Just before the turn of the new millennium, Archbishop Adam Exner, like many others, was asking himself the question, “What will the future bring?” 

He posed that question to about 100 college students and guests in the fall of 1999, and with it he offered a piece of the answer: the opening of two Catholic post-secondary institutions. 

That September, Corpus Christi College in Vancouver and Redeemer Pacific College in Langley opened their classrooms to their first waves of students. He called it a “historical breakthrough” to open two Catholic colleges in one year, a milestone that would lead hundreds of students to seek answers to the big questions for the next quarter century. 

“There is much hopelessness, much purposelessness,” he said to those assembled for the RPC inauguration Mass in Langley Sept. 8. “We need a light of hope. I pray that Redeemer Pacific will be a ray of hope spread to us and many others in the world.”

Redeemer Pacific College grad Kaitlin Kirkwood in 2003, left. President Tom Hamel chats with graduate Diane Kranabetter in 2008.

That college welcomed 12 students in its first year and teaches courses that can be applied to a degree at Trinity Western University. 

Archbishop Exner commented on the small class size that year: “The Lord began with 12 illiterate fishermen and look what He accomplished with them.” 

Corpus Christi College, which is at the University of British Columbia, had a few more people on its class list: 13 full-time students and 3 part-time. It took about a decade of planning for this dream, propelled forward by increasing demand for Catholic post-secondary education, to become reality. 

“We asked, is God calling us to go beyond to the post-secondary level?” said Archbishop Exner at the Corpus Christi inauguration Mass. 

A 2007 photo shows Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, shaking hands with former Corpus Christi president Gerry Sylvester as his son David, then-president, looks on. 

“After much prayer, reflection, study, and hard work, we were led to the discernment that the Holy Spirit indeed wants us in the Church in Vancouver to move beyond elementary and high school level to the post-secondary level, so Corpus Christi College at UBC has become a reality and Redeemer Pacific College in Langley has become a reality.” 

Garry Sylvester, executive director of Corpus Christi, told The B.C. Catholic at the time that the project was “blessed by the hard work and generosity of many devoted people,” including the Basilian Fathers at St. Mark’s and the Archdiocese of Vancouver. 

“The Holy Spirit has a way of making things happen and of bringing people together.”

Exner called Corpus Christi a “small seed” that would grow into “a huge fruit-bearing tree” in the years that would follow.

Redeemer Pacific College was re-named to Catholic Pacific College in 2015. Nearly 25 years after their inaugurations, both schools continue to educate and encourage young adults to ask the big questions.

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