Two Newer Schools Mirror Mountain Park
By Matthew
Franck of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
November 18,
2002
There's fire in the eyes and
passion in the souls of the true believers at a place called Thanks to Calvary.
And when the director of the small but expanding teen reform school calls six
of his best students to line up on the front porch, they practically have to
fight each other for their turn to testify to a visitor.
"I was a slave to sin," says a young man who has been at the school
for two years and plans to stay at least two more.
"God called me," says another.
"Sin brought me here," says a third teen, who once flirted with gangs
and now feels drawn to a life in the ministry.
They are each the products of one of the teen reform schools that abide by the
same doctrine and protocol of Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy.
Finding the isolated, rural schools isn't easy.
The Thanks to Calvary Boarding School, which houses about 65 teens, hugs the
banks of the Big Piney and Gasconade rivers in folds of the Ozarks. To get
there, you'd have to first track down a place called Devil's Elbow near
Waynesville, then pick the right unpaved road and follow it two miles to a
small cluster of trailers and modest buildings.
The Agape Boarding School with its 125 students near Stockton doesn't promote
itself through advertising or the Internet. Instead, its proud, 150-acre
complex — with solid, functional buildings, pool and covered basketball court —
has grown quietly by word of mouth.
Both Agape and Thanks to Calvary started with a few students and in just a few
years formed thriving, expanding ministries. Agape came to the state in 1996
after hassles with regulators in Washington state. Thanks to Calvary opened
four years ago.
Leaders of the schools say they are not tied to Mountain Park Baptist Boarding
Academy, but they share the same fundamentalist Baptist approach. Nathan Day,
who runs Thanks to Calvary, is a former Mountain Park employee.
Both Agape and Thanks to Calvary display pictures of the late Rev. Lester
Roloff, who inspired the formation of schools like Mountain Park. But unlike Mountain
Park, the two newer reform schools welcome visits by the news media and allowed
selected students to be interviewed.
Inside, the schools' unforgiving discipline was in full view, but several boys
said they welcomed and were grateful for the strict approach.
Yes sirs and amens
The sprawling campus of Agape Boarding School belies the school's rigid
structure. The place is nearly overrun with horses, livestock and what may be
one of the largest collections of exotic animals in the state.
Students at the school learn to care for camels, zebra, bison, water buffalo
and emus. There's a catfish pond and a hobby shop for tying flies and building
model cars. School leaders say boys are allowed to watch football games on a
large screen on Sunday afternoons.
Sean Markley, 18, is a recent graduate who is still at the school and is
thinking of working there for the next year. When he arrived three years ago,
he said, he resisted the structure and isolation and wanted to leave:
"When I first got here, I thought it was unreal."
But over time, he said, he grew to recognize he needed discipline. He said the
school has never censored his mail or pressured him to accept its faith.
Other students say they can't think of the last time a student was paddled.
Jim Clemensen, who runs the school, said he hasn't swatted a boy for six
months, largely because it invites interference from investigators. "I'm
trying to get away from it because of all the flak about it across the
state," he said.
At Thanks to Calvary, students also say that corporal punishment is rarely
used. One boy who was asked how often boys are paddled replied "not as
often as we should be."
Day is a former Marine who runs an operation with the efficiency and order of
the armed services.
The constant "yes sir" and "amens" that pepper students'
conversation attest to the school's marriage of religion and the military. The
43 boys sleep in a single bunkerlike dorm room with two 35-foot rows of bunk
beds on each side. Elsewhere on the campus, there are signs of both the
shoestring resourcefulness of a new enterprise and a healthy, steady flow of
income that comes from a $10,000 annual tuition.
A main building features a modern kitchen, offices and a dining hall, but other
buildings are not completely constructed. The narrow, aluminum school building
looks more like three trailers stacked on top of one another. Inside are bare
plywood floors.
Like Clemensen, Day said he offers students a variety of recreation, such as
canoeing, basketball and shop. But Day would grant interviews only with
students he personally selected.
Plans to grow
Determining how all students might describe their stay at Thanks to Calvary and
Agape is difficult.
Unlike Mountain Park, the schools are too new to have alumni old enough to have
sorted through their time there. What is clear is that the newer schools use a
similar formula to Mountain Park for turning around kids.
In fact, when it comes to daily schedules and policies on communication and
contact with family members, the schools are virtually indistinguishable.
Like Mountain Park, students are required to stay at least a year. Their phone
calls home are limited to a few minutes every two weeks, their mail is screened
and their days are filled studying at their own pace in rows of cubicles.
And like Mountain Park, the newer reform schools reject efforts to require them
to get a state license, as is the norm in most other states.
Clemensen already left one state over regulatory hassles. His school for boys
in Othello, Wash., closed in 1995 after regulators cited it for fire code
issues and for not having enough certified teachers.
Clemenson said he came to Missouri specifically because of its lack of
regulation. And he and Day said they would pick up and move from Missouri if
they were required to get a state license.
Day said even if the regulations were mild, he would object to the state having
oversight of a ministry that he believes should answer only to biblical truths.
"If we were forced to regulate, we would shut our doors," Day said.
For now, neither school seems to consider that even a remote possibility.
At Agape, Clemensen is laying the foundation for a 96-student dorm. And Day is
looking to double the acreage of Thanks to Calvary by buying neighboring
property.
At the moment, he said, the young school has "unlimited growth
potential."