

About Us
At Strathcona Baptist, we value connection and community. We are committed to helping people grow closer to God and to one another. Our church is welcoming and open, inviting everyone to experience the love of Jesus. Join us at Strathcona Baptist to grow in your faith alongside others in community.
We are a people of invitation
on the journey
from brokenness to wholeness
in Jesus

Love
We are committed to loving God wholeheartedly and showing His love to others, striving to be a community marked by genuine care and unity.

Discipleship
We are committed to discipling others in Jesus, helping them grow in their love for Him and in their understanding of His Word.

Worship
We aim to glorify God through worship grounded in Scripture, drawing us closer to Him and guiding our lives in His ways.

Mission
We are dedicated to fulfilling the Great Commission, sharing Jesus Christ and making disciples both locally and around the world.

Service
We are called to serve our community and those in need, showing Christ’s love through both practical help and spiritual care.

Unity
We strive to foster unity in diversity, standing together as one church family, united in our mission to share God’s love.
Our Values
. Our values describe what motivates us to do the things we do. They are the reason that we engage in the mission God has given us, and answer the question: Why are we doing this? The Real Me: Authenticity We value being honest about who we are, where we are at in our journey, and how we are doing. We value being able to speak the truth in love to one another, and being able to hear the truth spoken in love. Our Authenticity is demonstrated when we extend love, mercy, and grace as we speak the truth to one another. The Holy Spirit: Expectancy We expect that the Holy Spirit is at work in people's lives: speaking, leading, healing and forgiving. We have patience for the work that He wants to do, and that He, alone, is able to do in each other and in ourselves. Our Expectancy is demonstrated when we pray: we ask, we listen, we follow and we receive from God. The Poor: Love We recognize that poverty takes many forms, and that we all experience poverty at various times and in various ways: in spirit, in finances, in physical and mental health, in relationships, in emotional strength... We also recognize that God has a deep love and compassion for the poor, and calls us to minister with and meet the needs of those in poverty as he enables us. Our Love is demonstrated when we accept people as they are, pray for and support people in the unique ways they need, and recognize that it is the Holy Spirit alone who changes us. Old Strathcona & Beyond: Service We believe that God has intentionally placed us in this geographic community as one expression of his Kingdom. We love Old Strathcona and the people who live, worship, play and work here, and we desire to be Jesus' hands and feet to our neighbours. We also believe that the Kingdom of God requires us to look beyond ourselves and our immediate neighbourhood to see and serve the world that God loves. Our Service is demonstrated when we are actively involved in the life of the community, and advocate and work for justice, mercy and compassion on behalf of all of our neighbours. One Another: Celebrating and Equipping We believe that Jesus is building his church with people of diverse languages, cultures, backgrounds, personalities, interests, and spiritual gifts. Our Celebration of one another is demonstrated when we express our thankfulness for and delight in the uniqueness of what each person brings to the community. Our Equipping is demonstrated when we develop our God-given gifts and passions, learn from our mistakes rather than fear them, and pray for, encourage, and train one another.
Our pathway
. Our pathway describe the things we do in community to be on our mission together. This is the way that we develop disciples, and answers the question: How do we do this? Connecting Intentionally in meaningful community Our mission depends on each of us being in meaningful community with others. We need to be a church community in which everyone is known deeply by someone else; a community where no one feels like they are journeying alone. Serving Uniquely from spiritual giftedness Everyone who is a part of the Body of Christ is gifted by the Holy Spirit. We grow best in our walk with Jesus, and the Body functions best in its mission in this world, when we are using our gifts to serve others. Growing Spiritually in relationship with Jesus Our journey from brokenness to wholeness happens as we deepen our relationship with Jesus. Our capacity to love others grows directly in relationship with the strength of our love for Jesus. Engaging Compassionately with others on their journey Not only are we on the journey from brokenness to wholeness in Jesus, we are inviting others to be on that same journey. For all of us, that journey only begins as we are invited to follow Jesus; for most of us, that invitation needs to come more than once... And once we start the journey, our great privilege is to invite others to Jesus! It is not our task to change or heal anyone; it is our privilege to walk with them as Jesus brings healing and wholeness in their lives.
Our Life Marks
. Our Life Marks are the ways we evaluate how we are doing. These are not a "finished work" in us, but are the marks of growth as the Holy Spirit works in us, individually and corporately. They answer the question: How do we know we are "on mission"? Compassion for Others I am growing in my compassion for people, in their brokenness, who are on their own journey to wholeness; my life is marked by a growing sense of patience, mercy and empathy. We are a community that will be known for our compassion for people: regardless of whether they consider themselves part of our community or not. Growing in my Experience of Spiritual Freedom I experience increasing freedom from the pain and hurt my brokenness causes in my life and in the lives of the people around me. I experience more freedom from the sin that "so easily entangles" as I grow in obedience to Jesus. We will be known as a community where people are set free from their brokenness and sin, by Jesus. Authenticity in Relationships My relationships with others are marked by honesty, transparency and patience. We will be a community that speaks the truth in love to one another; we will be known for engaging in and resolving conflict well, for making room for our differences, and for "keeping the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace." Active Service I am actively involved in the Kingdom of God, seeking opportunities to use my Spiritual gifts to meet the needs of others. I am learning to use the Spiritual Gifts I have received more effectively as I serve and grow. We will be a community that is known for looking beyond ourselves as we act to meet the needs of those around us. Generosity I recognize that everything I have has been entrusted to me by God—my time, my finances, my possessions and my abilities—so I live with an attitude of open-handed generosity towards others. We will be a community that is known for being generous with our resources as we encounter the needs of those to whom God call us.
. SBC was founded in 1895, with 19 charter members. Until then, Baptist families living in the City of Strathcona on the south side of the river crossed by ferry in summer and by sleigh in winter to worship at First Baptist Church Edmonton. Once formed as First Baptist Church Strathcona, the new church called Rev. Alexander McDonald (Pioneer McDonald) from FBC Edmonton to take up the pastorate a FBC Strathcona. The church name was changed after the cities of Edmonton and Strathcona amalgamated in 1912. Until 1904, the congregation worshipped in a small schoolhouse that they had purchased and moved onto the property at the corner of 104 Street and 84 Avenue. A brick building was completed on the site in 1904 and served the congregation as sanctuary and Sunday School until 1964 when the current sanctuary was built. Over a period of decades, as the original brick building proved too small for the 400+ congregation, a gymnasium was built in stages beginning in 1927 and completed in 1953. As early as 1913, SBC had been involved in planting churches in the Edmonton area, mortgaging the parsonage (built in 1904) to build a mission in Allendale. Although challenged by the 1913 depression and the departure of many men for war service, the building was kept open for Sunday School and it was that group at Allendale that formed the nucleus of McLaurin Memorial Baptist Church. In 1915, SBC similarly established a Sunday School east of Mill Creek which became the Bonnie Doon church. In 1959, SBC made a significant loan to help Braemar Baptist build their house of worship. From its earliest years, SBC has been active in learning about and supporting overseas missions, sending missionaries to India in the 1940s and again in the 1980s. Recently interest in international missions has been revived with short mission trips to the Gambia and Lebanon. SBC has also been, over the years, a leading contributor financially and in leadership personnel to the now-named Canadian Baptists of Western Canada. Church and Sunday School attendance peaked in the early 1960s (congruent with church attendance across north America) just as SBC was building a new and much larger sanctuary on the site of the original 1904 building. This 1964 building houses the current sanctuary, Sunday School rooms, kitchen, parlour, meeting rooms and offices. A Building Investment Committee formed in 2019 is leading the congregation in considering whether some of our land might be used to build affordable rental housing with an emphasis on residents experiencing community together. This plan includes provision for a new sanctuary and program rooms. SBC has a long history of using its resources – buildings, money, people – to respond to needs as we become aware of them in the community around us. Building a gymnasium in an era that pre-dated City-financed recreation centres is an early example. In three years in the early 50s, a great influx of new immigrants taxed the capacity of institutions offering courses in basic English; SBC responded by setting up ESL classes in the church basement, staffed by volunteers. Again in the 90s, SBC responded to the economic situation that required both parents to work by establishing a daycare in the basement rooms not needed for Sunday School. As homelessness increased on Edmonton’s southside, SBC responded by making space available for overnight shelters, serving hot meals, and partnering to have a presence on the street by hiring a social worker who walked the Avenue with her dog. Eventually we initiated the establishment of the Neighbour Centre, a resource centre for homeless people subsequently taken over by The Mustard Seed. For the past three years we provided the home base for a street outreach ministry in the Old Strathcona area, a ministry which is now operating independently with financial support from local churches and members of those congregations. Currently, fourteen AA groups meet weekly in our facility, organized as the Southside Chapter House. Care for the marginalized and concern for social justice are very strong values for SBC. Concurrent with societal changes from the mid-sixties onward, attendance and programs dropped off at SBC. In the mid-eighties, Rev Ken and Shirley Knight stabilized the church, reaching out to connect with the Old Scona area churches and social agencies. These initiatives resulted in the formation of what has become the Old Strathcona Area Community Council. The church found a new vision and mission under the leadership of Rev. Shelley Utz (nee Schneider), the first woman to serve as senior pastor of a CBWC church. The administrative structure was streamlined to suit a church of 100 congregants, an outreach pastor hired to connect with the community around us, community ties and caring were gradually rebuilt within the congregation, prayer ministry was introduced, and we adopted as our mission statement: We are a community of Christ followers, growing in the love of God and sharing the love of God with others in Old Strathcona and beyond. We are on a journey, moving from brokenness to wholeness in relationship to God, self and others. From the founding of the University of Alberta in 1908 in the City of Strathcona, our proximity to the university has shaped our congregation, ministries and leadership with professors and students well represented in our congregation. We support, as one of our local missions, the work of congregational member Sherri Goethe in her role as Alberta Director for InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. Through this connection, many IVCF students and alumni have found a church home and contributed their gifts of leadership at SBC. As the community around us has evolved into the southside Arts District, home to the Fringe Theatre Festival and many galleries, theatres and performing arts organizations, we have recognized the opportunity for mission on our doorstep. For several years SBC partnered with other churches in the area to conduct outdoor worship service on the two Sundays of the Fringe. On other occasions we have sponsored Fringe shows or made our building available as a venue for off-Fringe events. It is our desire to explore further the possibilities for engaging the surrounding community through the arts. SBC has seen a resurgence in our Sunday School attendance and programs in the past 20 years, from a time when there were two children to now when there are as many as 20 ranging from infants to early teens. This growth has been organic in the sense that a number of young people met and married at SBC and have become sustaining families in the church. A new curriculum has just been implemented and we are looking to hire a Sunday School worker for 5 hours per week to prepare and teach and to handle some of the related administrative tasks. Demographics data presented elsewhere reflect that seniors, many of them single, and single people of all ages, comprise another significant component of the congregation. We are ethnically diverse. We tend to draw people from our community who are marginalized but find SBC a welcoming place. Our congregation is intent on continuing the witness for Christ in the Old Strathcona area into the future, basing that witness on worship of the Lord and on following the lead of the Holy Spirit in all decisions and actions.
