Motto | Douloi Cristou |
---|---|
Motto in English
|
Servants of Christ |
Type | Private |
Established | 1894 |
Affiliation | Transdenominational |
Chancellor | Stephanie Ling |
President | Gary V. Nelson |
Students | 1361 |
Undergraduates | 616 |
Postgraduates | 705 |
40 | |
Location |
Toronto, Ontario, Canada Coordinates: 43°48′0″N 79°23′09″W / 43.80000°N 79.38583°W |
Campus | Suburban |
Colours | blue and gold |
Nickname | Guardians |
Affiliations | CBIE, ATS, CHEC |
Website | tyndale.ca |
Tyndale University College and Seminary is a Canadian accredited Christian institution of higher education in the Protestant Evangelical tradition located in Toronto, Ontario. Tyndale students come from over 40 different Christian denominations and more than 30 different ethnic groups. Tyndale offers undergraduate and graduate programs. A student residence is located on its campus. Tyndale has a BED (After-Degree) program leading to certification in the Province of Ontario.
The Toronto Bible Training School was founded in 1894 by a group of brethren under the supervision of Elmore Harris pastor of Walmer Road Baptist Church. Elmore Harris became the first President. William Boyd Stewart (former pastor of Bond Street Baptist Church) was the first Principal. Courses were held at the Walmer Road Church for the first four years until they relocated to new facilities the Gothic Revival building at 110 College Street (demolished after 1928 and now site of the University of Toronto's Banting and Best Department of Medical Research Building since 1930) in 1898 financed chiefly through generous contributions of the Harris family. (This land had been leased from the University of Toronto). The name of the school was changed to Toronto Bible College in 1912 and in September 1928 relocated to 16 Spadina Road (just north of Bloor Street and now Native Canadian Centre) when the lease expired. It became the first permanent Canadian Bible school and only the third in North America. The founders' vision of TBC was to train laypeople as "Sunday School teachers, Pastors' Assistants, and as City, Home and Foreign Missionaries." The institution's leadership was largely Baptist and Presbyterian, but also included Methodists and Anglicans. The TBC graduation service was always a significant Toronto event, held initially at Massey Hall, and then moved to the University of Toronto's Varsity Stadium to accommodate crowds as large as 6,000.