Welcome to BibleLand Campground and Theme Park, a proposed world-class Christian and Catholic-themed destination where the greatest stories ever told are brought to life through thrilling rides, immersive attractions, beautiful gardens, themed restaurants, live entertainment, campground experiences, and unforgettable family adventures.
BibleLand is not simply an amusement park with Bible names attached to ordinary rides. It is a complete biblical world built around Scripture, imagination, beauty, faith, and adventure. Every ride, restaurant, exhibit, garden, game, show, and campground area is designed to connect with a story, image, lesson, prophecy, miracle, mystery, or event from the Bible.
The vision is simple and powerful: the Bible comes alive.
At BibleLand, visitors will not merely read about Noah’s Ark. They will step into the world of the flood, board an ark-inspired water ride, see animals gathered in pairs, hear the rain begin to fall, feel the storm rise, and experience the hope of the dove, the olive branch, and the covenant rainbow.
Families will not merely hear about David and Goliath. Children will enter the Valley of Elah, train their aim, face the giant, and remember that faith can overcome what looks impossible.
Guests will not merely be told that Babylon fell. They will ride through the pride, spectacle, height, luxury, judgment, and collapse of a great empire on a thrilling roller coaster built around the fall of Babylon.
Visitors will not merely imagine the night of Christ’s birth. They will glide through the sky above the park on Mary’s Nativity Night Skyride, surrounded by stars, music, angelic wonder, and the holy peace of Bethlehem.
This is the heart of BibleLand: Scripture is not treated as distant history. It becomes an environment guests can enter. It becomes motion, water, music, food, architecture, gardens, light, darkness, laughter, courage, memory, and wonder.
BibleLand is designed to be a major family destination, a campground resort, a Christian cultural landmark, and a place of joyful biblical imagination. It is being envisioned on a large scale, with the seriousness and excellence of a world-class theme park. The goal is not to create something small, cheap, or shallow. The goal is to build a destination worthy of the stories it represents.
The Bible already contains the greatest adventure world ever given to mankind. It contains creation, paradise, temptation, flood, covenant, patriarchs, dreams, giants, plagues, deliverance, wilderness, fire, kings, prophets, lions, whales, chariots, gardens, temples, angels, miracles, betrayal, sacrifice, resurrection, judgment, glory, and the New Jerusalem.
Other theme parks build imaginary worlds from cartoons, movies, superheroes, fantasy stories, and science fiction. BibleLand is built from the most important story-world in human history: the Holy Bible.
The park is intended to take guests on a journey from Creation to the New Jerusalem. One area may be filled with the beauty of Eden, gardens, animals, waterfalls, and the wonder of the world as God made it. Another area may lead guests into the ancient world of Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and the covenant promises of God. Another may bring guests into the drama of Moses, Pharaoh, the plagues, the Red Sea, the wilderness, manna, Mount Sinai, and the Ark of the Covenant.
The Kingdom of Israel can become a land of David, Solomon, the Psalms, the Temple, the prophets, royal banquets, wisdom, courage, worship, and judgment. The world of Babylon can become a dramatic land of towers, gold, empire, pride, fire, lions, kings, exile, prophecy, and divine reversal. The Gospel lands can bring guests into Bethlehem, Galilee, Jerusalem, the parables, the miracles, the Passion, the Resurrection, and the mission of the Church. A Revelation-inspired area can point toward final victory, heavenly worship, judgment, restoration, and the hope of the New Creation.
Every part of BibleLand should belong to the story.
The rides are not meant to be random thrill machines with religious decorations. The physical experience of each ride should match the spiritual meaning of the story. A spinning ride can represent confusion, danger, and the need for healing. A water ride can represent flood, crossing, cleansing, or deliverance. A drop tower can represent pride brought low. A skyride can represent peace, wonder, angels, or heavenly perspective. A dark ride can move guests through sorrow into glory. A children’s game can teach courage, wisdom, obedience, and faith in a way a child remembers.
BibleLand will include rides such as Noah’s Ark Adventure Ride, The David and Goliath Challenge, The Freefall of Babylon Roller Coaster, Mary’s Nativity Night Skyride, The Bethlehem Nativity Experience, The Fiery Furnace, Fiery Serpent Spin, Prophet’s Quest: The Valley of Dry Bones, Chariots of Iron, Redemption Journey: The Passion of the Messiah, Solomon’s Wisdom Garden, and many more.
Some attractions will be thrilling. Some will be beautiful. Some will be peaceful. Some will be educational. Some will be interactive. Some will be funny. Some will be solemn. Some will be designed for children. Some will be designed for families. Some will be designed for adults. Some will be places of reflection and rest.
That variety is part of the vision. The Bible is not one-dimensional. It contains joy and judgment, feasting and fasting, gardens and deserts, kings and shepherds, children and elders, war and peace, tears and laughter, death and resurrection. BibleLand should reflect that richness.
The restaurants are also part of the storytelling.
At BibleLand, food is not an afterthought. Food is everywhere in Scripture. Eden has fruit. Abraham serves a meal to heavenly visitors. Esau trades his birthright for stew. Israel receives manna in the wilderness. Daniel refuses the king’s meat. Jesus multiplies loaves and fishes. Christ eats with sinners. The Last Supper becomes central to Christian faith. The risen Lord eats with His disciples. Revelation points toward the marriage supper of the Lamb.
Because of that, every restaurant at BibleLand should carry biblical meaning.
King Nebuchadnezzar’s Chop House is inspired by the Book of Daniel, where Daniel refuses to defile himself with the king’s food. The restaurant can serve a rich Babylonian-style menu while also featuring Daniel’s 10-Day Menu of vegetables, fruits, grains, nuts, and simple foods. The meal itself becomes part of the story: empire and appetite on one side, discipline and faithfulness on the other.
Queen Esther’s Banquet can offer a royal dining experience inspired by courage, beauty, strategy, and the saving of a people. Jesus’ Favorite Feast can celebrate bread, fish, fellowship, and the meals of Christ’s earthly ministry. Other restaurants can draw from manna, loaves and fishes, the wedding at Cana, Jacob’s stew, Ruth’s harvest, Abraham’s tent, Solomon’s table, and the Upper Room.
The restaurants should feed the body while stirring the imagination.
BibleLand is also a campground and resort. This matters deeply. A campground changes the whole nature of the experience. It means BibleLand is not only a place guests visit for a few hours. It becomes a place where families stay, rest, gather, pray, laugh, eat, walk, and remember.
The campground can include cabins, tents, RV spaces, family areas, prayer gardens, fire pits, outdoor amphitheaters, evening storytelling, worship music, stargazing, morning devotionals, and peaceful walking paths. Guests can spend the day in the park, enjoy themed restaurants in the evening, sit by the fire at night, and wake up still surrounded by the world of Scripture.
This gives BibleLand the feeling of a pilgrimage as much as a vacation.
The park is meant to be Christian and Catholic in spirit while remaining welcoming to families, churches, tourists, and visitors from all backgrounds. BibleLand is not meant to replace the Church, the Mass, the sacraments, or true worship. It is meant to point toward God through beauty, memory, excellence, and imagination. It is a doorway into Scripture. It is a public celebration of biblical truth. It is a place where faith is not hidden, minimized, or treated as embarrassing. It is displayed with joy.
BibleLand should be fun, but not foolish. Reverent, but not gloomy. Educational, but not boring. Thrilling, but not empty. Catholic, but not narrow. Biblical, but not flat. Family-friendly, but not childish. Grand, but not soulless.
The purpose is to create memories that carry meaning.
A child who rides through Noah’s Ark may remember obedience and covenant. A teenager who faces Goliath may remember courage. A married couple who rides through the Song of Solomon may remember covenant love. A family who walks through Bethlehem may remember the humility of Christ’s birth. A guest who experiences the Passion and Resurrection may leave with a deeper sense of what redemption means. A church group walking through the Valley of Dry Bones may remember that God can breathe life into what seems dead.
That is the real power of the park. It teaches through experience.
BibleLand exists because Christian imagination should be grand. The stories of Scripture deserve excellence. Families deserve a place where faith and adventure belong together. Children deserve memories rooted in truth. Adults deserve a place where biblical wonder is treated with seriousness and beauty. The world deserves to see that Christianity is not small, gray, lifeless, or ashamed. It is alive with drama, courage, sacrifice, mercy, judgment, mystery, resurrection, and joy.
BibleLand Campground and Theme Park is envisioned as a destination where every path has meaning, every ride tells a story, every restaurant belongs to Scripture, every garden carries symbolism, every show awakens wonder, and every visit becomes a memory.