Bethesda Pentecostal Church is located in St. John's at the corner of Portugal Cove Road and MacDonald Drive. This building has been here since 1979, but Bethesda's history goes back farther than that...

We are proud to provide a brief overview of Bethesda's history, as well as the Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tel. (709) 726-9480       Fax (709) 726-9483                                  1 Escasoni Place    P.O. Box 21100     St. John's, NL    A1A 5B2      info@bethesda.nf.ca

Our History

History of Bethesda & The Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland

  • History of Bethesda
  • PAON
    1910–1911
  • PAON
    1912–20s
  • PAON
    1920s
  • PAON
    1920s–50s
  • PAON
    1950s–

In October 1908 Miss Alice B. Garrigus, a former teacher in the United States, was attending camp meetings in the town of Rumney, New Hampshire. She felt a definite call to go to Newfoundland to preach the gospel, a place totally unknown to her.

Accompanied by Rev. & Mrs. William D. Fowler, Miss Garrigus arrived in St. John's on December 1, 1910, and shortly thereafter obtained a building at 207 New Gower Street. On Easter Sunday 1911, the doors were opened to the public for the first time at what was called the "Bethesda Mission".

In 1963, under the leadership of Pastor G.B. Harnum, the board and congregation of Bethesda realized the need for larger facilities; thus, they purchased land on Aldershot Street. The building was completed and officially opened in November 1964.

Again in 1978, under the leadership of Pastor R.E. Osmond, the board and congregation of Bethesda decided to take a step of faith and extend their facilities by beginning construction of a new facility on MacDonald Drive. Upon completion, the "new" Bethesda Church was dedicated to the glory of God and to the extension of His Kingdom in November 1979.

In 1998, under the leadership of Pastor W.S. Potter, the board and congregation of Bethesda purchased the lot adjacent to the church on the corner of Portugal Cove Road and MacDonald Drive and built an extension onto the facility in response to congregational growth. In September 1999 due to rapid growth and limitations in the building size, it was felt that the church would hold two concurrent Sunday morning services to accommodate all those who wished to attend.

In 2004, under the leadership of Pastor G. Winsor, the board and congregation of Bethesda realized the need for larger facilities to meet the continued demands of growth within the various ministries of the church. Construction began in the Spring to build another extension onto the existing facility, which included a large multi-purpose room, larger classrooms, an enlarged sanctuary, and an office complex. An official dedication of this new Bethesda took place in the Fall of 2005.


Alice B. Garrigus was a schoolteacher by profession and an itinerant preacher for the Congregational Church in New Hampshire before her conversion to Pentecostalism in 1907. In October 1908 she received a mysterious message guiding her to go to Newfoundland. By 1910 Garrigus had arrived in St. John's, accompanied by a retired missionary couple Mr. and Mrs W.D. Fowler. The three introduced Pentecostalism to the island and established the Bethesda Mission in April 1911. This was to become the centre of Pentecostal activity in Newfoundland.

Alice B. Garrigus
Alice Belle Garrigus, 1910.

Alice B. Garrigus, born in Rockville, Conneticut in 1858, founded and nurtured the Newfoundland Pentecostal Movement until her death in 1949. This photograph was taken in 1910, the year of her arrival in St. John's. The original black and white photograph was hand coloured by Sylvia Cullum. Reproduced by permission of The Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland Archives, St. John's, Newfoundland. (Larger version)

Mr Fowler was the mission preacher until the couple departed in 1912, leaving Garrigus to carry on alone. The congregation grew slowly, and remained strictly confined to St. John's in its early years. The success of Pentecostalism in the United States had been based in part on the social instability and poverty generated by rapid industrialisation. Newfoundland, in contrast, was a relatively stable society in the first decades of the 20th century. Furthermore, existing denominations, in particular the Methodist Church and the Salvation Army, provided established outlets for evangelical fervour, as well as support and charity for the poor.

The 1919 evangelical crusade of Victoria Booth-Clibborn Demarest in Canada and Newfoundland served as an important catalyst for change. The renewed evangelical fervour which accompanied her crusade brought many new converts to the Bethesda Mission. In the midst of this evangelical renewal, a recent convert, Robert Chauncey English, began to hold Pentecostal meetings conversion in his home. He subsequently joined forces with the Bethesda mission. English was thus transformed from a Water Street jeweller into Garrigus' co-pastor from 1920 to 1927, and the first superintendent of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland.

Pentecostalism spread to other parts of Newfoundland in the 1920s. Methodists, in particular, were attracted to the revivalist enthusiasm of Pentecostalism, and congregations were established in Clarke's Beach, Port de Grave, Flat Islands and elsewhere. The Pentecostal movement experienced its greatest growth in central and western Newfoundland beginning in 1925 with the activity of Charles L. March and Herbert Eddy.

Industrialisation, which had encouraged the growth of Pentecostalism in the United States, had reached Newfoundland. Central and western Newfoundland were particularly affected by the new industrial economy. March and Eddy erected the first west coast Pentecostal church, known as the Ark, in Corner Brook in 1925, and congregations were established in central Newfoundland soon after.Eugene Vaters



Eugene Vaters as a Methodist Minister. Reproduced by permission of The Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland Archives, St. John's, Newfoundland. (Larger version)

 

 

 

 

In the early 1920s Garrigus came into contact with Eugene Vaters, a young preacher who had opened an independent Pentecostal mission in Victoria, Conception Bay. Studying to be a Methodist minister in Rochester, NY, Vaters had been attracted to Pentecostalism and moved back to Newfoundland in 1923. Garrigus and Vaters joined forces in 1925, and the Bethesda Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland were designated as a distinct denomination that same year. Vaters replaced English as leader of the Bethesda Pentecostal Movement in 1927, and served until 1962.

Vaters accomplished much for the Pentecostal denomination in Newfoundland and Labrador. He maintained and strengthened the Bethesda Assembly, and achieved governmental recognition in education in 1954. He helped to establish the periodical Good Tidings, and a summer camp in Lewisporte.

Good Tidings

Good Tidings, Premiere Issue.
Reproduced by permission of The Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland Archives, St. John's, Newfoundland. (Larger version)

Vaters was also instrumental in encouraging missionary activity both overseas and in Labrador, where assemblies were formed in places such as Cartwright, Happy Valley, Nain, and Forteau. By the end of Vaters' administration in 1962, the Pentecostal Assemblies of Newfoundland had over 20 000 adherents in 115 congregations. Vaters was succeeded by A. Stanley Bursey who served as General Superintendent until 1980. In 1981 there were over 35 000 Pentecostals in Newfoundland and Labrador.


Pentecostal Fellowship of North America Convention

Pentecostal Fellowship of North America Convention,
St. John's, Newfoundland, 1977.
Reproduced by permission of The Pentecostal Assemblies
of Newfoundland Archives, St. John's, Newfoundland. (Larger version)