Masters College and Seminary Horizon College and Seminary Logos

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

MCS-HCS Collaboration Media Release

Cross-Provincial College Collaboration Means More Christian Leaders for Canada

In a bold move, Master’s College & Seminary (Ontario) and Horizon College & Seminary (Saskatchewan) are joining forces to make Christian leadership training more accessible and affordable, sharing costs, curriculum, and faculty in a lean and sustainable collaborative operating model.

Since the 1930s, Horizon and Master’s (known colloquially as MCS) have prepared lay and professional leaders for Christian ministry, each with historic ties to The Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada. The need for Christian leaders in Canada today is high. As Baby Boomers move rapidly into retirement, too few young leaders are emerging to replace them—and training institutions are struggling as a result.

The Association of Biblical Higher Education, the accrediting body for Christian colleges in Canada and the US, reports an alarming fifty-five per cent decline in enrolment among its accredited Canadian institutions since 2016, and news of closure or consolidations of historic Christian colleges and seminaries in the US continues to populate newsfeeds.

“The days of operating solo are no longer the best way to steward our resources or bring holistic education,” says Jason Small, MCS Board Chair. “Today calls for collaboration.” For Horizon and MCS, collaboration looks something like the creation of Toy Story.

HCS President and MCS Transitional President sign partnership agreement

Thursday, November 23, 2023: HCS President and MCS Transitional President sign the Partnership Letter of Intent, in Mississauga, Ontario.

Back row (left to right) PAOC District Superintendents Rev. Paul Israelson (SK and HCS Board Chair), Rev. Andrew Porterfield (MB-NW ON), Rev. Jason Small (Western ON and MCS Board Chair), Rev. Jason Luscombe (Eastern Ontario and Nunavut), Rev. Michel Bisaillon (Quebec), Rev. Kevin Johnson (Maritime).

Front row (left to right): Dr. Jeromey Martini (HCS President) and Dr. Bill Morrow (MCS Transitional President).

Toy Story character

Photo by Zakaria Ahada on Unsplash

In 1991, independent animation studios Pixar and Disney entered a strategic partnership with the aim to produce a computer animated movie. Pixar was developing new methods of animation, but the small company lacked scalability to take it to the big screen. Disney, meanwhile, was looking for new ways to engage its considerable customer base. The partnership resulted in Toy Story, the first feature-length computer animated film and highest grossing movie of 1995. Collaboratively, they redefined movie animation.

In similar fashion, MCS and Horizon envision collaboration as a catalyst for changing Christian leadership training in Canada. Founded in 1939, MCS has been serving the largest church constituency in The Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada as Eastern Pentecostal Bible College since 1949 and MCS since 2000. For the past decade, Horizon has been pioneering new models of Christian leadership education. These include introducing a competency-based curriculum, partnering with community and business colleges to offer co-vocational programming, investing in technology to deliver quality online learning to individuals and church hubs, and expanding accredited seminary options.

“We’ve seen success,” says Horizon President, Jeromey Martini, noting Horizon’s sixty-five per cent enrolment growth since 2016. “But with our lower population on the prairies, our challenge is scalability.”

In May 2023, MCS Transitional President Bill Morrow was tasked with finding the best options for the future of MCS. Morrow weighed input from visioning groups, pastors, district and section leaders, board members, and alumni. When Morrow and Martini connected in early summer, a dynamic solution quickly appeared.

“It’s a great thing,” says Morrow. “What Horizon is doing is what Master’s wants and needs. This is an incredible opportunity for both colleges and our constituencies.” Martini concurs, “This is exactly what Horizon needs. Master’s has so much strength and scale to bring to the collaboration.”

MCS and Horizon will continue operating in Ontario and Saskatchewan respectively, granting degrees under their distinct names. Martini will begin as President of both institutions in January, serving alongside Morrow at MCS until Morrow finishes in June. Together, they will coordinate and consolidate curriculum, resources, faculty, and staff cross-provincially, and set up church-based learning hubs.

“There’s a lot of overlap between our organizations,” Martini says. “And with technology to erase the distance between us, we can be much more effective together at preparing Christian leaders to serve Canada and beyond.”

As Horizon and MCS step into this historic new phase, they invite the Christian community to join them in celebration. An FAQ page is available on each institution’s website. A schedule of events for constituents to ask questions and learn more will be posted.

For media enquiries or for more information please use the contact form below.

FAQs

Master’s College & Seminary (MCS) was established in 1939 in Ontario and is one of five Canadian colleges created to serve the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada (PAOC) regionally in Canada. MCS is designated to serve the PAOC districts of Eastern Ontario and Nunavut, Western Ontario, Quebec (English speaking), and the Maritimes. MCS also has a long history of serving the Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland and Labrador (PAONL).

Both Master’s and Horizon have many years’ experience preparing Christian leaders. By partnering, Horizon and Master’s will expand our combined capacity to prepare significantly more much needed Christian leaders in Canada while maintaining a fiscally sustainable operating model through shared staff, curriculum, and resources. In short, partnership helps both Horizon and Master’s better fulfill our institutional missions.

Additionally, Horizon has always been a partnering institution. From partnering with the Lutheran Theological Seminary (Saskatoon) in the 1960s to offer the first seminary option for Pentecostals in Canada, to affiliating with the University of Saskatchewan in the 1980s, to working collaboratively with multiple denominations, churches, and community colleges and business schools today, partnership is essential to Horizon’s DNA.

Master’s and Horizon are entering a strategic partnership that some businesses refer to as a “joint venture” (think Pixar and Disney before they merged). In our partnership, Master’s and Horizon will work together as independent institutions that collaborate to create a sustainable operation through shared senior leadership, finances, staffing, and curriculum, while each retaining our distinct names, identities, and degree-granting authority.

No, Horizon will continue to operate as Horizon College & Seminary. For promotional purposes, we may at times cross-brand with Master’s using designations and branding such as “MCS-Horizon”:

MCS-Horizon Logo
Yes – absolutely! Horizon remains committed to our denominational partners with the Alliance, Church of God in Western Canada, Mennonite Brethren, and other local assemblies and groups who share our beliefs and values! This is not a merger where Horizon loses our distinctives, but both Horizon and MCS retain our missions but are partnering to serve a wider constituency through meaningful collaboration.
Master’s and Horizon will continue to operate with their own individual governing boards. Through a model of shared governance, each board empowers a Joint Venture Council to act on its behalf. This Council oversees the strategic partnership and administration through its President/CEO who is responsible to administrate both colleges.

MCS-Horizon Governance Structure chart
While continuing to preside at Horizon, in January 2024 Dr. Jeromey Martini will begin as president of both MCS and Horizon. At MCS, Jeromey will serve alongside MCS Transitional President Dr. Bill Morrow until Dr. Morrow concludes his role in June.

Along with Dr. Andrew Gabriel, they will coordinate and consolidate curriculum, resources, faculty, and staff cross-provincially, and set up church-based learning hubs.

Dr. Martini will remain based in Saskatoon until summer 2024, at which time he will relocate to Ontario. He will return frequently to serve onsite at Horizon and in the Horizon constituency.
No Horizon staff or faculty are leaving Horizon as a result of this partnership. See above for what it means for Dr. Martini.

Collaboration means providing additional staff and faculty support for the Horizon community through MCS-based staff. We are exploring what it might mean for adding staff locally.

Both Horizon and MCS will remain independently accredited with the Association for Biblical Higher Education (ABHE). We have stayed in contact with ABHE throughout the transition to ensure that we will operate in a way that will meet ABHE’s Standards of Accreditation.

No, Horizon will continue to operate from our fabulous facility here. However, partnership with MCS will enable Horizon to expand our capacity to support Hub Church locations where students can study across Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Northwestern Ontario – and beyond!

Horizon students benefit from this collaboration by gaining additional supports through our new MCS staff and faculty.

Horizon students in the Plus program can also benefit from exploring an expanded list of possible locations to take the “Plus” portion of their program (see questions on the Plus programs in these FAQs).

Additionally, as this partnership helps us establish multiple Hub church learning centres in the east, we are hoping to increase and better support Hub Church learning options on the prairies as well. That means Horizon students might consider engaging studies while embedded at their own or another local church, gaining important experience while learning and potentially saving money by living at home. See questions on “Church Hubs” in the FAQs and our Church Hubs page.

A Church Hub can be designed to serve the needs of your church, regardless of where you are located. A Church Hub refers to a church where one or more students are seeking to integrate their studies with significant ministry engagement and learning in a local church context. Each Church Hub will have at least one ministry leader designated as supervisor-mentor for the student(s) serving at the Hub.

We envision two types of Church Hubs:

  • Single-student and multi-student Church Hubs: A church that has one or more students who are ready to engage in ministry training at their church. Students will take classes remotely, although they may choose to travel once to four-times a year to take a one-week module on campus.
  • Destination Church Hubs: Churches that can provide housing for multiple students to move to engage in ministry training at their church. The college will promote these hubs as locations where students might choose to complete their programs. While students will take most classes remotely, some classes may have in-person instruction at the Church Hub.

For more information see the Church Hubs FAQ on the MCS website.

There are at least three main reasons for shifting to church hubs.

  • First, there is increased awareness that the best place to prepare for ministry is in a real-life ministry context. We can accomplish much through ministry practicums and internships, but nothing compares to embedded learning in a ministry context.
  • Second, church-based learning benefits both the local church and the student. For many local churches it is difficult to send away to school those volunteers in their congregation who are called to ministry. This is so because when volunteers leave to study, the church loses their volunteers with no assurance that the volunteer will return. Consequently, there is a growing trend of churches raising leaders from within their congregations and forsaking education altogether.
  • For students, church-based education reduces the overall cost of study and increases their practical learning experiences in the context of a local church. In addition, we expect that as more students engage in the day-to-day life of church ministry, more students will sense the call to full-time vocational ministry and fill the great need that we have for competent, Spirit-filled leaders in our churches, both now and in the future.
  • Third, there has been widespread declining interest in residence-based theological education. ABHE-accredited Canadian institutions have experienced over 55% decline in enrolment since 2016. There is simply less demand for residence-based theological education in Ontario than it costs to provide it.
Yes. We aim to establish several Destination Church Hubs—churches that are commuting distance from many students, and some that can even provide housing for where students might relocate to engage in ministry training at that church.

Begin by reading through our Church Hubs for Ministry Training: FAQ, and give some thought to the “Additional Considerations” section of the web page. Please contact us if you want to learn more!

No. But through expanded church hubs, this increases options for where you can take your programs from. Additionally, for Plus Program students it expands the places you might consider taking the Plus portion of your program.

Plus programs let you combine studies at Horizon with certificates or diplomas from a community college or business school, meaning you graduate BOTH with a degree from Horizon AND a certificate or diploma from the community college or other institution. This prepares you for serving in the church AND the world. (See our list of Plus programs.)

For those interested in studying outside of Saskatchewan, colleges you might want to consider besides Saskatchewan Polytechnic and the Edwards School of Business include:

  • Assiniboine Community College (Brandon)
  • Red River Community College (Winnipeg)
  • George Brown College (Toronto)
  • Humber College (Toronto)
  • Seneca College (Toronto)
  • Georgian College (Barrie)
  • Algonquin College (Ottawa)
  • Sault College (Sault Ste. Marie)
  • Fleming College (Peterborough)
  • Mohawk College (Hamilton)
  • Durham College (Oshawa)
  • Nova Scotia Community College – and more.

OTHER PROGRAMS OPTIONS AVAILABLE – show us the program you’re interested in!

YES! For Plus Programs we require a completed Certificate or Diploma that is one or two-years in length. Talk with us about the program you took and where it’s from. We’ll need your transcripts and will help advise you on next steps.

Horizon Seminary is not affected by this change and will continue to offer the M.A. and M.Div. programs at Horizon Seminary, including M.A. Clinical Pastoral Counselling, M.A. Ministry Leadership, M.A. Biblical & Theological Studies, and Master of Divinity programs.

Pentecostal students might consider the programs offered through Master’s Pentecostal Seminary that operates through Tyndale Seminary under the direction of Dr. Van Johnson. MPS offers the MTS in Pentecostal Studies, Graduate Diploma in Pentecostal Studies, and M.Div. with a minor/concentration in Pentecostalism.

You can be a big help in this historic moment of Kingdom collaboration! Specifically, you can support us in three ways:

  • Speak life and pray – in this time of transition and change, you can help by being a positive influence in speaking well of this Kingdom work and praying for its success.
  • Send students and host a hub – do you know someone with a call to ministry or who could benefit from the spiritual and Christian worldview formation MCS and Horizon provide? Send them our way! And consider turning your church into a hub for your own and other congregants to study with us!
  • Support us financially – as with all enterprises, we can’t do this without financial resources. At this exciting time, your financial support goes a long way to ensuring our success in preparing leaders for the Kingdom. Thank you for your generosity! Donate here >

More Questions?

Please reach out to us using the form below and we will do our best to answer any questions you may have regarding this new partnership.