Campers make their way up to the hilltop bonfire area at Riverside Bible Camp in Story City, Iowa during the summer of 2019.
Mountaintop is a personal project about the effects of Bible camps on American evangelicals.
If you ask an evangelical Christian where they became an evangelical, chances are it was at a Bible camp. It is place where many evangelical youth experience the personal conversion moment that most consider foundational to their faith identity. Some reflect on it joyfully as a moment when their life changed for the better; others reflect on it bitterly as a place where they were emotionally manipulated into a religious ultimatum that set them on a course for spiritual trauma. Either way, the density of life-changing experiences at Bible camp makes them a sort of sacred space for evangelicals and other Protestants.
Over the course of a summer, I photographed a group of high school students who are counselors at a Bible camp in northern Iowa. The project is personal for me because I had my own formative faith experience at around their age, after reading an evangelistic book. I didn’t have much of a faith community for the first few years afterward, and I never attended Bible camps or Christian retreats. My visits to this camp reminded me of just how lonely those years were, and of how meaningful a faith community can be at this age. Of course this is not just limited to Christian camps; day camps in general have been connected to positive outcomes in youth resilience.
As I visit Bible camps, I am always struck by how comfortable and intimate campers are with each other as they hold hands in prayer, nap in each others’ arms, braid each others’ hair, and hold hands to each others’ faces, as if in the bestowing of a blessing.