Steinbach Bible College
Motto | YOUR MISSION STARTS HERE! |
---|---|
Type | Private |
Established | 1936 |
Affiliation | Association for Biblical Higher Education |
President | Rob Reimer |
Location | 49°32′8.46″N 96°41′23.43″W / 49.5356833°N 96.6898417°WCoordinates: 49°32′8.46″N 96°41′23.43″W / 49.5356833°N 96.6898417°W |
Campus | Urban |
Sports team | SBC Flames |
Affiliations | Christian Anabaptist |
Website |
sbcollege |
Steinbach Bible College is an evangelical Anabaptist college empowering servant leaders to follow Jesus, serve the church and engage the world. Located in Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada, the college opened in 1936 as a training school for Mennonite Brethren and Evangelical Mennonite Brethren churches of Canada.
Affiliation
Steinbach Bible College holds accreditation from the Association for Biblical Higher Education. SBC shares a campus with Steinbach Christian School. Steinbach Bible College is a denominational college owned and supported by three conferences of churches. These conferences are the Evangelical Mennonite Conference, the Evangelical Mennonite Mission Conference and the Chortitzer Mennonite Conference.
Programs
Four Year Bachelor of Arts - Ministry Leadership Major with the following Focus Areas:
- Bible/Theology
- Missions
- Counselling Ministry
- Pastoral
- Youth
- Worship
- Children's Ministry
Three Year Bachelor of Arts - Christian Studies Major with the following Focus Areas:
- Bible/Theology
- Missions
- Counselling Ministry
- Pastoral
- Youth
- Worship
- Children's Ministry
Two Year Associate of Arts - Bible Theology
Two Year Associate of Arts - Pre-Social Work
One Year Certificate of Biblical Studies
One Year Online Certificate of Ministry Studies
Partnership Programs
- Bachelor of Social Work (in cooperation with Booth University College)
- TESOL Certificate (in cooperation with Providence University College)
- Pre-Education (in cooperation with Canadian Mennonite University)
See also
External links
- Official website
- Steinbach Bible College (Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada) at Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online