May 20, 2022

Stepping Out in Faith

Do you remember a time in your life when God led you down an unexpected path? Maybe you already had in mind exactly the way you thought he’d take you, and then, all of a sudden, he was calling you to step out into something you never imagined you’d do.

One of these moments for me was in 2013. I was settled happily into a career in medical genetics when God very suddenly, and clearly called me to serve at a little church in the middle of the Navajo Nation. I remember the struggle it was to trust him in this sudden change of plans he set before me. There were so many reasons why it didn’t make sense, logically, for me to follow him. It took me away from my family and friends, it took away my security of a great career, and it pulled me out of serving in my local church. But I knew in my heart that I needed to follow him.

Through this surrender of my plans for his, I saw God’s faithfulness in both his path for me and his deep love for the Navajo people. I learned that when God unexpectedly redirects our path, and we wholeheartedly say “yes” to his plans, incredible things follow!

That first step of hesitant faith almost 10 years ago led to my current role with Josiah Venture. I have been the Intern Coordinator for Josiah Venture for 7 years now, and in this role, I’ve walked with hundreds of young people as they, too, are hearing God’s call to step away from the security of the known and into his plan for them. I’m often thankful that God took me on a similar journey, so that I can understand the struggle our interns sometimes face in following God’s often costly call to serve him.

Every summer, we invite college-age students to partner with us all summer long as interns. Some of them come from the United States, Canada or the United Kingdom, while some come directly from the churches we are connected with in Central and Eastern Europe. Each one of them senses God inviting them into his mission with us over the summer, and they are eager to follow him. Our interns are a key piece of our summer ministry. They travel to local schools and churches promoting camps, act as a bridge between young people and the local church, help camps run smoothly by stepping in when a role is unfilled, and they add an extra bit of joy and energy to the camp experience.

We know that an internship is an incredibly big step of faith for a young person to make. Many of them are entering into a different culture for the first time, learning to raise support, and diving into activities they may have never done before. Because of this, Josiah Venture is very intentional in training and discipleship of our interns.

When an intern arrives in Central and Eastern Europe, they participate in our version of The Amazing Race; a race across sometimes multiple countries in partnership with the other interns they will serve with during the summer. By overcoming the challenges of the race together, our teams learn to face conflict and discover more about the gifts that each one brings to the team. The race is followed by several days of Intern Training at our training center in the Czech Republic, and then teams are sent off to each of our countries to serve for the summer. During the summer, each intern is paired with a missionary who will disciple, and shepherd them throughout their time of serving with JV.

Our hope for our interns is that they will not only be a part of the movement of God among the youth of Central and Eastern Europe, but that they will also be forever impacted by seeing God move in young lives, and experiencing discipleship first-hand.

Maybe you are reading this, and God is putting it into your heart to join us. If so, we would love to connect with you and explore what God might be calling you to. Or maybe you know a young person who could be a good fit for serving with us in coming summers. We would love to hear from you too!

Here are a few of the frequently asked questions that potential applicants have:

How long is the summer internship?
Our internships run from late May until late July or early August, depending on which country you choose to serve in.

How much does the internship cost?
This also varies by country, and runs between $4,200 – $4,900 for interns from US, Canada, and UK. This includes airfare.

I need to work during the summer to pay for school, so how would I intern?
For our interns in North America, we allow you to raise a stipend of up to $2,500 extra that will be paid to you at the end of the summer.

How can I learn more about a specific country and the internships available there?
Our summer internship page will give you lots of information about what each country offers.

What if I have further questions?
Email us at interns@josiahventure.com

For the past seven years, I have had a front-row seat in the lives of hundreds of young people, as they listened to the call of God to step away from the known and into his mission in Central and Eastern Europe. Some of them now work full-time with us, or work full-time in ministry elsewhere, but all of them were given an opportunity, as Josiah Venture interns, to deepen their trust in God as they stepped out in faith and said “yes” to his plans.

Is God calling you to something new? Don’t miss the opportunity to say “yes!” to his call. Wherever he directs your steps, being on mission, with him leading the way, is the very best place to be!

Related Posts

Read Story

Stories

A Thanksgiving Challenge and Promise

Philippians 4:4-7 states, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice. Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand; do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” Two things stand out to me from this verse: a challenge and a promise. The Challenge: Christians are commanded to not be anxious about anything. Instead, we are to be thankful. Paul wrote this letter as he was in prison, preparing for his martyrdom. He acknowledged that his entire ministry was in the Lord’s power and he had nothing to be anxious about. Furthermore, his friends were not supposed to be anxious either. Rather, they were to thank the Lord for his provision and truth. In this situation, Paul was not instructing his friends to deny that there was hardship. He admitted that there would be pain in the future. However, with that, the Church was to devote all troubles to the Lord. How would this play out in a modern Thanksgiving Day context? Jenny Llamas was born in the Czech Republic, so she did not grow up with Thanksgiving. Landen, her American husband, did and has had so much fun introducing the holiday to her. From American football to turkey trots to sweet potato casserole with marshmallows, Landen and Jenny love getting to spend Thanksgiving either with their family or at Josiah Venture’s conference center in Malenovice, Czech with Josiah Venture missionaries. One challenge for Jenny, though, has been when people are asked to share what they are thankful for. It’s not the mental search for thankfulness that’s difficult for Jenny. Instead, it’s all the other thoughts that come to her mind too. It’s “the hard things in my life that sometimes even seem louder than the things I’m thankful for,” Jenny said. During these times, she wants to find ways to process and acknowledge times of hardship while also remaining thankful. So, how does Jenny do that when she is reminded of hard times during Thanksgiving? How does she process both pain and thankfulness? Jenny’s favorite part of Thanksgiving is the meal preparation. She has her own quiet time in the kitchen. As she experiments with all sorts of traditional American recipes, she reflects on how God has worked in her life over the past year. She recalls the exciting times of blossoming relationships with friends and the painful memories of things uncertain and hurtful. It’s in these moments that Jenny brings everything to God, both the good and the bad. That’s where the promise of Philippians comes into play. The Promise: In response to giving thanks, the Lord will surround us with his peace. When we submit to the Lord in thanksgiving, he places a spiritual shield around our hearts and minds. He takes us out of a state of fear and provides us with the ability to give thanks in all circumstances. When the meal preparation is complete and Jenny steps out to celebrate with friends, she reminds herself that God wants her to have peace. God has given her a spiritual family with whom she can process heartache and pain. He also provides her with the time to journal, writing down her thoughts as a way of acknowledging hardship and giving it to the Lord. Then, he gives her rest. “I say a quick prayer to the God who sees me,” she said. “I give myself permission to rejoice in what God has done and … take a break from the hard things knowing that God sees them and he holds them.” This Thanksgiving, I invite you to recognize the trials in your life and give them over completely to God. Replace the state of anxiety with the action of thankfulness, preparing your heart for worship as we enter into this holiday season. “The Lord is at hand.” (Phil. 4:5b)

Read Story

Events, Stories

You’re Not Alone in the Battle

When you’re used to leading, serving, and pouring into others, what happens when you suddenly can’t? What happens when the person who normally encourages everyone else wakes up and realizes she has nothing left to give? That’s where I found myself last year. I’m naturally a driven person. I love to see progress—to watch people grow, ministries flourish, and God’s work move forward. But last year, right before a major conference I had been preparing for—a mental health summit for nearly 700 youth leaders and church leaders—everything stopped. I got sick, and my normal pace of life vanished overnight. Suddenly, I couldn’t do what I thought I had to do. At first, I tried to stay positive, to find purpose in the pause. I told myself God was teaching me patience, humility, or to delegate better. But underneath those thoughts, a more dangerous narrative started to form: “God is disappointed in you.” “You’re not strong enough.” “You’re failing as a leader.” “Maybe God is holding back because you don’t deserve his help.” Those are the kinds of lies that can take root quietly—and quickly. It’s the same old whisper the enemy used in the Garden: “Did God really say…?” (Genesis 3:1). The serpent’s goal was never just to tempt Eve; it was to make her question God’s heart. And he still uses that same strategy today. He wants us to believe that God is distant, that we’re alone, unseen, and unloved. I’ve seen this pattern not only in my life, but in the lives of so many young people and leaders I’ve walked with. The moment things get hard—disappointment, exhaustion, relational conflict, failure—the enemy twists the truth. He tells us we’re forgotten, that our prayers don’t matter, and that no one really understands. And slowly, we start to isolate ourselves. But isolation is one of his most effective weapons. Once we withdraw, our vision blurs. We stop hearing the truth clearly. We start interpreting everything through the lens of fear, shame, and self-pity. Even Scripture is full of people who felt this same ache. David cried, “Turn to me and be gracious to me, for I am lonely and afflicted” (Psalm 25:16). Elijah, after a great victory, ran into the wilderness and said, “I have had enough, Lord” (1 Kings 19:4). Job sat surrounded by friends who misunderstood him. And even Jesus—our Savior—experienced complete abandonment in Gethsemane and on the cross. Loneliness and lies are not new, but neither is God’s response to them. In my own season of weakness, when I couldn’t find the strength to pray, others prayed for me. When I felt unseen, people showed up with meals, with text messages, and with quiet presence. Even my unbelieving neighbors said, “We think someone up there cares about you.” That was God reminding me: You are not forgotten. You are not alone. The truth is, the Body of Christ was never meant to function in isolation. Strength in God’s kingdom doesn’t mean independence—it means connection. It means letting others carry you when you can’t walk and trusting that God is at work even when you can’t see progress. This experience also helped me recognize a pattern: the enemy always attacks identity and connection first. He wants to disconnect us from God’s truth and from God’s people. But the way we stand firm is by returning to both. When I start to spiral now—when I believe I have to prove my worth or carry everything alone—I stop and remind myself of what’s true. I reach out to trusted friends and ask for prayer. I ground myself in simple spiritual and physical practices that bring me back to reality: breathing deeply, reading a psalm, or stepping outside to notice beauty. These small moments become declarations of faith. Romans 11:33-36 says, “Oh, how great are God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge! How impossible it is for us to understand his decisions and his ways!” That verse anchors me. I don’t have to understand everything; I just have to trust the one who does. Maybe you’re in a similar place right now. Or maybe you’re walking with young people who feel lost, invisible, or stuck in lies about who they are. The battle is real, but so is our victory in Christ. So, here’s my invitation to you: Would you take a moment to pray—for yourself, for your friends, and for the next generation—that we would recognize the lies of isolation, stand firm in truth, and live connected as the Body of Christ? You’re not alone in the battle. And neither are they.

Read Story

Missionary Kids, Stories

Heroes of Faith

Dear Friends, Faith has an unexpected ripple effect. In October of 1955, a 27-year-old woman named Margaret Olsen boarded a Norwegian freighter bound for the Philippines. While a grad student at Bible college, she heard a young missionary named Dick speak about his ministry to the military. Over the next couple of years, she saw him again at a few conferences and was later invited to visit him, along with her mom, for a week as his ship was delayed. He was moving to Subic Bay, Philippines, to establish a ministry to U.S. sailors stationed there after the war. After this brief time together, they continued to communicate through letters, and then a tape came in the mail with a marriage proposal. After prayer and counsel, Margaret accepted, and now she was on her way to marry him. It was a huge step of faith. Her future husband was far away, and so much was unknown. Before leaving, she had managed to gather just $150 in monthly support and donations of supplies for the new servicemen’s center Dick had opened. Standing with her dad and nephew beside the ship, she clutched a portable Singer sewing machine that provided her passage. It was an unusual ticket, but the captain of the ship had agreed to take on one more passenger if she would work her way across the ocean, mending uniforms, bedding, and flags, washing dishes, and scrubbing floors. Before this bold change of direction, she worked a steady job as a registered nurse. But when she gave her life to Christ at the age of 12, Margaret decided that following Jesus wherever he led was worth more than safety, stability, or a career. Now she headed into challenge and uncertainty, anchored only by the promises of God. Two weeks after they were married, she was learning to cook as she fed 60 hungry Sailors who gathered in their home for food and Bible study. It was more difficult than she imagined, yet her steady faith enabled her to view the challenges of long hours of work, heat, and an unfamiliar culture through the lens of God’s sovereignty and loving care. Six years later, I was born in the Philippines, the second child of Dick and Margaret Patty. Throughout my early years as a child, I was surrounded by fruitful ministry to the military. Then, our family moved to Denver as my dad became the director of the mission. In each of these places, daily examples of a life of faith filled our home. Courage, trust, thankfulness, sacrifice, and investment in the lives of others were consistently demonstrated through small acts of kindness and large steps of obedience. A year ago this month, my mom graduated to Glory at the age of 96, preceded just three years earlier by my dad. As I reflect on her passing, I think of the 27-year-old holding a sewing machine as she boarded a ship, confident in the future because she trusted in Jesus. And I realize that Josiah Venture would not exist today if it were not for that young woman’s example of faith. Many of you are also quiet heroes. What unexpected impact is rippling out of your steps of faith? Grateful for each of you, Dave Patty President, Josiah Venture