United Methodist Camp Allows Boys To Bunk With Girls, Choose Their Sleeping Cabins Based Off ‘Gender Identity’

The Warren Willis Camp is a United Methodist Camp and Conference Center on Lake Griffin’s picturesque shores in Fruitland Park. They are “dedicated to providing a sacred space where people of all ages and backgrounds come together to experience growth, connection, and transformation.”
A ministry of the Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church and proud partner of the United Methodist Camp and Retreat Ministries (UMCRM,) they offer overnight camps for everyone from 4th-grade students to recently graduated seniors. Here, students enjoy a week of chapel services, worship times, nature hikes, swimming, canoeing, crafts and ceramics, archery, wall-climbing, and making new friends and memories.

Notably, the camp has a very robust Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policy where they “intentionally includes all participants regardless of race, color, age, economic status, creed, religion, theology, national origin or ancestry, sex, disability, genetics, sexual orientation, gender identity, or expression.”
They have a particular emphasis on affirming the LGBTQ community. One way they accommodate, this is that campers are assigned to cabins based on the sex their parents or guardians choose during the registration process, allowing biological boys to bunk with the girls and vice versa.

Furthermore, if a 9 or 10-year-old child publicly comes out as gay, non-binary, or transgender, that information would be withheld from parents.

So they let Muslims in the camp too based off that statement. It sounds illegal actually, like they are engaged in prostitution.