19 Nov 2009, Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
Ansel Oliver/ANN

A Seventh-day Adventist student missionary who was teaching at the Adventist school on the Pacific island of Yap was found dead on Wednesday, the victim of an apparent homicide off the school's campus, church officials said.

Kirsten Elisabeth Wolcott, originally from Laneview, Virginia in the United States, had reportedly gone jogging alone before morning classes and did not return, church leaders said.

Leaders from the church's regional administrative headquarters, the Guam-Micronesia Mission, took the one-hour commercial flight from Guam to Yap Wednesday evening to assess the tragedy affecting the school and provide grief support for other teachers.

Police have been notified and an investigation has begun, church leaders reported.

“This is devastating news, not only for the family but for the school and the Adventist Church,” said Homer Trecartin, associate secretary for the Adventist world church and director of Adventist Volunteer Service.

“Throughout the history of the church many have made the sacrifice to go serve and some have paid with their lives,” Trecartin said. “Our prayer is that God will raise other people to finish the work that Kirsten and others started.”

Wolcott, 20, had taken a year off of school at Southern Adventist University in Collegedale, Tennessee, where she was a junior education major. She graduated from Richmond Academy in 2007 with high academic honors and was on Southern University's distinguished dean's list.

She was also known for her love of music and running, a university media release said. Wolcott played the harp and piano and sung in Bel Canto, the university's women's chorus. She won several 5k runs, placed third among women in the Toys for Tots 10k Race in Newport News, Virginia, and competed in the Kinetic Sprint Triathlon in Spotsylvania.

Wolcott had previously volunteered on week-long mission trips to Alaska and the Galapagos Islands, said Jose Rojas, the church's North American Volunteer Ministries director, citing her student missionary application.

Wolcott wrote in her application that she wanted to be a student missionary to challenge her walk with God by pushing herself to do something more than she had ever done before.

“My goal is to be the teacher that inspires them academically, pushes them spiritually, and comforts them emotionally,” she wrote.

According to Ingrid Skantz, director of marketing and university relations at Southern, an on-campus memorial service for Kirsten will be held the week after Thanksgiving break. Details about the service will be announced, she said. The school is also offering counseling to its students.

“At a painful time such as this, we remember in prayer Kirsten's parents, friends, fellow student missionaries, and all on our campus who knew and loved her well,” Skantz said in a statement.

Yap SDA School opened in 1987 as an elementary school and subsequently expanded to a kindergarten through 12th-grade school. The school is highly rated on the island and is operated mostly by Adventist college students volunteering as teachers. About 10 student missionaries are serving this year in Yap, Trecartin said. Teachers live in apartments on campus.

Yap, about 16 miles long and four miles wide, is one of four island states of the nation of Micronesia, a U.S. protectorate.

The Adventist Church currently has more than 780 student missionaries serving around the globe, Trecartin said.

Image by Image by ANN. Courtesy Southern Adventist University

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