We arrived the following summer to a camp that was ..... less than complete. We arrived to Excel Camp believing that we had the camp to ourselves. By the end of the second day, we were there with two other youth groups, meaning there were approximately 350 people there sharing a men's and women's bathroom with 2 sinks, three toilets, and two shower stalls. The water pipes were exposed and broken meaning there was no drinkable water (it was dirty and gritty), there were no walls on some of the cabins where some of the girls were staying, and on and on and on.
The pavilion we were having worship in didn't have any walls either and it rained like we were in a tropical rain forest throughout the week. We were getting wet and our sound equipment was getting wet. After one day of a typical downpouring and drying off the sound equipment once again, I turned around and all of a sudden JD and Matt Ervin walked in with power tools that who knows where they got. Immediately they were climbing around the pavilion like a couple of monkeys (with Bryan Rose) attaching think plastic lining around all of the outer walls of the pavilion to provide some kind of shelter. I'll never forget seeing how JD sprang in to action (as he always did) and started addressing problems... and usually with a set of power tools and Matt Ervin. Excel Camp was one of the worst and best experiences of my life and JD was all up in the middle of it!
--Crull Chambless
--Crull Chambless
2 comments:
Excel Camp was the summer of 1998. Just for clarifications sake.
I just found this blog today. Wow. My experiences with Jonathon were limited, but he impacted my brother Cody in a way that made him love him dearly.
I wasn't planning on posting anything, but the mention of Excel camp caught my eye. LOL. I can't think of Excel camp without reliving it. And now as the wife of youth pastor it is understood in an entirely different way! I remember JD climbing up into the top of the girls cabins and plugging holes with gum! all these girls standing there watching him-chewing gum-and him so confidently solving a problem.
I think of him often...thank you for remembering him in this way.
-Brittany Durham Bonner
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