My neck is burning because I forgot to put suntan lotion on it. Fortunately, that was the only downside of a great day of work camp. Yesterday began the fourth year of Camp SMILE, a middle school work camp that I coordinate with two other local youth ministers. It’s something we’ve shaped over the years. Each day is a different act of service and throughout the camp our purpose is to build community while exposing them to a world that is outside of theirs. Is the camp perfect? No, we tweak and iron out details up until the last day but, it has our heart and it produces fruit.
On top of personalizing a work camp I’ve found it fruitful to outsource the experience. In fact the easiest way to coordinate a work camp for your youth ministry is with an organization such as Group Work Camps or Heart Work Camp.
Whether you outsource your camp or run your own both can bare fruit and have a life long impact on the lives of teens. But, which one is better? Which one do you prefer? Below I have both pros and cons of an outsourced and home grown work camp experience:
Outsource:
Home Grown:
Our student ministry has done both and both experiences have produced great fruit. Obviously the battle comes down to finances and control over creativity, all of us are going to be swayed one way or the other.
What are your thoughts on outsourcing work camps?
What are your thought on the home grown?
Go to our NEW Facebook Page: Marathon Youth Ministry to share your thoughts on our poll