Christian camp sues Colorado to prevent males from using girls’ showers, sleeping areas

Christian camp sues Colorado to prevent males from using girls’ showers, sleeping areas

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Camp IdRaHaJe in Colorado on May 12, 2025, field a lawsuit against the state government over a state rule allowing males who identify as girls to be given access to girls’ showers, dressing areas, and sleeping facilities. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Camp IdRaHaJe

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 15, 2025 / 11:00 am (CNA).

A Christian summer camp network is suing the Colorado government over a state rule allowing males who identify as girls to be given access to girls’ showers, dressing areas, and sleeping facilities.

Camp IdRaHaJe — which separates private facilities on the basis of sex rather than self-asserted “gender identity” — filed the federal lawsuit against Colorado’s Department of Early Childhood on Monday.

The camp, which derives its name from the 1922 Christian hymn “I’d Rather Have Jesus,” is protesting a regulation that requires access to gender-separated showers, sleeping facilities, changing rooms, and bathrooms in all children’s resident camps on the basis of “an individual’s gender identity” even when the gender identity is different from his or her biological sex.

The lawsuit notes that the camps believe and teach that God “has immutably created each person as either male or female in his image” and that “the differentiation of the sexes, male and female, is part of the divine image in the human race.” 

It adds that the camps’ beliefs, including its beliefs on biological sex, are integrated into all of its programs and operations.

Camp IdRaHaJe requested an exemption from the state rule because it conflicts with its religious beliefs and mission, but the department denied the request. The department’s rules generally allow for individualized exemptions to “any rule or standard” if it poses “an undue hardship” on any camp, but the government determined the religious objection did not qualify.

If the camps do not comply with the rule, their licenses could be revoked or suspended and they could face fines. According to the lawsuit, the camps open on June 8 and will not operate in compliance with these rules. The camps also need to certify compliance with all departmental rules to have their licenses renewed in June, which the lawsuit asserts they will not be able to do.

The camp network is asking the federal judge to immediately prevent the department from enforcing the rule against its camps, arguing that any enforcement would violate the group’s First Amendment right to the free exercise of religion. 

The lawsuit also contends that the rule infringes on the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause, which safeguards the rights of protected classes, including those defined by religion.

“Those regulations would require the camp to violate its religious beliefs by altering its policies and operations that are based on its religious beliefs about sexuality and gender,” states the lawsuit, which was filed on behalf of the camp by lawyers at Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF).

Camp IdRaHaJe has operated since 1948 and was established for “the purpose of winning souls to Jesus Christ through the spreading of the Gospel,” the “edifying … of the believers through the preaching and teaching of the Word of God,” and the “evangelizing of campers through witnessing and missions,” according to its website.

The camp network serves children between the ages of 6 and 17. The camps are attended by about 2,500 to 3,000 children every summer.

Many families “choose to send their children to IdRaHaJe camps because of their Christian programs and education,” according to the lawsuit.

Andrea Dill, who serves as legal counsel for ADF, said in a statement that the government “has no place telling religious summer camps that it’s ‘lights out’ for upholding their religious beliefs about human sexuality.” 

“Camp IdRaHaJe exists to present the truth of the Gospel to children who are building character and lifelong memories,” Dill continued. 

“But the Colorado government is putting its dangerous agenda — that is losing popularity across the globe — ahead of its kids. We are urging the court to allow IdRaHaJe to operate as it has for over 75 years: as a Christian summer camp that accepts all campers without fear of being punished for its beliefs,” she said. 

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