August 12, 2024

The Original

Dear Friends,

It all comes back to Jesus.

Every year, we choose a theme for our summer camps that allows us to tell the old story in a new way. This summer, our evening talks centered on Jesus’ “I am” statements, captured with the title “The Original.”

In Ukraine, Eduard Kurat launched the first talk of his camp in the middle of a blackout caused by the ongoing war with Russia. With flashlights and phones as the only light, Jesus’s words, “I am the light of the world,” had special significance. Young people amid war need to know there is spiritual hope despite the darkness of relentless aggression.

Several days later, two members of our JV Ukraine team were stopped at checkpoints and sent directly into the military without even being given the chance to go home.  They are headed into dark and dangerous places, but we know that they carry the light of Jesus with them. Pray for their wives and young children who are left behind. In every place and circumstance, we need the light of Christ.

“I am the way, the truth, and the life” was the theme of talk number four.  Iva and Vika, two JV summer interns, taught this good news to young people at their camp, and also connected with a 90-year-old Orthodox grandmother from the local village. They visited her three times, shared the gospel, prayed with her, and gave her the first Bible she had ever owned.  Jesus is the way, truth, and life for both the young and the old.

At a camp in Serbia, a group of young boys began the week with little interest in spiritual things. Taking the initiative to reach out to them personally, Stojce, our Serbian team leader, gave them all Bibles. One of the boys started reading his Bible immediately that night and became visibly giddy as he read. When asked why he was so excited, he replied, “I love reading stories about Jesus. I don’t read, but I love reading this.”  Jesus is the bread of life (talk #7), and this young man was tasting Christ’s life-giving presence for the first time through his Word.

Every summer, I am amazed to watch the body of Christ at work. This year, church teams from the United States and the UK joined believers from Central and Eastern Europe to lead 125 camps in 16 countries, sharing the good news of Jesus with over 6,000 young people. Jesus is the Vine (talk #6), and we are joined to each other and bear lasting fruit only because we are first connected to Him.

Jesus is also the good Shepherd (talk #3), and he used you to care for those who served this summer through your gifts and prayers.

Thank you,

Dave Patty
President, Josiah Venture

Dave Patty President

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The Right Learning for the Right Person at the Right Time

Stop and think about the times in your life when you grew the most. What were you doing? What were the circumstances? What did you feel? What were you excited about, and what were you worried about? When I look back on my own life, I notice a pattern. Growth usually happens when the challenge in front of us is outside of our comfort zone or outside of our skill level. It happens when we’re stretched. I remember learning this in a very tangible way in college. I took a class called Experiential Learning, and, throughout the semester, we worked through various team-building exercises. At the end of the course, we went to a ropes course, which culminated in a challenge known as the “Pamper Pole”—a towering 10-meter telephone pole. The challenge was to climb to the top, stand on a tiny platform, and then leap to grab a trapeze bar. My professor had seen me go through most of the challenges fairly easily. Just as I was about to climb the Pamper Pole, he quietly walked up behind me, put something in my back pocket, and said, “Just in case you want a little bit bigger challenge.” I reached inside and found a blindfold. And I decided to put it on. I climbed the pole blindfolded, made it to the top, and then jumped. My hands hit the bar, but I didn’t grab it. Of course, I was strapped in, so I didn’t hit the ground, but that moment has stayed with me. Even though I didn’t “succeed” in the way I had hoped, I chose a harder pathway up, and I learned something important: growth often requires stepping into something beyond what we currently know how to do. The missionary life is a lot like that. When Brooke and I first stepped onto the mission field, we were eager and ready to say yes to whatever God put in front of us. We had vision, enthusiasm, and a desire to serve. But looking back, we didn’t realize how steep the learning curve would be or how much God still needed to form in us. Those early years were full of trial and error. We made countless mistakes and learned by trying something, realizing it didn’t work, and trying again. Over time, the Lord shaped us and grew us, but the learning curve was long. Some of the lessons we needed most came through hard seasons, and they didn’t come quickly. The Josiah Venture Winter Academy was established to help provide the resources necessary to give our staff a foundation for healthy, effective ministry that lasts, grounded in Christ’s strategy, and strengthened by shared language, practical tools, and a community that helps them grow through every season. This year, we gathered 52 Josiah Venture staff at our training center in Malenovice, Czech Republic, for a week of discussion, connection, and spiritual encouragement. Every staff member has the opportunity to participate in Winter Academy within their first year on the team (Year 1 track) and again within their second year (Year 2 track). 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Home

Sajmir just wanted to belong. As the youngest son in a Muslim family of eight children, he was expected to serve everyone. Sajmir’s family was oppressed in Albania because they were dark skinned Gypsies. On top of that, during the difficult time after the revolution, his father began drinking and beating his mother. “My father never beat me,” Sajmir said, “but he never showed me love. He never hugged me or kissed me. I never saw a father figure. I was afraid of him. Also, outside in the city, people were not very close to me. I spent most of my time alone, playing soccer alone, or basketball alone.” There was only one soccer field in his village, and when Sajmir tried to join a game, the other kids would kick him out. One day, a group came toward the field and Sajmir began to back away, sure they would ask him to leave. “Will you play with us?” they asked. “You want to play with me?” Sajmir replied. For the first time in his life, someone invited him in. After the game, they invited him to church. “What is a church?” he said. Running home, he asked his parents if he could go. “Don’t go to church,” they answered sternly, “you will shame us.” But the next day was Sunday, and he snuck out when no one was looking. “When I stepped into the church, at the door, someone gave me a hug for the first time in my life,” Sajmir said. “They put me in the first row. I felt like a celebrity. Then I heard the story that someone loves you just as you are, that is, Jesus—as I was, dark skinned, rejected. But still, there is someone who died for me.” “I ran and told my family, but their response was: ’If you go one more time, we will tell your brother to beat you up.’ I went again. My brother beat me up. For three months, I was beaten every week. I was loved and accepted in church, while suffering and being beaten in my family. Then my mom said, ‘Let him go.’” Filled with joy, Sajmir fell on his knees and said, “God, I will serve you wherever you want me to.” That was 25 years ago, and today Sajmir and his family are part of our Josiah Venture team in Albania. Through youth ministry, he recently planted a church called “Mosaic,” which has grown to over 100 people. Every day, young people come after school and in the evening for tutoring, children’s meetings, youth meetings, small groups, discipleship groups, and a very lively Fusion choir. The church is open every day, from 9:00 am to 7:00 pm, and there is always something happening. “Our building is a daily home for everyone; it’s a family,” says Sajmir. “I always remember what God did for me in my youth. My heart is burning to see more young people come to Christ and find that they are loved and belong.” During this Advent season, we remember how Jesus left his home to make a home for us. He was sent to find us, where we play our games alone, and to invite us into his family. He found Sajmir, and you, and me. Thanks for helping us share this good news with young people who are still without a home. Dave Patty President, Josiah Venture