KEVIN REICHELT
Author
My name is Kevin Kenneth Reichelt. I grew up in a small town named Whitewater in Montana of less than 100 people. I have always been very religious in nature. I attended Trails End Ranch Adventure Bible Camp for years and on my 19th birthday I became a staff member right after I graduated from high school. After the summer was up, I spent a year at....
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My name is Kevin Kenneth Reichelt. I grew up in a small town named Whitewater in Montana of less than 100 people. I have always been very religious in nature. I attended Trails End Ranch Adventure Bible Camp for years and on my 19th birthday I became a staff member right after I graduated from high school. After the summer was up, I spent a year at Capernwray Bible School in England where I learned more about Christianity. I always had a ?quiet time? and had read the bible 3 times by the age of 19. Christianity has always fascinated me, watching the different denominations live and argue. I was very diverse, I was baptized catholic, confirmed Lutheran, attended a community Awana program as a child, in high school I was involved in a non-denominational youth group. My best friend was a Pentecostal. Following that in the summers I attended a very southern Baptist type summer camp, and then got into the evangelical culture at Capernwray, in England and Campus Crusade for Christ in college. During my stay in England part of the program was to go on ?outreaches? where I got to spend a few weeks going inside of British Schools and teaching them logical reasons and evidences towards why the Bible is the True Word of God. The summer that I turned 20, I began college at the University of North Dakota where I was in training to become an airline pilot, I settled for a degree in Aviation Management instead. College was a turning point for me, in my spiritual journey. I was ?shocked? to meet a Muslim friend named ?Shokruh? and was surprised that there were just as strong of believers in the Muslim faith as there were in the Christian faith with their own apologetics and reasons to believe. All of this training in religion, being told what to believe, made me sad that we didn't have the ability to believe in whatever you want to believe, as we did as Children. As a result, i wrote this book returning to a child's imagination of God as well as a common sense approach to the creator.