Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.
Oh, well now aren't you just the paragon of all that is righteous.
OP, to answer your question, I am the opposite of this "interfaith," "open" minister, whatever in the world she expects that to mean.
We are conservative Christians. I would send my kids to most Protestant denomination camps, including Southern Baptist, especially, for the record, when we are visiting family in the south. Their camps (e.g. VBS) are often the most fun because so many kids attend, and they are not afraid to preach the Gospel. On the other hand, I would be very wary of a church that preached watered down values, designed to appeal to the likes of this "minister."
Yeah, OP, case in point. Stay away from the conservative Christian camps where they "preach the Gospel", unless you are also a conservative Christian. You don't want DC coming home talking like PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.
Southern Baptists teach hate?
I grew up in the church. They do.
What do you mean by hate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends. Our family has mixed religious backgrounds, but we're not religious. If the camp is run by a religious org, but does normal camp activities and is light on religion, than that's fine. But if they incorporate religious activities into the program - then no. So no religious songs and no praying or services (I'm ok with saying grace). It's not what I believe, so it's not what I want taught to my kids. I'm ok with learning about religion from a historical perspective. I grew up going to a camp run by a YMCA (so Christian org), but there really wasn't anything religious about the camp activities.
There is worship daily at this camp (so songs) but regular camp activities as well.
Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.
Southern Baptists teach hate?
I grew up in the church. They do.
Anonymous wrote:Depends. Our family has mixed religious backgrounds, but we're not religious. If the camp is run by a religious org, but does normal camp activities and is light on religion, than that's fine. But if they incorporate religious activities into the program - then no. So no religious songs and no praying or services (I'm ok with saying grace). It's not what I believe, so it's not what I want taught to my kids. I'm ok with learning about religion from a historical perspective. I grew up going to a camp run by a YMCA (so Christian org), but there really wasn't anything religious about the camp activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.
Southern Baptists teach hate?
Anonymous wrote:It would depend on the denomination. I'm an interfaith minister and very open. My kids have been to Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, etc.... churches. There are some specific denominations that I would not be ok with. When my kids were younger, I wouldn't have wanted them in any of the extremely evangelical Christian churches. I would be perfectly fine with a Methodist camp, for example. But, I would not allow my kids to attend a Southern Baptist Camp. I'm ok with differing beliefs. I'm not ok with hate.