You just
never know when God is going to come. My friend Jeff is convinced He speaks to
him through billboards and he has more than once told us stories to back it up.
Sometimes you will meet someone and a conversation with this perfect stranger
will turn into an answer to a prayer or confirm something you felt God was
telling you. Before fish camp this year I was praying for His direction, what
scripture to teach, how to teach it and what would it look like. OH He answered
and He blew me away, again.
God brings exactly
he right boys to KOZ at just the right moment. Some of the boys come from
intact families, some from hard places without male role models. Lots of time
they will be mad that their father is a non-participant and they can be mad at
men in general for breaking promises and abandoning them even to just their
jobs. They don't always know that that is the demon that binds them to anger,
frustration, confusion and distrust, but it is.
When God
gave me the scripture Luke
15:11-32 The Parable of the Lost Son, I was a bit taken back. I know that lots of
boys who have never experienced a loving father or even a stand-up man in their
lives don't get the concept of a loving Father in stories, much less heaven. My
first reaction to God was, "ugggg."
So
"Fathered by God" was what He wanted me to teach them and we let the
Holy Spirit lead us through scripture and the concept of God being our father.
The boys we open to talking and each morning, afternoon and evening we led the
conversations from stink bait and lost fish to God and His love for us no
matter what.
The fishing
was slow the first day or two. We studied the Freshwater Fishing Manual of
North America and had a teacher come in for a class on cat fishing. Once the
boys got in the groove they started to figure out how to catch the fish. They
caught perch and drum, catfish and carp. They took some of the fish and learned
how to fillet them and we ate them that night. Luckily we had planned our meals
around the chance our fish catches were on the slower side.
I am a guy
who believes in being intentional in my work for God. I can be fluffy and
colorful and tell a good story but when it comes down to it, where is God in
your life, do you know Christ in your heart and what would life look like if He
was there for you, is where I like to go. Some folks will argue that people
need to learn, understand and study for a period of time to be ready to accept
Christ into their hearts. I am from the belief that if the thief on the cross
next to Jesus could accept Christ, (Luke 23:43) into his heart without a three
week study then it must be a heart issue. If it is a heart issue then when a
kid at one of our summer camps is broken or feels led through his heart to ask
Christ to father him, then I say yes.
One morning,
about the third day, the boys were catching fish. Garrison had not had any luck
the first day or two but on this morning he caught two in a row and they were
nice catfish. That day I walked from boy to boy checking on them and talking
fishing. Garrison was sitting on the back corner of the dock. He was the most
patient of all the boys I think. He sat still and rarely took his hook out of
the water, where most fish are caught by the way. I sat next to him, a cool
breeze still blowing from across the lake as the morning sun began to crest the
lake cliffs.
"You
did good today," I told him. We sat quietly looking at the ripples and
reflections. Garrison is a young man of few words. "This morning I prayed
for Jesus to come into my heart and that is why I think I caught them,"
were his words back to me. I was stunned. I fumbled around in my mind.
"You said you prayed for Jesus to come into your heart this morning,"
I repeated. "Yes," he said. My heart soared. God, You did that to
show me. You did that to let me know You were with us. You showed Yourself to
him. I could barely hold back the tears of joy.

The sunrise
didn't seem so early the next day. The boys acknowledged their new life in
Christ and desire to be fathered by God as the pink sky turned bright and warm
on the horizon.
Not every
camp or outing is as powerful as this one. I pray they are and have seen Him
come for the boys in many ways, healing, lives saved, bonding, release from
agreements that were untrue and more. I love how He is joyful and playful. I
love how He takes these times and uses them to do mighty things.
Lord, thank
you. Thanks for loving on these boys, on me, on the men and women who
faithfully pour into these times for You. See ya soon? Maybe hunt camp? I pray
we do.
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