'Jesus Camp' Highlights Growing Youth Movement

A documentary on evangelising young people entitled "Jesus Camp" will launch this weekend, featuring kids praying and worshipping at Bible camps and youth events in the US.

Pastor Becky Fischer's Bible camp in North Dakota, US, "Kids on Fire," was among the groups who participated in the film.

"I want to see them as radically laying down their lives for the gospel as they are in Palestine, Pakistan and all those different places," Fischer said. "Because, excuse me, we have the truth."

"A lot of people die for God," one camper said, "and they're not afraid."

"We're kinda being trained to be warriors," said another, "only in a funner way."

The film has caused a split among evangelicals. Some say it's designed to demonise, while others have embraced it, including Fischer, who's helping promote the film.

"I never felt at any point that I was exploited," Fischer said.

"I think there is a push right now in a lot of evangelical churches to definitely keep the teenagers and keep the children in the faith," said Heidi Ewing, co-director of "Jesus Camp." "And this is one version of that attempt."

This camp is, by many accounts, a small - and perhaps extreme - slice of what some say is a growing, intensifying evangelical youth movement.

Over the past decade and a half, enrolment at Christian colleges is up 70 per cent in the US. Sales of Christian music in the US are up 300 per cent. Tens of thousands of youth pastors have been trained.

It is young people who are targeted through Christian music festivals, skateboard competitions and rodeos.

"This is an enormous youth movement," said Lauren Sandler, a secular, liberal feminist from New York City who spent months among the believers researching her new book, "Righteous".

Sandler says the evangelical youth movement will have a negative impact on the country's future, because even the most moderate young evangelicals are inflexible on issues such as abortion and gay marriage.

"It's an absolute, straight-up us-against-them," Sandler said. "It's, you're either with us or you're against us. ... Not only are you a sinner, but you are working for the enemy - the enemy being Satan."
related articles
World Council of Churches Empowered by New Youth Body

World Council of Churches Empowered by New Youth Body

Evangelicals Launch New Drive to Educate Youth on Basic Theology

Evangelicals Launch New Drive to Educate Youth on Basic Theology

North Devon Ready for Jesus Surf Classic

North Devon Ready for Jesus Surf Classic

Generation Y in Australia Seeks New Ways to Express Faith

Generation Y in Australia Seeks New Ways to Express Faith

Evangelicals Introduce 'essential' Teaching to Youth

Evangelicals Introduce 'essential' Teaching to Youth

News
Archbishop of Canterbury calls for peace in first Easter sermon
Archbishop of Canterbury calls for peace in first Easter sermon

Dame Sarah Mullally has used her first Easter Day sermon as Archbishop of Canterbury to renew calls for peace in the Middle East. 

Easter Sunday and the hope of resurrection
Easter Sunday and the hope of resurrection

The hope of the resurrection is especially precious in a world filled with grief, violence, uncertainty, and pain.

Activists warn Syriacs being erased in Syria
Activists warn Syriacs being erased in Syria

The Syriacs are mostly Christian.

New Iraq report urges stronger action to protect Christians and other religious minorities
New Iraq report urges stronger action to protect Christians and other religious minorities

Jim Shannon MP said the report records both “the progress observed” and “the ongoing challenges” that remain for religious minorities seeking to live in safety and freedom in Iraq.