Letters to the Editor 2013 Spring
A call to divest
It is with great interest that I read about as well as his dedication to confront Calvin鈥檚 challenging financial situation.
Michael Van Denend that will be up for board approval in May of 2014. Van Denend claimed 鈥渢he plan is participatory and open; there will be opportunity for all voices to be heard and options to be put on the table for consideration.鈥 Le Roy, according to Van Denend, desires this financial plan to be sustainable, affordable and strategically focused. I would assume this plan would include a campus audit of buildings, procedures and practices during this time of financial challenge. I would also assume, as a Christian college with the biblical mandate to seek justice and protect the vulnerable, Calvin would examine where their financial investments lie to ensure the school is not profiting from environmentally and socially destructive companies.
As a school with a mission to develop students to be 鈥渁gents of renewal,鈥 I would conclude that Calvin desires its investment holdings to be in line with that mission. Therefore, I call on Calvin College to immediately freeze any new investment in fossil-fuel companies, and to divest within five years from direct ownership and from any commingled funds that include fossil-fuel public equities and corporate bonds. I believe such action on behalf of Calvin will not only be a sound decision for its financial portfolio, but also for the well-being of its current and future graduating classes, who deserve the opportunity to graduate with a future not defined by climate chaos and with an education not funded by environmentally destructive companies.
By January 2013 there were 210 public and private universities pressuring their schools鈥 administration to divest. I commend the current Calvin students who created a petition to divest at , and I urge all alumni and current students to sign the petition.
I also call on Le Roy to sign the 聽on behalf of Calvin.
I know climate change denial exists, but this is not about climate change rhetoric. This is about physics. Two thousand twelve was the warmest year on record and the second most extreme year for weather-related events. The scientific consensus is clear and overwhelming; we cannot safely burn even half of global fossil-fuel reserves without dangerously warming the planet.
It is with a hopeful heart and a respectful tone that I submit this letter. It is my desire that Calvin truly be a place of 鈥渕inds of the making鈥 (not a place of minds made up or minds disinterested) and a vibrant, engaged institution educating for shalom.
Ann Wiersma Van Zee 鈥01
Chicago, Ill.
Grateful to Calvin
I would like to say thank you for being so faithful in sending us the Spark in spite of not always being faithful in making donations towards this magazine. Thanks for keeping us informed.
I received a 鈥渟park鈥 in 1961 when my brother took me on a tour through the old and new campuses. This experience convicted me to return to school and get my high school education and start on the road to a degree in education. I graduated in 1968. After 33 years in the teaching profession, 20 of those in administration as well鈥攊n Immanuel Christian, Lethbridge, Alta.; Shannon Heights Christian, Langley, B.C.; Delta Christian, Ladner, B.C.; and Gibsons Christian, Gibsons, B.C.鈥擨 thank Calvin College for my education.
Since retiring in 2002, my wife, Gerda, and I have volunteered at Haggai Institute on Maui and at Barnabas Family Ministries on Keats Island. We have just moved to a lovely and quiet acreage with our daughter and son-in-law and their three lovely children. We have four kids and 12 grandchildren.
Jake Lieuwen 鈥68
Langley, B.C.
Facing financial reality
The acknowledgment that the financial terrain is sobering is hopeful. Just聽acknowledging the issue exists can be a blow. My hope would be from the聽leadership down to the first-year student that the reality would have been聽staring us right in the face by this point. The reality is our policies as a聽country are failing: Americans are not educated in how success is achieved, and聽prosperity is dim for most when reliance on government exists.
Solutions to this should be to engage the local business leaders in the聽. The featured list is disappointing with the few exceptions. All聽speakers this year should have been chosen based on their business and聽Christian background, discussing the economy that we as a country and college聽face as a result of the current policies.
Jon Vasquez 鈥91
Bagram, Afghanistan
Study Bible as product of its culture
From the Spark (winter 2012) which I just received, I'm reading that there is聽an 鈥渁ll-campus Bible study (which) annually gathers students, faculty and聽staff in many groups 鈥 to study the same text鈥 and for this go-round it is聽the Sermon on the Mount.
Having just skimmed those chapters (Matt 5, 6, 7), I鈥檓 recognizing verses聽that have been resounding in my head over the decades, and verses I鈥檝e quoted聽as back-up to my written thoughts over the years.
Indeed, I can鈥檛 quote right now from a learned historian to back me up, but it鈥檚 just conventional wisdom that these passages in Matthew are one of the聽intellectual pillars of Western Civilization, especially its legal systems.聽Thank God the Calvin community was not invited to read chapters containing the聽dreaded 鈥渟even passages鈥 or verses regarding 鈥渟ervants obey your masters,聽for this is right.鈥 But even in these oft-cited chapters in Matthew there is聽weirdness and attention to strange and to us moderns, irrelevant detail.
So I hope that the Calvin students will read those three chapters in Matthew聽and will digest all of the wisdom, both human and divine, that is found there.聽But I see that Matthew and all of our cherished Bible is a product of the聽culture of its time, containing some universal truth and some nonsense.聽
As Karen Armstrong writes in The Bible: A Biography (2007): 鈥淔rom the first,聽the biblical authors contradicted each other, and their conflicting versions聽were all included by the editors in the final text.鈥
Harold Bontekoe 鈥62
Hawthorne, N.J.