Calvin College
3201 Burton St SE
Grand Rapids, MI
49546-4388
(616) 526-6000
(800) 688-0122
(616) 526-8551 (Fax)
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Our Calling
Educating for Shalom: Our Calling as a Christian
College
The great writing prophets of the Bible knew how many ways human life
had gone wrong because they knew how many ways human life can go right.
And they dreamed of a time when God would put things right again.
They dreamed of a new age in which crookedness would be straightened
out, rough places made plain. The foolish would be made wise, and the
wise, humble. They dreamed of a time when the deserts would flower, the
mountains would stream with red wine, a time when weeping would be heard
no more, and when people could sleep without weapons on their laps. People
could work in peace, their work having meaning and point. A lion could
lie down with a lamb, the lion cured of all carnivorous appetite. All
nature would be fruitful, benign, and filled with wonder upon wonder;
all humans would be knit together in brotherhood and sisterhood; and all
nature and all humans would look to God, walk with God, lean toward God,
and delight in God, their shouts of joy and recognition welling up from
valleys and crags, from women in streets and from men on ships.
The webbing together of God, humans, and all creation in justice, fulfillment,
and delight is what the Old Testament prophets called shalom. We
call it peace, but it means far more than mere peace of mind or cease-fire
among enemies. In the Bible shalom means universal flourishing, wholeness,
and delighta rich state of affairs that inspires joyful wonder
as its Creator and Savior opens doors and welcomes the creatures in whom
he delights.
We are now fallen creatures in a fallen world. The Christian gospel tells
us that all hell has broken loose in this sorry world but also that, in
Christ, all heaven has come to do battle. Christ the warrior has come
to defeat worldly power, to move the world over onto a new foundation,
and to equip a peopleinformed, devout, educated, pious, determined
peopleto follow him in righting what's wrong, in transforming what's
corrupted, in doing the things that make for peace.
That's what Christian higher education is for. It's for shalom.
It's for peace in the sense of wholeness and harmony in the world. It's
for restoring proper relationships with nature and other humans and God,
and for teaching us to delight in the wonders of creation that remain.
As my teacher Nicholas Wolterstorff used to say, Christian college education
equips us to be agents of shalom, models of shalom, witnesses to shalom.
I believe we could summarize our calling in Christian college education
as follows: in an academic setting, with the peculiar tools, perspectives,
and resources of academe, we have to equip ourselves with the knowledge,
the skills, and the attitudes that can be thrown into the struggle for
shalom, the battle for universal wholeness and delight. The calling is
exceedingly broad. We must never narrow it down to personal piety. But
our role in the calling at this place is particularly academic: we must
not confuse it with the role of other Christian agencies. So what we need
is an extraordinarily broad concept of the general Christian project in
the world combined with a sufficiently restricted and academic concept
of our present role in preparing to take our place in this project.
As C.S. Lewis once said, we are trying to retake territory that has been
captured by the enemy. We are trying to recapture society, culture, and
all creation for Jesus Christ. We will need the right attitudes for this
recapturing program, including the attitude of delight.
So in a Christ-centered college we learn what we can about creation itself.
We learn the functions and beauty of numbers and sets of numbers; we learn
the wonder of cells and cell division. In The Medusa and the Snail
Lewis Thomas, a truly distinguished scientist, wonders at all the fuss
over test-tube babies. The real marvel, he says, is not the change of
incubators, but rather the sheer joining of sperm and egg and the cell
that eventually emerges from this uniona cell that can grown into
a human brain. "The mere existence of that cell should be one of the greatest
astonishments of the earth. People ought to be walking around all day,
all through their waking hours, calling to each other in endless wonderment,
talking of nothing except that cell."
We study and teach history, as Paul Gagnon has observed, in order, among
other things, to develop judgement. We want to understand from
a biblical point of view what is comic and what is tragic in a fallen
world, and how strikingly often they combine. We must learn not to be
surprised when "failure teaches us more than victory does" as Gagnon puts
it, or when triumph eventually curdles into folly. Christians have a general
explanation for such surprises. Sheer gratitude makes us thankful for
even provisional historical solutions, but our knowledge of human perversity
leads us to do so with a tinge of irony.
We learn to distrust simple accounts of complex events and to be prepared
for the place human irrationality has in the course of human history.
All this equips us to understand the world in which we are to be peace
agents. Just as no CIA agent would be sent to an area of which she was
ignorant, so it's folly for us to expect to serve and transform a world
we do not know.
We learn in literature classes the best that's been thought and said.
Reading fiction, for instance, is an excellent way to learn something
about human character. We learn (as we would by reading the biblical account
of King David) how possible it is for great goodness and great wickedness
to cohabit in a single person. We learn to distinguish in human character
between what is merely bizarre, between what is truly vital and what is
only enthusiastic. As we read and ponder and discuss, our knowledge of
human character deepens and becomes subtle. It's part of our equipment
as peace agents. No business group, no army, no task force, no basketball
team is sent out to serve clients or engage foes without knowing their
character and habits, without trying, so to speak, to climb inside their
skin. And so it is with Christian students reading fiction. It's required
training for the peace corps.
But Christian college education isn't only a matter of knowledge. It
includes skills as well. We learn how to read, and how to read critically.
We learn how to compute and how to do it precisely. We learn how to experiment,
and how to do it scrupulously. We learn how to write better so as to equip
ourselves to spread the truth and to do it really efficiently.
In physical education we gain knowledge, skills, and attitudes that are
natural for embodied creatures who, even as adults, must play. Part of
our calling as delighted creatures of God is to be playful. War, for instance,
isn't playful. Football is. A prominent mistake is to confuse these things.
In art and music we learn to delight in sheer beauty and to distinguish
what is lovely from what is merely loud, what is graceful from what is
garish.
In all these areas and many others we become equipped. Of course we become
equipped for jobs. But that's not the final point of college education.
The reason is that as Christian people we shall still have to ask what
those jobs themselves are for. How will the job I'm preparing for serve
God by serving other people? How will it clean a lake instead of polluting
one? How will it offer opportunity to marginalized people rather than
crowd them still further out to the rim of things? How will it yield an
honestly built product or genuinely useful service that will anticipate
the new heaven and earth? In other words, how will the knowledge, skills,
and values of my Christian college educationhow will these things
be used to clear some part of the human jungle, or restore some part of
the lost loveliness of God's world, or introduce some novel beauty into
it? That is, how do my education and work make for shalom?
In the things that clean and clarify, in the things that build and rebuild,
in the things that bring light and delightin all things that make
for shalom, may the Lord bless and keep us and cause his face to shine
on us, and be gracious to us and give us his peace.
Cornelius Plantinga, Jr.
Dr. Plantinga is a '67 Calvin graduate and the President of Calvin
Theological Seminary. He is the author of several books, including Not
the Way It's Supposed to Be (Eerdmans, 1995), one of Christianity Today's
"Books of the Year." |