Hello all! My name is Justin Davis and I will be serving as a
missionary with the Young Adult Service Corp of the Episcopal Church
(YASC for short). I want to start out by thanking all of you for your
support. The Diocese of Southern Virginia has played an incredibly large
role in shaping who I am as a person, especially through the Episcopal
Youth Community (EYC) in which I served as president from 2009-2010, and
as a member of St. David's, Chesterfield. I will be forever grateful.
I have spent the
last four years at Virginia Commonwealth University, a religious studies
major with a minor in business, and I hope to one day become an
ordained minister. I have attended Grace and Holy Trinity Episcopal
Church in Richmond for four years, where I have been active in the
Episcopal Campus Ministry. I have also interned for Grace and Holy
Trinity for three years. Two of these years I spent as a youth intern
and one year as a Campus Ministry Intern. This summer I am working in
Fauquier County, Virginia at Leeds Episcopal Church as an intern with
the Young Priest Initiative.
During my upcoming year
with in YASC, I will be serving with the Mission to Seafarers in Hong
Kong. You will be able to learn more about the programs I am working
with, and follow my personal experiences while in Hong Kong at my blog. I am asking you all especially for your thoughts and prayers in the upcoming year.
I will be fundraising
throughout the summer for this trip. My goal is to raise $10,000 before
the last week of August, which is when I leave. Donations can be sent to
Grace and Holy Trinity Episcopal church at 8 N. Laurel Street, Richmond
VA 23220 with "Justin Davis YASC" in the memo. All donations are tax
deductible, and I can provide you with a tax ID.
Feel free to send me an email at davisjb4@vcu.edu if you have any questions or concerns. Once again thank you for your thoughts and prayers as this new adventure begins.
Feel free to send me an email at davisjb4@vcu.edu if you have any questions or concerns. Once again thank you for your thoughts and prayers as this new adventure begins.
Episcopalians have a great opportunity to aid and participate in the
ministry for Native Americans through a special offering that will
assist the ongoing mission work in Navajoland. The Navajoland Area
Mission is 26,000 square miles that spreads over Arizona, New Mexico and
Utah.
On May 7, four Virginia Theological Seminary students left for a
mission excursion to St. Phillip's College in Kongwa, Tanzania. The team
includes Mark Riley from Southern Virginia (Galilee, Virginia Beach)
along with Chandler Whitman of West Tennessee; David Tremaine of Florida
and Ben Maddison of New Jersey. The students are joined by The Rev.
Jaques Hadler, Director of Field Education, Emeritus.
Who was Apolo Kivebulaya? There is much on the internet about him, but
briefly, Apolo was a converted Ugandan Christian who was sent to a
region which is now the D. R. Congo to evangelize an area that had
previously rejected the faith. Unlike his two predecessors, Apolo
withstood difficulty and after several years, prevailed. Known for
rising at five in the morning, Apolo was known to have spiritual gifts
including the gift of prayer for healing. Beginning in a small village
in 1896, the Anglican Church of D. R. Congo is now composed of nine
dioceses and is considering creating two more in a country the size of
western Europe.