Bernice Gerard: Pentecostal minister, Vancouver city councillor, TV host

Bernice Gerard chosen as number one on a list of the 25 most influential religious figures in BC in the 20th century.

Bernice Gerard was number one on a list of the 25 most influential religious figures in BC in the 20th century.

This profile is from the Faith in Canada 150 Thread of 1000 Stories. Faith in Canada 150 exists to celebrate the role of faith in our life together during Canada’s anniversary celebrations in 2017.

Bernice Gerard, who left her mark on British Columbia in both Christian ministry and civic politics, passed away November 1, 2008, at age 84. 

Gerard was a well-recognized Vancouver public figure, as a Pentecostal minister, university chaplain, city council member and radio/television host.

She was also the subject of a penetrating analysis, in 2014, by Canadian historian Linda Ambrose, who specializes in both feminism and Pentecostal studies at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. More about her assessment later in this essay.

Adopted as a baby by an Aboriginal family, Gerard heard two women preaching the gospel in a country school-house in rural Abbotsford when she was in her early teens.

In a 2000 BC Christian News interview, she noted that the women “told me there was one whose name was Jesus, who took little children up in his arms and blessed them. He was totally loving and kind.”

She gave her life to that Jesus. As she grew to adulthood, her commitment stuck.

Gerard became a teacher in the public school system, ending up in the interior mining town of Rossland. There, she met two Pentecostal evangelist sisters, Velma (later Chapman) and Jean McCall. They took the young woman under their wings. Velma was the pianist; Jean, the preacher; and Bernice played a big fiddle, nicknamed ‘Junior.’

Eventually, when Jean McCall married and moved to the United States, Gerard took over the preaching duties. Chapman was the behind-the-scenes organizer.

They toured in both eastern and western Canada, using a big white tent dubbed the Cloud Cathedral. In the process, Gerard was ordained to the Pentecostal ministry.

Visits of the Gerard-Chapman team to Canadian and American cities resulted in the planting – directly or indirectly – of some 200 new churches.

Gerard, left, sharing the Fraserview Assembly pulpit/podium with her long time ministry associate, Velma Chapman.

Gerard, left, sharing the Fraserview Assembly pulpit/podium with her long time ministry associate, Velma Chapman.

The tent work continued into the 1970s, after which Gerard and Chapman settled in Vancouver, founding Fraserview Assembly (now Harvest City Church). They became involved in radio and television ministry.

For many years, the Fraserview church, which seated over 1,000, doubled as a TV studio for their nationally broadcast Sunday Line program. The pulpit at Fraserview Assembly often doubled as podium for Bernice Gerard’s television ministry. 

Her decision to run for city council, in 1977 [she served until 1980], was rooted in her pastoral activities and her chaplaincies at the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University. She is probably best remembered for her protests against nudity on Wreck Beach, something she believed would have a detrimental moral effect on students at nearby UBC.

Gerard was a many-faceted person, practical as well as devout. During her pastorate, she earned a master of arts in literature at UBC.

She was what one might today call a social conservative. She spoke out against porn and abortion – and for what she saw to be the biblical view of life and family.

And she was a staunch supporter of the nation of Israel – leading tours to the Middle East, where she encouraged visitors to plant trees as a means to help in what she saw to be biblically-mandated reforestation.

During her years of social activism, she maintained a close association with famed British journalist Malcolm Muggeridge, who had turned from agnosticism to Christianity in his later years.

Gerard served on many Christian boards, among them Christian Info Society, publishers of BC Christian News. One CIS board member, Dolphe Hoffman, served as treasurer of Sunday Line, Gerard’s ministry.

Gerard was a major mover behind the development of Pacific Academy, a well-regarded, Pentecostal-based independent elementary and high school. PA, dominated by a red-brick clock tower and two auditoriums named for Pattison family members, is clearly visible from Highway 1 in Surrey, just east of the Port Mann Bridge.

Gerard also worked with Willard Thiessen to start Channel 10, a Christian television outlet – now a cross-cultural spinoff of Rogers, known as JoyTV 10.

“I would definitely describe Bernice as a networker. She wanted to help in anything that furthered the gospel,” said Hoffman, adding: “She was ethical and didn’t compromise. She worked with Bob Birch in the charismatic renewal, and it didn’t matter about denomination. She was strong in the Catholic charismatic movement.”

Entrepreneur Jim Pattison, who provided much of the startup funding for Pacific Academy, “admired her boldness and uprightness,” Hoffman added.

Gerard was involved in Christian-initiated cooperative housing in Richmond and downtown Vancouver. Shiloh Housing was eventually taken over by Broadway Church, her place of worship in later years.

When Parkinson’s Disease began to take its toll on her in 2000, she retired from Sunday Line. When she did appear in public, her gravelly voice was a little thinner; but the glint for Jesus still shone in her eyes.

Bob Burkinshaw, a church historian at Trinity Western University, recalls her as a leader among leaders. “When she walked in, she commanded the room,” he told BCCN.

Burkinshaw said that in working with Bob Birch to encourage the charismatic renewal, she helped bring to Vancouver such international leaders as Michael Green and David Watson, as well as Dennis Bennett, who advanced the movement on the American west coast.

Gerard topped the Vancouver Sun’s list of the 20th century’s most influential spiritual figures in BC.

Linda Ambrose’s 2014 assessment of many of Gerard’s statements, sermons and writings leads with a reference to that list. She noted:

In the year 2000 the Vancouver Sun named the Rev. Bernice Gerard number one on a list of the 25 most influential religious figures in British Columbia in the 20th century. Journalist Douglas Todd explained, “The veteran evangelist has made Greater Vancouver a stronghold of charismatic worship, spreading its super-emotional, arm-waving style to mainline Protestant, Anglican and Catholic congregations.”[1]

bernicegerardbook1Dr. Ambrose said that her own work:

Explores Bernice Gerard’s reflections on the question of women in ministry and women’s status in the church. Her autobiography, Today and for Life, appeared three years after she concluded her pastoral ministry that had stretched from 1964 to 1985, when she co-pastored a Vancouver church, Fraserview Assembly, with Velma Chapman, her life-long ministry partner.

In her private correspondence just a few months before the book was published, Gerard described it as ‘a[n] intellectual – spiritual – pilgrimage kind of book: . . . my story of new life in Jesus, and my Pentecostal experience, life as a university chaplain, women’s ministry, a biblical rationale for Christians in politics and some of my experiences as a member of Vancouver City Council, etc.[2]

With respect to Gerard’s position on women in Christian ministry, Ambrose noted:

I set out to interrogate Gerard’s ‘intellectual pilgrimage’ and in particular, her position on the contentious issue of women in ministry. Questions about women’s place in the church were being widely debated by North American evangelicals throughout the 1970s and 1980s and the issue of women’s ordination was at the centre of the deliberations of her own denomination, the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada, in that period.

Bernice Gerard was a feminist, Ambrose maintained . . .

. . . and her feminism was shaped by a surprising combination of influences and ideas she encountered, adopted and adapted from a surprisingly broad spectrum of scholarship. Indeed, Gerard encouraged readers of her life story who were curious to know more about what had shaped her thinking, to check the footnotes of her book.[3]

Historian Ambrose says that :

A careful reading of [Gerard’s] autobiography and her personal papers held in the archives of the Hudson Memorial Library at Summit Pacific College in Abbotsford demonstrates that Gerard’s thinking about women’s roles was influenced by at least three different expressions of feminism in the 1970s and 1980s:

* Evangelical feminists who believed that read correctly, the scriptures actually teach equality between women and men.

* Ecumenical feminists, especially Catholic scholars who claimed unabashedly that ‘Jesus was a feminist’.

* And perhaps most surprising of all, radical secular feminists like Germaine Greer who encouraged women to take responsibility for their own lives.[4]

Portrayals of Gerard in the media and in Pentecostal church circles as a popular (and often controversial) preacher, broadcaster and municipal politician, Ambrose suggests, have tended to overshadow the fact that she was an academically inclined woman who read widely, enjoyed academic exchanges and thought carefully about how she could arrive at a synthesis between her faith and her feminism.

She concludes:

The fact is that she managed this so skillfully, almost subversively, that many of her former listeners, readers and parishioners might balk at the very idea of the label ‘feminist’ even being applied to her. Certainly her instruction to simply check the footnotes in her book belies the complexity of ideological influences that converged as she adopted and adapted ideas from various sources to arrive at her conclusions about the role of women in the church.

[1] Douglas Todd, “British Columbia’s 25 Most Influential Spiritual Leaders” The Vancouver Sun, Friday April 21, 2000, A1.

[2] Summit Pacific College, Bernice Gerard Collection, Personal Correspondence, Bernice Gerard to Dr. Paul Yonggi Cho, February 29, 1988; see also Bernice Gerard, Today and for Life (Vancouver: Sunday Line Communications, 1988).

[3] Gerard, Today and for Life, 147.

[4] Pamela Cochran, Evangelical Feminism: A History (New York: New York University Press, 2005), 2; Leonard Swidler, “Jesus was a feminist,” Catholic World January 1971. The full text of the article is available online at http://www.godswordtowomen.org/feminist.htm (Accessed January 15, 2014); and Summit Pacific College, Bernice Gerard Sermon Notes, “Diamonds are Forever,” February 1972 at Fraserview Assembly. In her sermon notes, several times Gerard quotes directly from Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch (London: Paladin, 1971), 240.

Lloyd and Edna Mackey. Photo by Francis Lo.

Lloyd and Edna Mackey.

Dr. Lloyd Mackey has close to half a century of experience in community, faith-based and leadership journalism, including 15 years working out of the Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery in Ottawa. Books he has authored include These Evangelical Churches of Ours, Like Father, Like Son: Ernest Manning and Preston Manning, More Faithful Than We Think: Stories and Insights on Canadian Leaders, Doing Politics Christianly and The Pilgrimage of Stephen Harper. He is founding editor/director of the Online Encyclopedia of Canadian Christian Leaders, an outgrowth of his DMin studies at Tyndale University College and Seminary. He and his wife Edna live in Surrey.

Dr. Linda Ambrose is a historian at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. Much of her work has been in the areas of Pentecostalism and feminism

This article is re-posted by permission.

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6 comments for “Bernice Gerard: Pentecostal minister, Vancouver city councillor, TV host

  1. In about 1962 Bernice was in a 4th year English class at UBC. One day she challenged some of the anti-Christian remarks made by our professor — a dangerous move on her part, I thought at the time. But a lesson for me.

  2. I remember listening to her on the radio in bed in the early to mid 80s. Enjoyed her program so much!

  3. Her Sunday Line show was the best program on TV on Sundays, an excellent interviewer, too, of her brilliant guests. She is definitely missed.

  4. Great story. I like that fact that she was adopted by aboriginal parents and I wonder what influence they had on her.

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