CATEGORY ARCHIVES: Echoes From Final Fire



“Do Hard Things” by Garrett Prewett

Posted by sam

Do Hard Things.

Atychiphobia: The fear of failure. More specifically, a fear of failure that we allow to stop us from doing things to move us forward towards our goals.

We love to portray ourselves as successful, we enjoy doing what we are good at, we often avoid what we are bad at. That’s human nature in many of us, its easy and fulfilling to simply do what is easy and can make us feel good or look good. For some, myself included, that was sports. I needed identity, everyone does, so I simply made it what I was successful in. I became sports. On the outside, I worked hard to get better at soccer, to get stronger in wrestling. It appeared like I was “doing hard things” and where yes, I was working hard I was not doing hard things. I was staying in my comfort zone because I was too scared of people finding out that I could fail. If I did not succeed in sports then what did I have left? If I stepped out of my comfort zone and things didn’t go well then I thought I would lose my successful. I saw failure as final. However, my identity was never designed to be created by me. I was never destined to be defined by my success or failures.

“For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared
beforehand, that we should walk in them.” Ephesians 2:10, ESV

I was created for more. More than a life of wondering if my success would outweigh my failure, more than an identity of just myself. I was created for the glory of God. The chains slowly start to fall the more you press into the Lord for your identity, the more you look to him for direction the more free you are to be who he created. You are not limited to your comfort zone of small successes and more importantly how can there be fear of failure? If you are scared of letting God down you need to stop thinking that you are holding him up.

Camp Ridgecrest has helped me learn that lesson more than anywhere else on earth. I truly felt like every year God has answered my prayer of giving me hills to climb and the strength to climb them. Failure has become part of the journey to being who I was designed to be. When I step outside my comfort zone, it doesn’t always go well, but that doesn’t matter. What does matter is that I had the courage to do it, with the knowledge that I have an all powerful God at my back.

“It is hard to fail, but it is worse to have never tried to succeed”
-Teddy Roosevelt

Do Hard Things.

Garrett Prewett
Chief Igniting Pitch


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“Adventure at Home” by Preston Morris

Posted by sam

I love camp’s mission: Impacting Lives for God’s glory through discipleship and adventure. It is incredible to think about that idea being lived out summer to summer, for almost one hundred years- the Lord has built up men through generations at Camp Ridgecrest. 2017 was no different. Serving the mighty Arapaho tribe stands as one of the most impactful experiences of my life. Yes, we boogied through spicy hoedowns, acted like dads, and celebrated Bob Ross. More importantly, campers asked their counselors about what being a man of God looks like. Young men stepped forward and gave their lives to Jesus in front of their camp family. We formed and solidified brotherly relationships that will last us more than a lifetime.

This summer, I heard so many campers express something along the lines of, “Man, I wish the real world was like camp.” They talked about how much easier it would be to thrive at home if they had a community of men, and more spaces for Jesus like those we so joyfully embrace at Ridgecrest. I want to challenge that thinking. I think that camp is the real world. Living in community, having spaces for Jesus, challenging each other and ourselves daily- that is what we have been called to in Christ. So instead of saying, “I wish the real world was like camp,” I think we should be saying, “Hey, let’s make my home world more like Camp Ridgecrest.” I deeply believe that discipleship and adventure can happen every day at home, but you have to fight for it! Many of us have experienced life change at camp, so let’s take that to our friends. Why not take a hike with some school friends and ask them what they think about Jesus? Why not start playing two square in your neighborhood and using your time in line to build brotherly relationships with your neighbors? Why not organize your own Battle for Middle Earth in your cul-de-sac, and have mom grab some popsicles to top off the night?

Right now I live in Texas, but I am traveling to college campuses all across the country to equip men to be strong followers of Jesus on their campus. In a lot of these interactions, I bring up camp – I explain how Ridgecrest models discipleship and adventure, and I encourage men to seek those things in their lives on campus. In a sense, I am bringing the camp world, the real world, to the culture of college campuses. I encourage you to act similarly. This is what men do. Instead of only taking from experiences, we grow up, and we give or lead into the experiences of others. So, brother, if you are missing quiet time at camp, wake up early and make that space for yourself. If you miss the devotions from your cabin, see if your church has small groups, and plug into that community. If you miss your counselors or your TL, find an older guy in your community who you know is following Jesus, and ask him to invest in your life. All of these great things we love about camp feed something deeper within us: adventure. John Eldridge says, “Adventure, with all its requisite danger and wildness, is a deeply spiritual longing written into the soul of man.” That longing you have for adventure, the longing that is fulfilled every time you come to Ridgecrest, North Carolina, seeks to be fed right where you are. Feed it.

L.O.L. – Lots of Love,
Chief Esteemed Grizzly


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“Change” by John Mark Oliver

Posted by sam

Change is a natural part for all of our lives. It can happen in the smallest of ways, like a simple switching of what class you are in at school. It can also be huge, like parents splitting up or losing a family member because of death. Change is something that we should expect in life. Sometimes change is even something that we can control! You may be trying to decide where to go to college. Or asking yourself, “Should I stay or quit this sport or school club?”. That type of change is in your hands.

Many people find themselves in these situations asking what the “will” of God is. In this setting, people mean “what does God want me to do?”. This can often be tough for all Christians. People who have followed Jesus for 60 days or 60 years often struggle with what the plan of the Lord is in their lives and how should they respond. Are we supposed to wait around and listen for a voice from Heaven? Do we open up the Bible randomly and pick a verse and see what it says? We are often confused and looking for solid answers. Sometimes, God really can speak to us in a miraculous way. Some people have really heard a voice tell them what to do. But more often than not, the Lord speaks to us through more subtle ways.

Micah 6:8 says this: “He has told you, O man, what is good;
    and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
    and to walk humbly with your God?”
(Read more here)

This verse right here answers a lot of questions for us. We may have about what the will of God is for us. Whether we are just responding to a surprise that happens in life or being asked to make a big decision on our own, the Lord speaks to us through the Bible. Words that He has already told other people and that we can apply to our lives now.

In the decisions you’re making and how you respond to things, are you treating others fairly? Are you loving the people around you? Are you being humble in all of it? These are all things that the Lord REQUIRES of us no matter what situation you are in. So a good thing to think about is whether whatever we decide to do or how we respond to a situation, will it allow us to do these things that this verse talks about?

Peace and blessings from Chief Silly Billy Goat!


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“Community” by Coulter Pierce

Posted by sam

Most of my closest friends come from Camp Ridgecrest.  Some of these guys I met way back in Apache and others I’ve met this last summer while I was Mohican Tribal Leader.  Needless to say, since I was 8 years old, camp would bring a flood of people into my life that I will always look up to and want to be.  The problem with this was when each summer would come to an end, I would head back to Asheville and my friends would go back to Florida, to Georgia, Virginia, Tennessee, etc.  

As a camper this was very difficult for me. I would spend 2 weeks with these brothers of mine going on adventures, hanging out, and experiencing this beautiful world God has created for us, and suddenly that time would come to a close and I would sink into that “post-camp slump”.  Now, this slump would be different for me each year; sometimes it would last a couple days others a few weeks and in some cases a month or two.  I would always replay the camp video and try to relive my time there but it would just never be the same.  For a while I could never put a finger on what I missed most: was it the blob? Chicken tender Tuesday? Four square with Ron? I could never figure it out.  It took me until after my second year in Sioux for me to realize what I would really miss the most: the dudes.  

As a young kid I never had a cell phone. I didn’t have email or anything to keep up with the friends I would make that summer and months after camp had ended I found myself growing further apart from them again.  For me, the main problem with this was that back home I didn’t have friends like these. I could never find guys I looked up to, who would want to go on great adventures with me and who would want to talk about our relationship with Jesus together.  Don’t get me wrong, I had friends for sure, but there was one thing holding us back from having a deep friendship like the ones I found at camp and that was our faith was different.  Many times those friends back home did not share the same faith with me, they didn’t want to maintain a relationship with Jesus so they would never want to talk about real life things.  

Each summer my relationship with the Lord would grow so much deeper and I would leave camp a changed man but would sadly have to return to those same friends back home that I couldn’t grow with.  A mentor of mine showed me a verse in Hebrews that says, “And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”  For the longest time, I never really had this type of community, one which pushes each other and encourages each other to be real men of God.  I knew I wanted it so badly but sometimes felt trapped where I was and who I was with, until my sophomore year of high school when my youth pastor took me and three other guys from my church out to eat for the first time.  

What started as an occasional meeting turned into a weekly thing, every Wednesday night, no matter what, we would meet up and hang out.  These Wednesday meetings were times for us to live out the verse in Hebrews where we could “spur one another on toward love and good deeds” and grow together in our relationship with the Lord.  Suddenly, after we started meeting on a regular bases I found the same bond in these new friends that I had with my camp friends.  I had these friends back home with me now and one of them (Tate Wynne) even came back to camp with me.  I cannot explain how great of an impact these guys have had on me and my walk with the Lord ever since we started meeting back sophomore year of high school and will forever be thankful for them.  

Here’s my question to you though: do you have this type of community back home? Do you have other guys in your life that who you can talk to and “spur on towards love and good deeds” and who can do the same to you?  God created us to live in community, and not just live together and hang out together, but to really push each other like the verse in Hebrews talks about.  I would encourage you as you continue to grow in your walk with the Lord, and as your time at camp comes and goes, to go back home and search hard for this type of friendship.  The ones that don’t make bad decisions, the ones that are usually doing the right thing, the ones who are looking to grow in their relationship with God.  

Psalm 133:1 says, “Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!”.  God created community like this so that we might grow and glorify him. It is such an awesome thing when we find these type of friends.  Like I said earlier, it took me a long time to finally find those guys who could “spur me on…” but when I did, I held on tight to them, and will forever be grateful I did.

Coulter Pierce
LC Comical Colt


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