Pastor Sullivant was saved at the age of 15 during a revival service in Kansas City, Missouri. He heard a message on Hell and knew that he was in need of salvation. At the age of sixteen, his youth group from Kansas City took a trip to a camp at Lake of the Woods, Ontario, and it was during that week he surrendered to God's will for his life. He knew that God called him to preach and that one day he would be serving the Lord in the great land of Canada.
After completing Bible college, he and his wife Brenda, along with five of their eight children (three later born inCanada), came to Manitoba in September of 1988. On December 11 of that same year, the first service for the Pembina Valley Baptist Church was held.
Pastor Sullivant has assisted in the starting of 11 churches, but the need to train young men became a great concern to him in 1995, when he and the members of Pembina Valley Baptist Church determined to start Canadian Baptist Bible College. God has greatly blessed.
Jake Friesen was raised in a home where the Bible and church was not part of his upbringing. He was taught to do the best he could, and hope that he would make it to Heaven somehow. He had a lot of fear in his heart about going to Hell. At the age of thirty, someone shared the Gospel of Jesus Christ with him. Telling him how Jesus had paid his sin debt by dying on the cross, and by trusting in Him he could be saved from Hell. On October 29 of 2000, Jake trusted Jesus Christ as his personal Saviour. He joined Pembina Valley Baptist Church shortly after that. Jake served in the youth department for nine years, and also graduated from Canadian Baptist Bible College.
In 2010, Jake and Anna surrendered to the call of God to be missionaries to the Mennonites of Mexico. Both Jake and Anna were born into Mennonite families and spoke the Low German language fluently. In 2013, after two years of deputation, they moved to Mexico. They served with missionaries Will and Cindy Klassen for five years.
During their fifth year in Mexico, God directed their hearts to CanAmera, through much prayer and fasting, and counsel from their pastor, Jake and Anna moved back to Manitoba, where Jake now serves as General Director of CanAmera Baptist Missions International.
Anna trusted Jesus Christ as her personal Saviour at a young age, but grew up attending a church which taught works for salvation. It was not until Jake and Anna started to attend Pembina Valley Baptist Church that they both began to grow in their faith. They immediately got involved in the ministry of Pembina Valley Baptist Church. Anna served with her husband in the youth ministry, sang in choir and attended Canadian Baptist Bible College.
In 2010, Jake and Anna surrendered to the call of God to be missionaries to the Mennonites of Mexico. Both Jake and Anna were born into Mennonite families and spoke the Low German language fluently. In 2013, after two years of deputation, they moved to Mexico. They served with missionaries Will and Cindy Klassen for five years.
During their fifth year in Mexico, God directed their hearts to CanAmera, through much prayer and fasting, and counsel from their pastor, Jake and Anna moved back to Manitoba. Anna serves along side her husband, as CanAmera's Secretary.
Dr. Dave Cook is a former missionary and current church planter.
Brother Bernie Dueck is a Deacon at Pembina Valley Baptist Church.
"Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me."—John 14:6