Manuscript Collection MS#002
Boxes #117-119
Content Summary: Minutes
and other records of the Cono Christian School, the Bible Presbyterian Church
and Covenant Theological Seminary; Correspondence; Sermon Notes; Materials
from printing business
Biographical sketch: provided at the end of this page.
Span dates: 1945-1985 |
Size: 1.0 cu. ft. (one carton) |
Access: This collection is open to researchers.
Preferred citation: Max Victor Belz Manuscript Collection, PCA Historical Center, St. Louis, Missouri.
Related Collections: Cono
Christian School; Bible Presbyterian Church; Covenant Theological Seminary.
|

Max Victor Belz
[12 June 1914 - 2 December 1978]
|
Box 117: Family and miscellaneous correspondence,
Cono Christian School documents; General Synod (BPC) dockets, minutes
and reports.
Box 118: Correspondence; Sermon Notes; Covenant
Theological Seminary, Board of Trustee Minutes, 1958 - 1973.
Box 119: Materials from the printing business conducted
by Max Belz, including representative samples of his work for Covenant
College, The Bible Presbyterian Reporter, National Presbyterian
Missions, The Reformed Presbyterian Advocate, and World Presbyterian
Missions.
Collection Focus: "Ask God to Use
His Rod"--A Personal Testimony by Max Belz
Biographical Sketch [excerpted from the Minutes of the 157th General Synod of
the RPCES, page 172]:
When the Lord took the Rev. Max Belz home to heaven on December
2, 1978, the Midwestern Presbytery of the Reformed Presbyterian Church,
Evangelical Synod, lost one of its most colorful and most beloved members.
He had been a member of this presbytery continuously since his entrance
into the denomination in 1948 at the time when he led his congregation at
Cono Center near Walker, Iowa, to throw off the shackles of the compromising
fellowship of the Presbyterian Church in the USA.
Although his was a rural church, it was always under his leadership a veritable
beehive of activity. Max Belz was one of the first pastors in the denomination
to recognize the significant importance of the preservation of the faith
and nurture of the hearts and minds of children of the church in an age
when the public school systems were becoming increasingly anti-Christian.
With the support and encouragement of some of his faithful elders and friends
he established Cono Christian School. The influence of this institution
has been a blessing throughout the entire denomination. It has set an example
of high quality Christian education which has been followed in a good many
of our churches.
Max Belz was always deeply involved in the work of the church as a whole.
He was a member of the founding board of Covenant College and Covenant Theological
Seminary. He has also served on the board of Christian Training, Inc. It
was through his initiative that the Bulletin News Supplement was begun,
and for years he was responsible not only for its editing but also its printing-and
he rejoiced in serving the church he loved so well.
His last extended journey away from his home was to the Grand Rapids meeting
of the synod last June. Of this visit his son, Joel, wrote, "I think he
sensed a foretaste of his welcome to heaven itself as he was embraced by
so many with whom he has worked in the last 30 years.
Surely the greatest witness to the life and testimony of Max Belz and his
dear wife, Jean, is the family that he left behind when he was taken to
glory. Every one of his eight children is an active, dedicated Christian
reflecting the godliness that their father and mother exhibited day after
day in their home. Max and Jean Belz instilled in their children an appreciation
for the value of hard work, but they also surrounded them with parental
love and tender care even as they taught them of the love of God.
Although he lived in a rural area there are some respects in which Max Belz
was ahead of his time. His founding of the Cono Educational Network is an
example of this. Everyone who has been closely associated with him is grateful
to God for this gifted servant of the Lord whose zealous commitment to his
Saviour was an inspiration that remains even though Max Belz himself is
with the Lord he loved so fervently.
|