When I was a teenager, 89% of my energy at summer camp and church retreats was spent trying to kiss girls. Tender Ronis if you will. The important word to note in that first sentence is "trying." I know this may shock many of you, but I was not a ladies man. I didn't even want to be one but there's a secret guild of pastor's kids that makes you misbehave. They approached me when I turned 13 and informed me that as the eldest son in our family, it was my job to live up to the song "Son of a Preacher Man." So I did what I had to do for the safety of my family, the PKG (Pastor's Kid Guild) is a dangerous bunch. I've said too much.
But times have changed. I'm a dad of two little girls now that will one day go to summer camp or a church retreat. And when they do, some punk kid with a name like "Thayyne" is going to try to make purple with them. (Boys are signified as representing the color blue and girls the color pink. When they kiss, they make purple, so it's common to hear youth ministers yelling "no making purple" at camp.)
And knowing that I can only arm my kids with so much sarcasm and Godly wisdom, I decided to create something youth ministers and leaders can use to dramatically reduce the amount of making out at camp. Taking lessons from Sun Tzu's Art of War and Greene's 48 Laws of Power, I have created the "Reduction Of Making Purple" Manifesto, or the "ROMP Manifesto."
1. Eliminate wartime propaganda
When Mao was fighting against the Nationalists in China, they used all sorts of propaganda to encourage their enemy to give up and join their side. Think that same thing doesn't happen at camp? You're crazy. The first thing you want to do is make a rule that no pants with writing on the butt can be worn. I promise, even if you put a Bible verse on the butt, or as K-Mart recently did "True Love Waits," you're only asking for trouble. Start camp with the rule "the butt is not a billboard."
2. Encourage bad breath
In the eighth grade I used to date a girl named Sue. After every school dance, during which boys sat sweatily on one side and girls on the other while listening to Ace of Bass, we would walk to a local pizza joint. It used to kill me when Sue would eat Cool Ranch Doritos. Those may taste great, but it makes your breath smell like warm garbage. And Smartfood white cheddar popcorn has the same effect. It tastes good but makes your fingers and your mouth smell like throw up. So instead of having a well-stocked snack table or snack booth at camp, only offer bad breath items after 5PM. Call it the "garlic pickle rule." Don't sell gum or mints or other things that are going to make kids' mouths like Alpine ski resorts of freshness. Focus on things like Swiss cheese, beef jerky and other unpleasantly-flavored delights.
3. Know your enemy.
Weeks before camp or a retreat begins, go over the roster of people that will be attending with your staff. Put a check by the name of everyone you think is likely to at one point kiss someone. Go ahead and put a check by any of the pastor's kids. Don't be fooled by the dorks either. You might think the kids playing world of warcraft 82 hours a day aren't going to make out, but they will. As Sun Tzu says, "if you know the enemy and know yourself, your victory will not stand in doubt."
4. Don't create Gremlins.
In the movie, "Gremlins," the little creatures that were the star of the film got out of control if you fed them after a certain time. I look at kids and energy drinks the same way. Red Bull is not a beverage, it's a gateway liquid to camp kiss-a-thons. Don't let the kids load up on caffeine, but don't just throw the energy drinks away. The Art of War says that "a wise general makes a point of foraging on the enemy." Save those drinks for yourself, you're going to need them my friend.
5. Get an informant.
You need an inside man. Someone that can feed you information, like when someone is sneaking out or where the sneak out spot is. You'll be tempted to play this role yourself, but don't. Teens can spot a youth minister trying to act cool a mile away. Instead, find someone that will do the job for you if you give them an important sounding title like "assistant to the regional manager of no kissing."
6. Master the terrain.
Chances are, there are only a few places that kids could use for making purple. On the first day you get to camp, send out advance scouts. Have them analyze the area and take control of the high ground. Cabins your group isn't using, secluded spots by the lake, tool sheds, your enemy is like water flowing to a weak spot in a dam. Go there first and create a "kiss map" so instead of trying to cover an entire camp ground at midnight when two kids go missing, you can check the five or six possible spots.
7. Make a sacrifice.
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand was one of Napoleon's chief advisors. When Napoleon was first sent to exile, Talleyrand knew that he would try to retake France. He felt that Napoleon would destroy the country, so he actually helped speed up Napoleon's plans. He realized that the faster he could make Napoleon fail at his plans, the less harm it would cause France. You need to do the same thing at camp. Instead of fighting the making purple issue, make it really easy for one couple to kiss and then get caught. One of the best ways to beat the enemy is to crush what scientists call their "kissing spirit." OK, I made that phrase up, but the principle stands. Set a trap for two kids, give them a few seconds to kiss and then spring from the woods with your troops. As punishment, make them wear cow bells for the rest of camp. In addition to knowing where they are all times, you'll show the entire camp that the teenage kyrptonite, embarrassment, awaits anyone caught.
8. Never underestimate the enemy.
It's tempting to believe in the kindness of humanity. Resist that temptation. I know people that made purple on mission trips. My friend's parents thought he gained 40 pounds in high school from being a big eater and not drinking beer. My friend's new car got smashed at church in the parking lot yesterday and the church member hit and run without leaving a note. As the policeman that filed the report said, "even churches have squirrelly people." Don't think your kids that love sleeping in won't set their alarms to sneak out at four in the morning. Don't think that we won't use a prayer walk as a chance to go make out. Don't underestimate what we are capable of.
9. Never show your hand.
When you are sharing the rules at camp, don't reveal too many of your plans. Don't say things like "we'll be watching the lake shore and checking all the cabins at midnight to make sure everyone is in bed." If you told me that as a teen, what I would have heard is, "Avoid the lake and feel free to leave your cabin three minutes after midnight." As Sun Tzu advises, "By altering his arrangements and changing plans, the general keeps the enemy without definitive knowledge. By shifting his camp and taking circuitous routes, he prevents the enemy from anticipating his purpose."
10. Use chemical warfare.
Kids at camp should smell bad. That's part of camp. That's just what you do at a retreat. You should have a unique musk or potpourri of sweat, sun tan lotion and bootleg cookies. So on day one, use chemical warfare and go around to each dorm and confiscate body sprays, colognes and perfumes. Especially take the ridiculous ones like Axe and those new products that promise girls will rip your clothes off if you splash on a few drops of what smells like discount Drakkar or Cool Water cologne.
11. Embrace audio assaults.
You might not need to confiscate Prince's "Purple Rain" as I imagine today's teens have not discovered this fantastic record. But google a few songs before camp starts and make sure you never hear them played in the cabins. Soulja Boy's "Superman" although not a kiss inducing song, has some gross lyrics and should be removed. Lil' Wayne's new song "lollipop" should be eliminated at the gate. And the current number one song, "I kissed a girl," has obviously got to go. It's got the "k word" right there in the title. If you want to go old school fundamental, you can light them all on fire in a awesome bonfire of judgment. A bonus benefit is that everyone will smell smoky, which fits idea #10. (By the way, Kanye West's recent comparison of Soulja Boy to NAS is ridiculous.)
There are certainly other methods that work well when it comes to reducing camp make outs. But it's Monday and I didn't want to turn on the SCL firehose too hard and drown folks in words at the start of the week.
Did I miss one? Some technique that will work well? Let me know.
OH NO NOT THE FIREHOUSE! lol, ok that's a minor spelling error, I just felt like saying that.
ReplyDeleteAt our summer camps the counselor's made us believe that they were patrolling the woods making sure kids weren't out there. I would like to believe that they were out there, hunting down teenagers like oh-so-many Predators, but I know plenty of kids that snuck out of their cabins and not one got caught.
As both a member of the PKG and a veteran of student ministry, I can assure you of one thing...no matter what you do, you can't stop purple, you can only hope to contain it.
ReplyDeleteNo Testamints! No matter how effective they are in winning the lost souls to Christ, they make the breath smell better and holier!
ReplyDeleteOh...and the thing Hoover built is spelled "dam." "Damn" is what the heathens often mistake as God's last name.
Don't worry Jon. If the PKG comes after you I gots your back.
ReplyDelete-The Art of Waging War on Purpling-
ReplyDeleteYou didn't mention "fake free time"
Where everyone has "free time", but they are only allowed to play sports, do "glitter rabbit" crafts.
Both excellant choices because they left evidence of participation. After free time we'd do a body check for either "slick sweat heads" or glitter rabbits".
We worked really hard on our "kiss map" down pat. Especially the "cow pasture".
We did ban going to the cow pasture, but used the tactic of "cows are really dangerous creatures".
Thought I'd share a real song (seriously) that our junior high kids actually wrote:
Lyrics to LOVE SONG
- Chi Rho 2004 -
Love ...
begins with an L
and ends with an E
and Jesus loves me,
hey, hey, hey
Love ...
begins with a You
and ends with a me
and Jesus loves me,
hey, hey, hey
God ...
made leaves on the trees,
the birds and the bees,
and He loves us unconditionally
-chorus-
There's blue,
there's pink,
no purpling
God ...
He loves us a ton,
He gave us His son,
and Hes' #1,
He died for me
-chorus-
Sex ... is not Love
Love ... is not Sex
-chorus-
p.s. it really helps to have a lot of PKG on staff and kids who used to have checks by their names...it give you a head start.
I work in youth ministry and I always laugh when another youth worker tells me that their kids are good and they don't have to worry about purple. These are some great ideas...I love it!
ReplyDeletecowbells. I love it.
ReplyDeleteuh... I think you misspelled "dam" and probably lost a few fundamentalist readers in the process. Just a heads up.
ReplyDeleteYou must eliminate games that encourage physical contact of the opposite sex and games that require passing a card by suctioning it on your lips or passing lifesavers on toothpicks.
ReplyDeleteYou also have to limit the number of times you sing the verse of "friends" at the end of camp as this usually involves hand holding and is a way for the guy to tell the girl that they he will always be there for her and get them worked up.
Oh my - these cracked me up! My husband is at camp right now and teaching on 'dating'. I have to print these off and take them to him tonight. Hilarious, but oh so true!
ReplyDeleteI NEVER made out at church camp, Never. I can't even imagine.
ReplyDeleteBut only because I never went to camp. Dang! Dang! Dang!
Thank you for the stopping purple tips. Our church is going to camp in about 1.8 weeks, and I know, already, one couple is probably already plotting to make purple. I'll be sure to stock up on Cool Ranch Doritos and confiscate all perfume upon arrival. OOH, I also can get some GOOD informants. (Those younger kids without girlfriends/boyfriends are always willing to rat them out.)
ReplyDeleteThe male perpetrator at one of my youth camps was handcuffed to a tree in front of the girls' cabin, and the girls gave him a make-over.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what happened to the girl.
On #6...."flowing to a weak spot in a damn"?!
ReplyDeleteI know about the middle finger of grammar....but that's at least a double barrel salute and probably some other gestures as well!
I guess you should stop using the spellchecker on your copy of Microsoft HeathenXP....
Hahaha, oh man, as a former camp counselor this brings back so many memories! And Dan, we didn't actually patrol the woods during the night, but we did have MOP (Make Out Patrol) circulating during all night games carrying flashlights and large baseball bats to try and limit the amount of purple being made. As far as kids sneaking out of their cabins at night, I don't think we ever had an issue with that, it was always the counselors who were sneaking out (and not getting caught for the most part!)
ReplyDeleteSadly there is a lot truth in this post--not I know that because I was chasing girls at camp or nothing . . . No I was more likely the mole from #5. (My best friend was a PK.)
ReplyDeleteJon,
ReplyDeleteDam - structure to hold back water
Damn - what is said under the breath of many youth leader that has to wake up and walk the rounds at 3:30 in the morning
Our head youth pastor was in the army and loved to low crawl around our camp to try and catch people where they shouldn't. But I think the best deterrent happened one year all by itself. The first day at this camp out in the woods I found a very large copperhead snake sitting out in the open. After discussing the horror of a snake bite with many of them, word quickly spread that there were some very dangerous things just off in the darkness. This definitely cut down on the late night excursions into the woods.
So maybe bring a few snakes and plant them early around camp as a sort of psychological warfare. This may not work though with the Sunday snake handling crowd. You may have to use other tactics on them. Just a thought.
What about providing an honestly compelling reason for kids not to make purple? What? There isn't one? The whole kissing-leads to sex argument is true. Then why no sex? A Christian camp shouldn't be spouting off all the conventional consequentialist reasons for avoiding sex, instead they should be teaching that as Christians we adopt a peculiar ethic and seek to obey Christ because He died on the cross for our sins and we are grateful. Period. No more Sunday school secret police. Just teach the gospel.
ReplyDeleteI found the worse boyfriend I ever had at a retreat. He was horrible and mean but thats a side note. We didn't start dating till after the retreat. ANYWHO not the point but apparently a sore spot. The point was we played a game of nightly Capture the Flag where the girls had a flag and the boys had a flag and we would run around till 4 in the morning then get up at 8 and do it all over again. Needless to say it was the easiest way to make purple so yet another game to aviod at all cost! (Yes many of us purple makers would be called out the next day as "traitors"!)
ReplyDeleteMaybe you could turn Camp Smoocher into a 24/7 daylight camp. Take the Purple and add red, orange, yellow, green and blue, send them all threw a prism, and create white light, light that fills the camp day and night. That would reduce Purple (and sleep) having a well lit camp with no darkness for making out. (And while your at it you can teach about Joshua's Long Day!)
ReplyDeleteOK, I was going to make fun of you for using the word "damn" instead of "dam", but then I saw that you posted the item at a quarter til 4 in the morning, and I changed my mind.
ReplyDelete(OK, no I didn't. Jon, swearing on SCL?! How dare you! What would Psalty say? Or Bible Man? Or that little anime kid that traveled through time with a robot and an old man or something? What about the children?!)
this cracks me up... i worked at a summer camp and one of the duties was "roaming"...aka, wander around camp looking for kids having a MOS (make out session) This duty was especially fun when it involved weaving in and out of kids during an outside movie night
ReplyDeleteWe had a few streakers at our church camp, when I was a teen, so maybe kissing isn't so bad... LOL. Love your ideas, though.
ReplyDeleteAs a former camp counselor, it's important that as you're "Mastering the Terain" (#6), you take along a counselor of the opposite sex.
ReplyDeleteFor research purposes, right? He or she will give vital input from the view of a guy or girl. Find someone you're fond of and someone you trust who won't spoil your findings to other counselors. That way no one else will get the credit for finding crucial make-out spots.
Just for research ... yes. Sweet, sweet research.
my wife and I met working at a camp where the kids and the counselors were told "no purpling" is that how you spell that? I guess when counselors are kissing each other it can cause problems with staff unity, who'd a thunk?
ReplyDeleteYou're probably going to be far enough from city limits to fear an inspection from the fire marshall so just scoot the edge of the leader's bunk in front of the door so no one can get out. Problem solved.
ReplyDeleteNow for the daytime kissing...
No swimming together. When you see a purple substance spreading and rising to the top, you know just what happened underwater...time to clear the pool.
ReplyDeleteJust finished directing a week of junior high church camp. So could have used this a week ago!
ReplyDeleteWe had a camp pastor once that instituted the "cubit rule". The cubit, as described in biblical times, was the distance from the tip of your middle finger to your elbow. So, if there was at least one cubit in between you and the opposite sex, it's unlikely that anyone can get into trouble. A nice Biblical history lesson, as well as a purple deterant!
I loved this: '...an important sounding title like "assistant to the regional manager of no kissing."...'
ReplyDeletebecause you've just made him the Assistant to the Regional MONK. And, as we all know, Monks are all about the removal of purple.
Ha -
ReplyDeleteI swore in this post by accident. I wish it was a subtle reference to our society's desire to root out swearing instead of focusing on how we are mishandling the way we treat sex, but I'm not that smart. It was a typo.
Jon
A dating or engaged camp staff couple kissing or holding hands = a distraction.
ReplyDeleteA married camp staff couple kissing or holding hands = setting a healthy example.
This is the important lesson I learned when I was on staff at a Bible camp for the summer. My boyfriend (husband now, incidentally!) was three hours away from me working his summer job, so no problems for me there, but I found the theory amusing nonetheless!
I would just like to come clean. In high school I was basically the poster-child for faith...throughout our surrounding area. But I doubled as the poster-child for trouble. I never "made purple"...but there was a time when I was assumed to have.
ReplyDeleteMy church hosted a lock-in (another rule for no purple...no lock-ins). Well, a girl friend and I thought it would be the best thing in the world if we snuck into the boys' room, got a bunch of their boxers and hung them up all around the building.
Having successfully done this once, we wanted more. Going in for round two, we were almost home free when the boys decided to come in. We hid, thinking that they were only going to be a minute or two. The joke was on us. At 3AM, the boys decided to go to bed, and slept so that the girl and I could not safely get to the door without tripping over them. We were stuck. So we decided to sleep in there, too.
The next morning rolls around and what do you know, one of the boys needed to leave extra early, before anyone else, so his mom came to get him. Please try to imagine the look of horror on my male youth minister's face when he opened the door with the mom in tow, turned on the light, and saw me sleeping on desks in the back of the room. Jesus might as well of rode in right then on Reptar and smote me where I lay.
After the boy left and I was escorted out of the boys' room (the other girl was well enough hidden so as to escape safely later...and I didn't rat her out), I was given the most stern talking to I'd ever received and threatened with the prospect of never being allowed to another youth event again (although that end part did not happen).
Phew! I feel so much better clearing the air about my past. As punishment, I did have to single-handedly clean the building (with my youth minister watching), and came across quite a few craft rabbits. Not to mention I had to babysit my youth minister's son, who was like Donny Thornberry of the Wild Thornberrys...
As a PK, the "PKG" was pure genius! And when you get two PK's together...well, let's just say I haven't dated another PK since I was 16. That's probably a good thing.
ReplyDeletehaha! I have about 10 friends from college that are camp counselors this summer. They will greatly appreciate this post.
ReplyDeletethis is awesome. I was too shy to make purple at camp. But I wanted to. I did make purple at christian college though and I would enjoy a post about "purity talks". Everytime we had a chapel message about purity I could count on my boyfriend pulling me aside and saying he felt guilty about us making out. I could also count on him trying to make out with me more about 2.5 days after said talk.
ReplyDeletei was always an "ugly" kid, so girls loved the rest of my youth group friends, and no one liked me :(
ReplyDeleteI sure showed them though...I'm the only one still serving the Lord.
Hmph!
I know, that was bad.
I was gonna mention Capture the Flag, but someone beat me to it! Any game that HAS to take place at night and the darker the better, all while encouraging people to hide from one another is a very bad thing when it comes to avoiding the making purple!
ReplyDeleteand really, camp counselor making purple is a whole other issue, really.. I'm not sure there's any way to stop that. Usually you've got counselor only areas that have those lovely thrift store couches to sit on for camp staff meetings, but um, well, you know. They've seen their share of purple, I'm certain of it!
that song "I kissed a girl" brings up a whole new coloring problem. Red + Red makes... a whole new subject that is harder to deal with. Maybe we should just ignore the fact that the idea is much less a problem with kids now than it was even a couple of years ago. I seem to remeber some verse about "even the men will give up natural relations and burn with lust for each other". oops brought a downer on this subject sorry.
ReplyDeleteI used to run a summer camp for church youth groups and their adult leaders. A few times during the "Purple" speech, I'd ask a couple of the married adult leaders to come forward and show them what not to do. Beautiful and hilarious.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I read "making purple" I can only think of newborn infants which, in my experience, have the tendency to be on the purplish side.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I've worked at some summer camps and considering that the counselors were mostly college students, there was as much of a problem deterring the counselors from purpling as for the campers.
The "ROMP Manifesto"? Ahahahaha!!! It sounds AWFULLY eeeee-ville!!
ReplyDeleteWe had actual 2 feet in diameter movie skylights from an old movie studio sale. The kind of lights they'd shine in the sky, looking for Tom Cruise's mothership. Anyway, we'd set them up and wait ohhhh so patiently. Wait, my padawan learners, wait.... then when we would hear the soft, dew laden footfalls of the cool kids...then BAM!! We lit them up like the world's best SWAT take down and all we would hear is them screaming!! You see, not one human alive can actually see anything with those lights on their faces! We knew them, they were caught like bugs in a flashlight and they had no idea who was behind the lights, Darth Vadaring the voice into the bullhorn, "gooooo baaaaaaaaaacj to your caaaaaaabinnnnnnnnnnnnns!!!" Then in the moring, whoever was blinking like a mole was pegged.
It was great. Pure fun had by all.
So...many...hilarious...references...must ...comment...comedy...overload...
ReplyDeletewell, going along with your war-time strategies, i'd say the most important thing is *indoctrination*. That's why every youth pastor's best friend should be the book, "Why I Kissed Dating Goodbye." (now *that* should be a subject for one of your blog entries. :) )
ReplyDeleteanyway.. cram that down their throats for awhile, & it should help.
Then combine that with the "six inches" rule: no person of the opposite sex may not come within six inches of the other. this works well, if you've done your job at indoctrinating everybody. This will give you tons of informants. Anyone who is bitter about not having anyone to kiss themselves, (that would be the majority) will keep their eagle eyes peeled for all of the rule breakers. Then, if one person even *looks* at another the wrong way, they'll hear every one around them yelling, "six inches! SIX INCHES!!"
Speaking as a giantic rap dork, I've got to agree with Kanye's assessment of Soulja Boy, but in a negative sense.
ReplyDeleteNas is easily the most over-rated rapper on the planet. He's only made one good album, has never made a hit record, and his most shining moment was his feud Jay-Z.
Indeed, it can be correctly argued Nas and Kelis are nothing but a poor man's Jay-Z and Beyonce.
By the same token, Soulja Boy has had only one hit song, no good albums, and is in the middle of a feud with Ice-T, which will probably his only chance to battle with a real MC. He's pretty much Kris Kross for a new generation.
Meanwhile, Keith Murray is still underrated. Don't lie, I'm sure you've said "The most beautifullest thing in this world" more than once or twice.
As for the Youth Camp stuff, I was always pretty good about not making purple. That being said, I once got on Youth Group Probation for teasing one of the junior high kids too much. Basically, for one month, I could only attend the Sunday night church service. This was not imposed by the church, just the youth pastor. Nor did the youth pastor feel led to tell my parents about my disciplinary action. Needless to say, he was fired (for other reasons) within the year. Still, our youth group had the reacurring inside joke "That's it! I'm putting you on Probation!" for many years to come.
Did anyone else have Youth Group Probation or was I the only one?
I guess I'm the only one that recognized that Ace of Bass should be Ace of Base - there's something fishy about that one.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I loved the post, especially as someone who didn't grow up Christian.
I'd tell 'em to kiss all they want, nothing I could do to them now would amount to the guilt and shame they will feel later.
ReplyDeleteI didn't notice the dam* spelling error. What does that say about me? Either I can't spell either, or cursing doesn't bother me as much as I thought it did. hmmm.
ReplyDeleteAh, yes, but I can't believe how many found informants. At the camp I went to "nobody" knew where certain people were. It was always a vague, "oh, I think they went to mini-golf" when you knew perfectly well they were in the tornado shelter tunnel making out.
ReplyDeleteAlso, never underestimate how suggestive of a conversation a bunch of kids on a church van ride can have using just colors. (burgundy, maroon, periwinkle...you don't really want to know.)
The church van on the way back from a retreat or a mission trip is also the perfect place to be "so tired" and "accidentally fall asleep" on someone, some quality cuddle time there. :-)
Hucklebuck, the myth, the legend.
ReplyDeleteman, i sure do miss those church camps! haha
ReplyDeleteWell, I am personally a fan of the undercover "Purity Police" for camp. Bring a couple "good kids" along for this, and make sure they have brought dark colored hooded sweatshirts (dark pants are also a necessity, even if they are jeans- no acid wash please). Then you can stealthily go around at night with your flashlights and cameras (also a requirement for this team) ready at any moment to catch offenders. You should also utilize the camp "tech team" to make sure there is a new PowerPoint presentation or video that shows the people who have been caught in the act. Please be careful, because sometimes these violators have been known to become violent when confronted.
ReplyDeleteAt our youth camps, we had the Night Sentinels. This was a group of male leaders who would dress up in camoflage gear, balaclavas and massive Mag Lights. They would patrol the campsite after dark and make sure everyone was in bed (their own preferably).
ReplyDeleteOne camp, there was a room full of boys that we knew would be up to no good. So the Night Sentinels camped outside their room playing cards. The boys tried to escape several times, only to find the Night Sentinels waiting for them.
When one of the boys started shining a laser pointer at the girls room, no doubt trying to signal them for some make out time, the Night Sentinels burst in and asked for the laser pointer. When the boys denied knowledge, the Night Sentinels switched on the lights, turned off the heater (this was in the middle of winter) and left the door open as the Night Sentinels proceeded to play cards in the middle of the boys room. After AN HOUR, the boys finally gave in and surrendered the laser pointer so they could go to sleep and have the heat back.
Fun times.
Tell your team to NEVER waste time or resources on 6th or 7th grade boys. They smell so bad, no girl in their right mind is coming within 6 yards, much less 6 inches. No need to give them the stinky snacks either, save those for the high schoolers.
ReplyDeleteI don't know how many teen readers you have, but my sister (13) and I (16) are two of them, and I hope you have MANY more! Your blog has had such a tremendous impact on my life! I reference your blogs almost everyday, and often snicker when I hear people doing "stuff Christians like." And although you have me giggling and relating to most all of your posts, this one took the cake.
ReplyDeleteLet me start by saying, I think I know why old people dislike the youth ministry so much. (I think I suggested this before, but Seniors Vs. Youth would be a GREAT topic!) Perhaps us "hooligans will destroy the future of America" but I'm thinking it's because we're just a bad flashback of when they were younger, because I'm positive they've done some of the same things we have. No "back-in-the-day" excuses for them. If everyone was courting like they claim they were, there wouldn't be the old song "Besame Mucho" and my Popi wouldn't have paid their "kid chaperone" to go away and buy himself an ice cream just so they could "purple" themselves!
Anyways, I loved reading these comments too. I wanted to mention some of the possible purpling I've noticed (or was too naive to notice till today). So I'll just mention a couple, even if they were already mentioned. :-)
Cature the Flag - on a choir trip the entire group decided to play capture the flag. Everyone "needed" a partner so they wouldn't get lost in the dark by themselves, and it was insisted that people should be paired up boy/girl. There were more girls than guys, and considering I was a loser-junior-higher I was paired with another girl. Of course all the couples (and future couples) paired up, and I was wondering if the adults even thought about the fact these kids would probably be "purpling."
Bus rides - On a choir tour it's so easy to purple. Personally, I think holding hands and sitting so close you could mash potatoes between you would be considered purpling. And that's what the couples were doing.
One guy had a crush on me and invited me to sit next to him and his friend to watch a movie on his portable DVD player. As soon as I accepted he shoved his friend over so that I could sit between them. (There was a set of three seats in the back of the bus instead of two.) After I sat down he said "Okay Travis, now we have to make her run away!" So he put his arm around me and put his head on my shoulder. After I swatted him a couple of times he said "Well, that didn't work. Looks like there's just one thing left!" I was about to dart off, but instead I secretly planned to punch him in the face if he tried to do what I thought he was going to do. Instead he put his hand on my leg, which resulted in another slap, and we finally watched the movie. The funny thing is that this girl thought I liked him back, so she got mad at me and literally almost drowned me for it. (although I don't think she truly attempted to kill me) After telling this guy what that girl did, we pretended to be a couple for the rest of the trip just to make her mad. I think everyone was in on the joke except for her, which was the best part.
"Free-time" - Apparently I am REALLY naive sometimes. When I was on a Disciple-Now retreat I met this guy from another church. He hung out with me and two other galfriends of mine, but he seemed to follow me the most. It was kind of stupid cause we would go into this train at the playground during free-time and people would get mad at us and threaten to tell on us, and I had no idea why. Another guy that also had a crush on me would continually ignore me, especially when I was with the other guy, and I didn't understand why either. Now that I look back it's so obvious to me. I guess it took me a few years longer to understand all the purple going around.
And now that I have read this, all of my friends will be wondering why I snicker at every youth group event and why I keep mentioning the color purple. I'll just tell them it's "Stuff Christians Like" and hand them your gumstick sized sarcasm card, that I have personally added a unibrow to. (Not really)
when we were at winterfest we stayed in a nice HOTEL with VERY FEW CHAPERONES we all kept an eye on each other however. The big rule was no guys even STANDING in girls doorways and vice veresa. Now, my all girl Sunday School class i'm in (which made up half the group) has a special saying that should be used in any group of Christian girls,"YOU'RE TEMPTING ME!!". A fellow girl would shout that wile fixing the other's outfit! Ah...youth group!
ReplyDeleteWe had some purpling going on at my christian college too. One of my friends suggested "Purity Security". I think that is perfect. Mostly because it rhymes.
ReplyDeleteAt camp we would always go around saying "six inches or a Bible," meaning six inches or the width? surface area? you know, the front-ways side of a Bible between people of the opposite sex. A good time would be had by all calling each other out on that one.
ReplyDeleteThen one year someone got the bright idea that it would be fun to share a drink with someone of the opposite sex then run around saying, "I just kissed so-and-so!"
I miss camp.
Comment:
ReplyDelete"A Christian camp shouldn't be spouting off all the conventional consequentialist reasons for avoiding sex, instead they should be teaching that as Christians we adopt a peculiar ethic and seek to obey Christ because He died on the cross for our sins and we are grateful. "
I agree...however, I feel you miss a few points worth considering.
1. The whole article you are responding to is written for amusement. Perhaps you are able to be serious all the time, others are not. You can not assume that this is the whole of what is being taught at any said camp regarding sexuality, or even "making pruple".
Yeah, I get that. But it concerns me that all too often we teach in youth group "no making purple" for all the wrong reasons. And, what's best illustrated by this thread is it does not work!!!! If I were a youth group leader today (and I was a teacher at an inner-city mission/boarding school for eight years, sharing my bedroom with 6 teenage boys for a few years of that time) I would present the following message:
Here are a bunch of reasons you might want to avoid making purple:
a. It leads to sex. You might want to avoid sex right now because:
i. There are STD's and they suck.
ii. You could get pregnant, and you might not be ready for that responsibility.
iii. Sex leads to an emotional attachment which, when broken, hurts really bad.
b. Some people are bad, and only want to take advantage of you. We know this because we have been said predator, and/or the prey. It sucks.
c. You want to focus on your future and not be distracted by superficial relationships which can distract you from your goals. Instead you want to study, work hard, and develop your character.
These are great reasons why anyone might want to avoid making purple. You don't have to be a Christian to buy into any of these reasons. Using these excuses with someone who expresses interest in you could be enough.
But, if you are a Christian, there is a peculiar reason why you might want to avoid making purple. Peculiar means strange, or unusual, or just different. If you are a Christian you believe that you have been regenerated, or born again. Most people are naturally selfish, or self-interested. They want to do what is best for themselves. All the reasons above for not making purple could be used by a person who is primarily interested in themselves. But since we are regenerate, we give up our own desires in order to serve God. We do this because we have already received Christ as our reward, and He has changed our very nature. We no longer live to serve ourselves, but to give glory to God. The question then becomes, how do I serve God in my relationships with others?
Most of the time making purple is a transaction. It is sort of like making a deal to buy something. You give the guy at the store some money, and he gives you a candy bar. You both say thank you. You do this because you both traded something of less value for something of more value. You both feel better off. Another example is when you help a neighbor with a chore, and then she returns the favor. You are being nice to each other, and it feels good, but that is mostly because you are both getting what you want. If either of you welched on the favor, there would be hurt feelings, and the relationship would dissolve.
Most romantic relationships are transactional in this way. We both go kiss someone because we want to be kissed. We go further because we want to go further, or because we want to feel loved, or pretty. We get involved because we want to get something out of the experience.
But God has set the romantic relationship between men and women aside for a special purpose. He has made man and woman in such a way as to be an illustration of His relationship to the Church. God loves us unselfishly - sacrificially. He has made a covenant with us to love us. He will not break this covenant. It is pure. We should be careful to reflect this relationship with God on our relationships with one another, and especially in the special relationship which leads to marriage. If you have not been led by God to enter a relationship like this to His glory, then you might not be ready to be in a dating relationship.
2. When in said camp situation, you, as a servant/leader, are in a precarious situation where you must deal with many various levels of both spiritual and physical maturity. Hopefully some of the kids there are non-Christians (at least my camp always encouraged us to invite our non-Christian friends), so you can't assume any certain level of Christian understanding.
That should not mean that we water down the truth, or that we give all the wrong reasons for behaving in certain ways. That will just produce a worse understanding of Christianity, one that many will come to resent. It is better to be honest about the truth. Make it clear the difference between the Christian ethic and the worldly - utilitarian ethic. Engage them. Challenge them to think about it. Encourage those who have accepted Christ to embrace the peculiarity of the Christian ethic and to live it fully.
I understand the varying levels of maturity is true in about any church situation, the difference here is that these people are not adults. You have a responsibility not only to the kids, but to their parents as well. Hopefully there are some kids who come in to camp mature enough in their faith to be good, living examples--but that doesn't always work with adults in the church either.
There is no limit to the work the Spirit can do in people, but most do not have a Damascus-road, instantaneous changing point in our life. Growth comes over time, and in a week with a camp full of teenagers, chances are that not everyone is going to be at a place where they will understand and respond at a mature level of obedience and self-control over hormones.
If you want the parents of the non-Christian and immature teenagers (the ones who need to hear the message of the gospel the most) to let their kids come to camp, too, you also need to be babysitters.
Why should it be your job to prevent purple-making among non-Christian kids? The whole responsibility-to-the-parents bit is the core of the problem. Keeping the frozen chosen does not work. If the parents are not buying in to the whole Christian ethic than you are out of luck. You really are just a babysitter, and there is nothing peculiarly Christian about your camp. Better to be honest and say: "Hey we are Christians and we are running this camp so that we can have the opportunity to bring you into a closer relationship and better understanding of God, but we have to have rules about sexual interaction or else your parents won't let you come here. We really don't want to have to babysit you like this and try to catch you breaking these rules, but we have to to keep your parents happy. This is the least favorite part of our job because it has nothing to do with learning about God. We try to make the most of it, but it still sucks. So just make it easier for us, and we will try to make the week more fun for you."
Unfortunately, most camp leaders never make this little speech because they are overly concerned about boy/girl interaction themselves instead of being focused on getting deeper with God. They are distracted from their main purpose, and their ministry suffers for it.
So, I am entirely un-empathetic with the baby-sitting youth leader. Her job is pointless. She is not leading kids to Christ, she is just being paid (or not) to shelter kids. She ends up spending way too much of her time making consequentialist arguments to kids about why not to engage in certain behaviors (sex, drugs, porn, bad music), and way too little of her time teaching the Bible, or discipling kids in spiritual disciplines, or equiping them for ministry to the least of these. She burns out and wonders whether she has done any good, and with good reason.
One year, when my husband and I were camp referees for our church youth group, the speaker was telling the story about the lepers who were healed. He mentioned that when we saw people breaking the PDA rules, we should all point and yell "Unclean! Unclean!". So you can imagine, during the 10 minutes a day when my husband and I even saw each other, if we were holding hands on the way to the cafeteria or close talking, a bunch of smelly teenagers would run up yelling "Unclean! Unclean!" Yeah. Really effective.
ReplyDelete"the butt is not a billboard " I LOVE IT - I'm gonna go out and get a pair of pants with tha--- Oh wait!! :D
ReplyDeletejuris naturalist...
ReplyDeletewhat you are referencing is good chastity and purity education- things that should be addressed in youth group meetings/teachings and in talks/seminars. while at camp you need rules. rules with punishments. rules that we can make fun of for our own sanity.
as far as what you are saying, you're absolutely correct, just referencing the wrong setting. what you are saying needs to be taught well so that when you go to a camp setting, the rules make sense and aren't just "more rules to follow (ha! break!)".
this coming from the kid who at 17 thought it would be funny to steal the boys' boxers and got stuck and then caught. i didn't, however, make ANY purple (even though it is my favorite color). and i never did at any of the many youth events/camps i went to. this is a result of good teaching on the part of my youth minister and how much he trusted me. in fact, he trusted me so much that when he found me in the boys' room, he felt like i had betrayed him. i felt incredibly awful for having let him down. i later wrote him a letter of apology.
the reason you perceive the "no purple" rule doesn't work is because kids like to be creative and rebellious (i speak from my own personal rebellious streak). so we, as leaders, just have to be more creative in our tactics. even at girl scout camp, where there were no boys, i was rebellious. i liked to burn things (at one point, i was not even allowed to roast my own marshmallows). but when proper punishments are set in place (like perhaps suspension from certain camp activities or accountability time), kids will follow the rules. and if we endow them with our trust, they will learn to take care of it.
of course, there will always be that one boy and one girl...
Aww this brings back memories of working at camp (and going to camp...). When I worked at camp, two of the summer staff would always go out on patrol each night, drive around in the golf cart for an hour or so, make sure cabin lights were off... campers were quiet, nobody was "making purple" and so on. Good times. Unfortunatly, there wasn't someone patroling the summer staff who were out patroling. They didn't think that one through all the way!
ReplyDeleteI just returned from visiting my mom at the nursing home.
ReplyDeleteSometimes that place DOES remind me a bit of camp.
Bed alarms. That's what camps need.
And, those plastic ankle bracelets that sound an alarm when the wearer passes through the doorway.
For those who miss camp (of which i am one) there is always the looming possibility of a nursing home in your future.
The food, crafts, Bible study, songs, showers and the smell seem eerily familiar.
Not much purlping going on though...
That PKG is no joke. Let me tell you.
ReplyDeleteOur youth ministry is run by two gentlemen and a bunch of volunteers who all made purple. Therefore we aren't even allowing boys and girls to camp together. That's right. Two separate camps. Grant it, my youth pastors growing up didn't know that they needed to worry about some boys making deeper blue, so that's not always as effective as you'd think. But they can't pull one over on me. It's 2008 and I'm on it!
ReplyDeleteOne Christian youth retreat I attended had several houses for boys and several other houses for girls. There were lots of (crowded) common areas, but the guys wanted to come talk to us girls and just hang out in a quieter place. They came in our house to a common living area (not a bedroom) and got yelled at, so they went on the porch. Then, they were told that the porch was also considered the girls' house, and they had to go somewhere else. Needless to say, the guys were a little annoyed. We even offered to have chaperones there while we had our discussion, but they were convinced that having guys near a girls house would lead to purpling!
ReplyDeleteDon't worry, Jon...
ReplyDeleteI didn't even pick up on your misspelling of "dam" (not until I read all of those comments about it)-- although, I would like to say that it is a real word that is not only used by those godless creatures. "Damn" is not always a "bad word" and can be used correctly and appropriately. It’s like if you were to accidentally add and extra “s” to the word “as”—it would still be a real word that we say in church every year for Christmas. But yet, no one thinks of the innocent version of the word, they always jump to the “heathen” version.
Just a thought though… you should consider doing a blog about all the words that many Christians deem "bad" (or at least only deem "bad" when in front of others from church)... like the word "crap" *gasp!* I throw that word around all the time. My father will still get on my case for saying "freakin'". His reasoning: "It sounds way too close to 'the real word'" He may have a point on that one though, but I still use it. There's a whole list of words that may not be the most dignified words to use, but they sure of HECK help me get my point across without using "the real thing". I find them so funny when I think about them...
aww the memories! i attended a summer camp for many years and then came on staff at that same camp, and also currently work with my church's student ministries. in my experience, it was a bigger problem of the staff/counselors making purple than the kids! but there were two things that deterred us as campers...
ReplyDelete#1. "Bumppas"- this was a crazy man that lived in the town near the camp. Most people had never seen him, but the story still scared the snot out of you as a kid. He was an old man that carried around a pitchfork and would chase you if you got too close to his house. Funny thing was, no one would say where his house was, we only knew it was "in the woods". That was pretty effective in keeping us all in our cabins after dark! At least until we were "grown up" and on staff at the camp and learned that it was a legend (except that I actually met the family of the man we all called Bumppas ... so he really is real!!)
#2 "Momma's Dime" - when a pink and a blue were caught making purple, they got sent home at their parent's expense. that always made for great homeward-bound conversations, especially when the event occurred on an overseas mission trip :)
My junior high summer church camp took place at a water park. Yes, a water park. Our church decided it would be a good idea to put a hundred or so hormonal teenagers in bathing suits for a week and let the run free through a water park all day. Not to mention the jokes about that one really steep water slide that had about an 80% success rate at removing articles of the already minimalist attire. And you think there was no physical contact in the wave pool? Right! So, may I add to the list #12: No summer camps that require near nakedness. Like junior high girls need more to be self conscious about and like junior high boys need more to be distracted by.
ReplyDeleteoh man, this post is so applicable to me right now (not that i'm making purple or anything, but i just got back from camp). so anyway, at the camp i went to (which was friggin' awesome by the way), on the first day they had a puppet show that covered all the rules, and guess what rule no. 1 was? "Stay away from the PDA". it was hilarious, they had a whole song about it that's still stuck in my head. i was going to shout out, "what about private displays of affection? would that be ok?" lol, i ended up not asking it, but it still would have been funny.
ReplyDeleteI just got back from a week-long conference where i was kinda helping with the teen program.
ReplyDeleteThey started the conference with a commercial for "Hands-Off" - the official chastity pill of Messiah '08. It was extremely cute and went over very well.
(I can't find the video from this year - Matt must not be home yet - but you can see last year's at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rs4chA-7G4 )
Jon,
ReplyDeleteAs a PK and a member of the PKG I want to remind you have broken "the first rule of PKG". There will be consequences.
When me and the boys were out on the prowl at camp we would always ask around the guys at other churches to find the pastor's daughters and other girls of less than pure motives and let them know the targets from our's (kinda like a cia intel swap) so we didn't waste our time on the choir girls. The point is...
ReplyDeleteyou can't stop the purple. the purple is bigger than you and bigger than me.
Pure genius... using the Art of War as a backdrop to stop camp waywardness? Inspired.
ReplyDeleteWell done!!!
I only went to camp once, as a 5th grader. I've been to a ton of MK (Missionary Kid) Camps though, and we're as bad as PKs! Even then, I was more afraid of my mom finding out than anything else. I kissed a guy on a dare in middle school (not at camp, but in one of the secluded spots on school grounds)and when my mom found out it was the end of my innocence as I knew it! No guy is worth that!
ReplyDeleteI only went to camp once, as a 5th grader. I've been to a ton of MK (Missionary Kid) Camps though, and we're as bad as PKs! Even then, I was more afraid of my mom finding out than anything else. I kissed a guy on a dare in middle school (not at camp, but in one of the secluded spots on school grounds)and when my mom found out it was the end of my innocence as I knew it! No guy is worth that!
ReplyDeleteAhh camp. I do recall and laugh at the thoughts. I went to a camp with my christian highschool everyyear, and the boys stayed in cabins down the hill and around the kale from the girls, who were up on the hill with a huge field separating us. And our principal would camp out in the path needed to get from boys to girls, and she had a dog who barked when he saw people. It was quite effective. During the free time during the day though, the patroling was limited and I remember sneaking into the boys cabin with a male friend, when all of the sudden one of the older strict male chaperones appeared and I freaked out and dove into the lake in an attempt to hide. Somehow, it worked. Haha.
ReplyDeleteAvoid the game spotlight (kids hiding in the dark together = trouble), and truth-or-dare is a bad idea too. Also camp concerts with the lighting on stage and dark back rows are a no-no, kids will makeout even through worship songs...
ReplyDeleteHaving a camp leader in each cabin helps prevent sneaking out at night, and increased chances of overhearing any secret plotting.
Kids are creative and will find a way around anything, i love the cowbell idea.