History
The Alaska Bible Institute began
with the burden of a few Alaska missionaries to establish a place where
Alaska natives could be grounded in the faith through the concentrated
teaching of God's Word and Christian fellowship. After months of prayer
and effort, God, in a most unexpected way, began to fulfill this vision.
In the fall of 1965, under the encouragement of missionary Barbara
Crozier and the direction of Pastor Ray Arno, The Alaska Native Bible
Institute began. School facilities were non-existent and operating
capital was very small, but God provided. Students were flown in from
villages and housed in rented cabins in Homer.
In 1971 God made it clear that the school should be available to all,
so the word "Native" was dropped and the school is now known as the
Alaska Bible Institute. ABI operates under the Board of Directors of
Alaska Village Missions, Inc. (AVM). There is no tuition charge and the
staff receive no salary. ABI is interdenominational and the board and
staff strive to make it an institution that can be a help to all,
regardless of church affiliation. |