Itenary for Leslie Clay and Carl Agston for October
Sunday, Oct. 2 Village Chapel for a World Communion service @ 11 AM (Carl)
Thursday, Oct. 6 First Charleston for a multi-church event with Anita Taylor@ 7 PM
Sunday, Oct. 9 Clifton for Sunday worship @ 11 AM (Carl)
Saturday, Oct. 15 Fairmont for Apple Butter Days – mid-morning through lunch (both)
Sunday, Oct. 16 Waverly-Bethel (9:30 AM) & First Williamston (11 AM) for Sunday worship (Carl)
Ronceverte for Sunday worship @ 11 AM (Leslie)
First Ripley for a fellowship supper @ 6 PM (both)
Monday, Oct. 17 Glenville for a fellowship supper @ 5:30 PM (both)
Tuesday, Oct. 18 Marshall University for PROWL meeting 9:15-10:30 PM
Thursday, Oct. 20 First Charleston for a Global Missions event (both)
Saturday, Oct. 22 Bates Memorial (with Kuhn Memorial and Beverly Hills) 5-7 PM for a fellowship supper (both) – they’ll assemble treat bags for Nicaraguan children
– with a covered dish to follow & time to talk about mission and answer questions
Sunday, Oct. 23 Spencer (combine w/ Ripley & Ravenswood) for worship @ 11 AM (Leslie)
Bridgeport for Sunday worship @ 10 AM (Carl)
South Park for a Bible study gathering @ 5:30 PM (Leslie)
First Clarksburg for a 5:30 Vespers service (Carl)
Tuesday, Oct. 25 Buckhannon for a fellowship Supper @ 5 PM (one here; the other to Oak Hill)
Oak Hill (combine with Fayetteville & Mt. Hope) for a Fellowship Supper
Wednesday, Oct. 26 Highlawn (with other Huntington churches) 530-7:30 for a fellowship supper (both)
At the September 2010 quad meetings the Presbytery of West Virginia approved a recommendation from the Mission Interpretation and Stewardship Committee to enter into a partnership with Carl Agsten and Rev. Dr. Leslie Clay who are currently serving as missionaries in Nicaragua. They have West Virginia ties and would like to build and strengthen relationships between people in our presbytery and Nicaragua.
Rev. Dr. Leslie Clay and Carl Agsten
Carl and Leslie were appointed in July 2009 to serve with CEPAD, the Nicaragua Council of Churches. They work through CEPAD’s Nehemiah Office, and their primary role is to help CEPAD in its communications with international partners. They do this through publications, newsletters and the Internet. They also facilitate visits of Nicaraguans to the United States and U.S. church delegations to Nicaragua.
CEPAD is a Christian, nonprofit, nonpartisan association of social concern. It is comprised of denominations, Christian institutions and departmental pastoral committees that confess Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior and desire to live out the gospel in service to others. Of the countries of Central America, Nicaragua is the largest in area and the smallest in population. More than 80 percent of the population lives in extreme poverty. Since 2001, Nicaragua has been considered the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, falling behind Haiti.
In reflecting on his service with the youth of First Presbyterian Church, Charleston, West Virginia, Carl writes, “My recent work as a volunteer with First Presby’s youth groups has been a rewarding and transformative experience. Instead of one ‘Aha!’ moment in my Christian faith, my transformation came from expressing my beliefs to high school and middle school youth, week after week. I informed them, even as I learned myself, that my faith in Christ leads me to think soulfully with my heart, making sense of a confusing and changing world.”
Leslie, who spent a year as a chaplain at the Kukini/Queens Hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii, recalls her service there by writing, “I was amazed at the experiences and stories I witnessed. It was a humbling experience because I wondered who am I, to stand with these families as they say their last goodbye to their mother or their father, or to hear a story of a wife’s relief that her husband has died after causing her to suffer years of suffering from physical and emotional abuse, or to bless and name a still-born baby. I learned that it is not ‘Who We Are’ but ‘Who They Are.’ To the patients and families we represent God, and that is why we are asked to participate in the most intimate of moments.”
Carl has an extensive background in construction and was the first certified construction specifier in West Virginia. He was the vice president of Agsten Construction, a project manager for Carlton Inc. and a construction specifier for ZMM Architects and Engineers. He also has been an instructor in the architectural technology program at West Virginia State University and an architectural historian for the state of West Virginia.
Leslie has always wanted to go into mission. She went to southeast Alaska for two months as a volunteer in mission and returned to Alaska as a seminary intern, serving at the Utkeagvik Presbyterian Church in Barrow. She also worked for one year as a chaplain for the Kukini/Queens Hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii. She once spent three months in India. She helped mentor spiritual development, worked at a pastoral counseling center and served as interim youth pastor at First Presbyterian Church, Charleston, West Virginia. She served for two years as the director of Christian education and family ministry at the First Congregational Church of Evanston, Illinois.
Carl earned his bachelor’s degree in English and art history from West Virginia University in Morgantown, where he graduated summa cum laude. He was the founding editor of Calliope, the university literary journal. He earned his master’s degree in the history of architecture and urban development from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.
Leslie earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Colorado in Boulder. She holds two master’s degrees a Master of Divinity from San Francisco Theological Seminary in San Anselmo, California, and a master’s in counseling from Marshall University, South Charleston, West Virginia. She also earned a doctorate from United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, where her thesis topic was “Clergy’s Response to Domestic Violence.” She has also studied at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota, and pastoral counseling at Loyola University in Chicago, Illinois.
Leslie and Carl are members of First Presbyterian Church, Charleston, West Virginia. Carl is ordained as an elder and served on session for six years. Leslie was ordained to the ministry of Word and Sacrament on September 13, 2009.
Leslie and Carl have two daughters, Kai and Ella. They adopted Kai, whose name means “Ocean,” in Hawaian, from China in 2007.
Birthdays:
Carl - February 8
Leslie - February 1
Kai - May 28
Ella: August 1
You can read more about them in their November 2010 letter home (& see pictures too!):
You can contact them at the following email addresses:
If you’d like to donate to their work, please follow the link below:
CEPAD is a Christian non-profit, non-partisan association of social concern. It is comprised of denominations, Christian institutions and departmental pastoral committees that confess Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior and desire to live out the gospel through service to others. As a Christian institution CEPAD works to serve poor communities, promoting justice, peace and equitable solidarity with the aim of improving quality of life. Carl Agsten and Leslie Clay are filling this position. They facilitate PC(USA) congregational and presbytery partnerships established through CEPAD, as well as communications between CEPAD and partners both in Nicaragua and in North America. They also coordinate and support partnership visits of Nicaraguans to the United States and U.S. church delegations to Nicaragua. E200445