife framed Joseph and he was sent to prison, where he was again entrusted with administration.  Eventually, he interpreted Pharaoh’s dream and became second in Egypt.  When his brothers came to him later, he forgave them and eventually treated them with kindness.   When he died, he spoke by faith of the Exodus, commanding the Israelites to take his bones out of the land with them. 
            Joseph was well-established in Egypt.  His wife was from there, his children had grown up there, now his father’s whole clan was living with him in the land.  He could have set his heart on Egypt and its glory and riches, which were all effectively his.  But in his death he chose to look forward to the Israelite’s inheritance of God’s promise.
             He demonstrated courage really throughout his life, in every administrative position he held, he never once (that we have recorded) compromised and used his authority for his own gain, but he always worked diligently and feared God.  Even when his master’s wife tempted him, he refused, saying, “How can I do this great evil, and sin against God?”  He knew that God was on the throne and therefore considered it unthinkable to sin against Him.
            On his deathbed, he called his brethren to him, and left instructions as to his bones.  He did not dwell on his own success in Egypt on his deathbed, but rather on God’s promise to His (and his) people.  In this he chose humility, even after a life of stellar success both before God and man.  He was rich and righteous, an exceedingly rare combination.  But he did not boast.  He trusted God and looked forward to the inheritance of God’s promises.
            After Joseph died, he was put in a coffin in Egypt, but we can be sure that the people of Egypt and Israel alike mourned his death.  But even he did not speak of mourning, but of the promises.  May we likewise consider God’s promises of greater importance than our accomplishments. 

Nehemiah-Champion of the Lord

            Nehemiah was the cupbearer for the king of Persia during the captivity of the Jews.  Many Jews had returned to the Promised Land, but they were in disarray.  The walls of Jerusalem, which were needful for the city to be defensible, were in shambles.  They had never been rebuilt when the Jews returned at first, and the people in the city were living in the midst of the rubble.  When Nehemiah heard this, he wept, fasted, and prayed before God, confessing his peoples’ sins, and begging God to fulfill His promises to Israel, so that the people may live in safety again.  Then the king asked Nehemiah one day why he was sad, because he looked upset.  Nehemiah prayed silently as he explained the matter to the king.  The king asked him what he needed, and Nehemiah listed the supplies.  The king then commissioned him to go rebuild the wall.
            In the process of rebuilding the wall, and later ruling as governor of Judah, he ran into a lot of obstacles.  Enemies, upset people among the Jews, despair and threats, even sin among the rulers of the people.  Nehemiah confronted each of them without fear, because he feared God.  The wall was rebuilt in 52 days, and he ruled the people wisely in godliness as the governor.  He was a champion because he overcame every obstacle set in his way because of his fear of God, and did exactly what God intended, rebuilding the wall, rebuilding the people, and ruling them in godliness and peace.  This is a tough duty, but Nehemiah did it well.
            He impacted the course of history because prior to his administration, the Jews were feeble and still living in sin, but Nehemiah led them to strength and righteousness.  He was yet another stepping stone of the Jews on History’s march to the Messiah.  Daniel prophesied specifically concerning the rebuilding of the wall and its relation to the coming of Messiah.  (Daniel 9:25)

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Des Moines Y Camp


            Yesterday, we as Launch visited the Des Moines Y Camp along the Des Moines River near Fraser, Iowa.  It was first of all quite unlike any camp we have visited yet.  It is along the river, so it has a canoe ramp.  The Dragoon Trail, a series of Iowa roads which follows the Des Moines River, goes right through the camp, dividing it in two.  Along the road leading up to the camp are signs that indicate the driver must slow down, all the way to 10 mph.  When I first drove through there on my way to Boone a few weeks ago, I had no idea what I was running into, but was delighted to see such a beautiful and well-organized camp.  The other unique thing is that it is divided again by the Boone & Scenic Valley Railroad, an old coal line which is now used for tourism, and takes folks on old-fashioned train rides through the beautiful Des Moines River Valley.  The railroad’s Des Moines River bridge is right by the camp.
            I ended up with many questions, but I will mostly share the ones I wrote down.
1.  When was the camp established?
2.  Was it the vision of one man or of a group?
3.  What is the history of the YMCA in Iowa?
4.  Why was this spot chosen for the camp?
            I list all these questions together because they were answered for me in one monologue.  The Boone YMCA was one of the first in the state, but did not join the Des Moines YMCA until recently, and was not involved in the camp.  The camp was founded in 1919.  The YMCA of Greater Des Moines had been looking for a camp for a while, but had hitherto only had access to Camp Foster, near Okoboji, which was a long journey by train in 1912.  They went there several summers, but were looking for a place of their own.  Howard Crawford and George Weber, two leaders of the Des Moines YMCA, went on the Des Moines-Fort Dodge train to see a property along the Des Moines River which was for sale near Fraser, which at the time was a booming mine town of 12,000 people.  They decided not to buy it, but as they were waiting at the station, another man from the area told them that an old dance hall was for sale, which had been quite popular before it was closed by the constable a few years before due to some recent stabbings.  So the two men walked out to the dance hall, and decided to buy it.
5.  What is the biggest change that has come about since you’ve been director?
            My original question was, in the last ten years, but the director, who gave us our tour, had been there twelve, so I extended it.  He said the biggest change was the retention rate.  Their rate at his arrival was 11%, meaning that about one out of ten campers from one summer came back the next summer.  Now it is at 78%, an impressive figure, but softened by the fact that they do some medical specialty camps which are not found elsewhere, such as diabetes camp, kids with cancer camp, siblings of cancer patients camp, and the like.
6.  What do you want your campers to leave with?
            I never actually asked this question, because I considered it sufficiently answered when the director explained, “We’re a seed-planting camp.” I assumed, therefore, that their goal is that the kids leave with the Gospel, so I didn’t ask the question.
            One thing that was very different at the Y Camp versus Hidden Acres is the way the staff are handled.  They have established tracks, set responsibilities, and they are not allowed to help another department unless they are asked to by that department.  This avoids burning them out completely.  They will have up and down times of the year, but that’s understandable.  They aren’t giving their all every week of the year.  Here at Hidden Acres, we experience a lot more “Department-hopping” as I would call it, jumping from one thing to another from week to week, or even hour to hour.  Of course, that is the job of Launch, anyway, so that makes sense.  We have our reasons for the way we do it, but they way they do it, they have much lower staff turnaround. 
            Another idea I found quite exciting was their concept of “Boys will be boys” camp.  This allows boys to act like boys with very few restrictions.  This is not really a concept that Hidden Acres as a whole could implement, but I have been churning through my head ways to implement it, in a controlled way, in my own cabins this summer.  Boys really aren’t allowed to be rowdy in school anymore, they are expected to act like girls.  It’s lame.  So my Rule #3 last year was, “Be rowdy, but not nasty.”  That seemed to work pretty well, but I want to have some more exciting adventures with them this year.
            The thing that I appreciated perhaps the most about them was their sense of history.  They are currently in the process of interviewing old veterans about what the camp used to be like, etc., and have hired an author from Boone to write a camp history book for them, with stories and lore.  I would love to see something like this done at Hidden Acres, and it would be even better to do now for us, because most of the founding fathers of camp are still alive.  I love history, so the sense of their continuation of the path set before them by their forefathers was particularly exciting for me.