Coaldale Bible School (Coaldale, Alberta, Canada)
The Coaldale Bible School (CBS) was established in 1929, the
largest and most enduring of the three Bible schools established by the Alberta
Mennonite Brethren between 1929 and 1933.
B. B. Janz, a prominent member of the
Coaldale Mennonite Brethren Church, was one of the leaders
instrumental in the founding of the Coaldale Bible School. There were two main
reasons for the school. Church leaders were determined to give young people the
opportunity to deepen themselves in the Word and in their faith, and the school
was to equip workers for the local church.
|
|
| Coaldale Bible School faculty. (L-R): Bernhard W. Sawatzky, J. Neuman, Jacob H. Quiring, John A. Toews, 1941 |
Over its 36-year history, nine principals provided leadership for Coaldale Bible School. Abram J. Schierling (1929-36) served as the first principal and was in fact the only teacher in the school's inaugural year. The school's other principals were Bernhard W. Sawatzky, John A. Toews, David Ewert, A. P. Regier, Abram Konrad, Henry Derksen, Henry P. Neufeldt, and Jacob Thielman. In all, 27 teachers served at the school over its history.
|
|
| Coaldale Bible School and Church buildings, 1949 |
Although a local church institution, the Coaldale Bible School attracted
students from other Alberta congregations and from congregations outside the
province and it eventually peaked at an enrolment of 101 in 1949—remarkable
growth from the original class of 12.
In the years that followed the enrolment faltered, however, dropping to 40 in
1955-56. Hoping to attract more students, the school elected to offer the
equivalent of a two-year program in the space of one long year (8 months)
divided into two semesters (1957-58). Only 7 students enrolled in the second
semester of that year.
Enrolment figures from the late 1950s indicate that something had to be done
about the situation. By 1959-60 the total student count was down to 11. One
option was to try to salvage the school by placing it under provincial
jurisdiction. Therefore at the June 1961 convention the
Alberta Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches easily voted to accept the Coaldale Bible School as its school, and
thus the school became the Alberta Mennonite Brethren Bible Institute (AMBBI).
Several reasons have been cited to explain the demise of CBS. Historian J. A.
Toews notes that the Coaldale church could not carry the financial burden. Both
the Coaldale Bible School and the Alberta Mennonite High School, located
adjacent to each other, competed for the support dollars of local donors.
Support became polarized. But shortage of money was only one problem. There was
also a shortage of students. A shifting post-war mentality was siphoning more
and more young people into secular training and pursuits. Finally, for many
young people, the Coaldale location was not an attraction and other schools like
Bethany Bible Institute became a more attractive alternative. The adoption of CBS
as a provincial school seemed to have immediate positive results, as seen in the
enrolment figures. In its first year as a provincial school the enrolment jumped
to 29 (from 11) and the next year it reached 43. But in the end, the move to
provincialize the school extended its life by a mere four years. The conference
formally closed the school at the end of the 1964-65 school year. Eventually the
Alberta and Saskatchewan Mennonite Brethren conferences joined forces in the
support of the Bethany Bible Institute.
Bibliography
Gedenk- und Dankfeier des 25-jaehrigen Bestehens der Coaldale
Mennoniten Brueder Gemeinde am 27. Mai 1951. Coaldale Mennonite Brethren
Church, 1951.
Regeher, T. D. Mennonites in Canada, 1939-1970: A People Transformed.
Mennonites in Canada, Vol. 3. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996.
Additional Information
©1996-2008 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.
To cite this page:
MLA style: Dirks, George. "Coaldale Bible School (Coaldale, Alberta, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. February 2002. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 09 May 2008 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/C613.html>
APA style: Dirks, George. (February 2002). "Coaldale Bible School (Coaldale, Alberta, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 09 May 2008 <http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/C613.html>
