Church Camp Changes Lives
- By President Matt Proctor
- Published 03 17, 2025

Church camp changes lives, and this year you can play a part without ever sleeping in a bunk. I donāt know if youāve ever been to church camp, but it was one of my childhood highlights. Why?
I could say the fun activitiesĀ like shaving cream wars, ziplining, goofy Bible skits, bellyflop contests, silly songs in the mess hall, and crazy youth minister games. (Did you ever play āchubby bunnyā?)
I could say the camp romancesĀ between awkward braggy junior high boys (āI put the āstudā in Bible studyā) and infatuated girls (āHe held my hand in prayer circle, so weāre getting pretty seriousā).
I could say the new friends like carpetball king Robbie, Walter who loved playing pranks, Kelly who became a missionary, and Teresa whoās now OCC faculty and still my friend 40 years later.
I could say the distraction-free environment. Getting kids away from their screens and into Godās Word is transformational, and I memorized more Scripture at camp than anywhere else.
But after almost a hundred weeks of camp, Iāll tell you what makes it special: the camp staff. In the midst of hot days, hot dogs, hard bunks, and half-size hooligans, God works through these unsung heroesāpreachers, youth ministers, volunteers, and college students running on 5 Red Bulls and 40 minutesā sleepāto change kidsā lives. Itās only a week, but their ministry leaves a lifelong impression.
You might not serve on a camp staff this summer, but you can still play a part. Iāll show you how, but first letās play a game. Iāll tell three brief storiesāyou see if you can spot the common denominator.
1. In 1947, a crew-cut 11-year-old boy attended junior week at Lake Region Christian Assembly in Indiana. The young boy met a Bible-college-kid-soon-to-be-missionary named Bernie and wondered, āIs God calling me to be a missionary?ā The answer was yes, so that 11-year-old committed himself to missions that week. The boyās name was Ziden Nutt, and the missions ministry he startedāGNPIāhas now shared the gospel with over 195 million people around the world.
2. In 1981, Matt Stafford attended high school week at Camp Sooner in Oklahoma, planning to be an engineer. There, Matt met a cool-Bible-college-kid-soon-to-be-youth-minister named Richard. ā80ās ācoolā probably included a neon headband or Ocean Pacific shorts, but it also included a boombox Richard carried all week, playing Keith Green tapes. Between the sermons, songs, and Richardās words, Matt decided, āThere will always be enough engineers, but there will never be enough harvest workers. I can be one.ā Now an OCC professor, Matt has sent hundreds more into the harvest field.
3. In 2020, Kristen Whaley attended high school week in South Dakotaās NebWyoDak Camp. There she met a Bible-college-student-soon-to-be-preacher named Colton. The tall, cute Iowa boy didnāt catch Kristenās eye (though other girls were crushing on him), but Coltonās talk about Bible college and the need for kingdom workers caught Kristenās ear. In 2021, Kristen enrolled at Ozark, where she met a tall, cute Missouri boy named Carl Proctor. (Kristen is now my daughter-in-law.) This summer, Carl and Kristen will serve at a camp in Canada because they believeā¦church camp changes lives.
You noticed it, didnāt you? Three stories, three young people, three church camps, three lives changed. (And through those three, many more have been reached for Christ.) But did you notice the other common denominator?
In all three stories, a Bible college student at camp played a pivotal role. Hereās the sad news: there are fewer Bible college students serving on church camp staffs these days.
You can change that. Keep reading to find out howā¦
Twenty years ago, Bible colleges sent out ācamp teamsāācollege students who traveled to nine weeks of summer camp where they learned kidsā names, taught classes, led worship, played games, led āfamily groups,ā and challenged campers to consider the call to ministry. (I served two summers on OCC camp teams, which is how I met my wife Katie. Church camp changes lives!)
But weāve now lost several Bible colleges. My brother Mike has served as a camp manager the last 20 years, and camp managers will tell you: there simply arenāt as many Bible college camp teams to staff weeks of church camp these days.
What if Ziden Nutt had never met Bible-college-kid Bernieāor Matt Stafford had never met Bible-college-kid Richardāand never made their commitments at church camp?
It saddens me to think of the missed opportunities: the campers who never meet young people preparing for ministry, the relationships never built, the conversations never had, the decisions never made, the ministries never started, the people around the world never reached.
You can change that. Hereās howā¦
Every summer, OCC sends out camp teams. This summer weāve got seven teams going to over 60 weeks of camp in 16 different states. But we get more requests from camps than we can fill. We donāt like saying ānoā to those requests, but Iāll let our Vice President of Enrollmentāand guy in charge of camp teamsāBob Witte tell you why we have to.
āThe biggest reason we canāt send more teams is vehicles. We donāt have enough vans. And because our fleet is getting old, we also canāt say āyesā to some faraway campsāwe just donāt trust our vans.ā
Over the next few years, OCC plans to update and expand our van fleet. Weāll put hundreds of thousands of miles on these vehicles (with college students inside), so safe, high-quality new vans are important, but not cheap. The cost per van is approximately $50,000.
Would you help us purchase a $50,000 new van for summer 2025?Ā
Jesus once rode a donkey, the apostle Paul sailed in boats, Philip took a chariot ride, and the Lordās servants have used oxcarts, horseback, bicycles, motorcycles, planes, trains, and automobiles to go do the Lordās work.
This van for summer 2025 will take college students to do the Lordās work at church camps. There OCC camp teams will meet young men and women (some named Matt and Kristen, though probably not named Ziden) who, because of our studentsā influence, will answer Godās call to ministry.
You may not serve on a camp staff this summer. (Though I hope you do.) But even if you never sleep on a hard bunk, eat hot dogs, or wrangle rowdy kids, you can help send Bible college students who will.
By the way, itās not just the campers whose lives are changed. When I was 19, I worked on a summer camp staffāwashing dishes, chopping campfire wood, collecting trash, cleaning buildingsābut I was in a Jonah season. I was running from Godās call to ministry and planned on returning to the University of Iowa when the summer was over.
But an OCC camp team spent two weeks at my camp that summer. I saw in those OCC students something I didnāt haveāsomething I wantedāand one of the reasons I surrendered to Godās call by summerās end was their influence. I transferred to Ozark, and my lifeās never been the same.
Church camp really does change lives. So thanks for considering playing a part this summer.
Yours in Christ,
Matt Proctor
President
P.S. You made a huge difference! A few months ago, I sent a letter describing the wild temperature swings in our Multi-Purpose Building. Your gifts purchased new HVAC thermostatsā¦which created a warm (but not too warm) and welcoming environment for our hundreds of Preaching-Teaching Convention guests last month. Thank you!
Your gift is a sacred trust. We promise to honor your generosity by using your gift in the most effective way to train men and women for Christian service. The project described here reflects OCCās ministry needs at the time of writing. Your gift will go to the general fund to be used where it is needed most when received to prepare students to take the gospel to the world.
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