Just below ground level on Calvin's campus there is a
department that—appropriately—studies the earth.
Walk down the steps into bowels of North Hall and let your eyes adjust
to the light. Look out of office and classroom windows, and you'll see
the earth everywhere. Yellow slivers of sunlight filter through the
tops of the trees onto a forest floor. It's as if you've stepped back
in time, into the heart of a small primordial forest.
It's an apt metaphor for what the department of geology, geography
and environmental studies does here. The seven professors in this department
look back in time to study how the earth has been formed; they study
its composition now; and they look forward to see what must be done
to better use the earth and its resources. Geography professor and current
dean of research and scholarship Janel Curry puts it well: "We
study the earth; the earth alone or as the home of humanity." The
discipline of geography has two thrusts: physical geography focuses
on the study of the earth's surface while human geography studies the
interplay of our earth and its human inhabitants. The department's second
discipline, geology, examines the composition of our earth, while the
third discipline, environmental studies, concentrates on how mankind
can best live with the earth in wholeness and healthy relationship.
It's a complex task for a small department, but after spending a day
and a half with faculty and students, I am convinced that they are up
to it, and that they love the work they do. An exploration of the department's
home yields the evidence.
I meander down a hall to see lit display cases containing all kinds
of interesting specimens: rocks and fossils, brachiopods, blastoids
and bones, all with classifications and names I can't get my tongue
around. On one shelf lies a tooth the size of a brick: it's the right
upper molar of the "Ada Bible Church Mastodon," says the label
(see p. 28). Another wall displays charts on volcanoes and solfataras,
magna and lava. I take a long look at the giant relief map of the world
that stands taller than I am outstretched and at least four giant steps
across.
Then there is the shiny new computer lab, gleaming with new monitors
and hard drives, all recently dedicated on October 2, 200l. Here students
can create intricate maps and analyze oodles of data. They can make
high-impact visuals and answer questions ranging from "Where exactly
should the next retail outlet be located?" to "What is the
relationship between income and the demographics in a particular area."
It's not just the physical evidence, it's the attitude of the faculty
that impresses me. It impresses the students, too. Seniors Sebastian
Naslund and Nathan Bosch speak of the passion their instructors have
for their teaching, their research and for creation itself. The department
chair, Henk Aay, explains that "geography, like no other discipline,
is able to bring the natural and human world together in a dynamic interplay,"
while Curry says that the question of "what it means to live on
God's good earth" undergirds all study done by her colleagues.
Aay agrees, explaining that striving to understand the delicate "interplay
between the natural world and the human world" is "what animates
us."
It isn't just the professors who feel passionately about their subject
of study; students too exhibit a real love for the earth. Naslund, a
geology major from Abbotsford, B.C., says simply, "I love nature."
Curry says that at times she wonders if her students "aren't prophetic…if
the love they have for the earth isn't a lot like the love students
might have for the handicapped, for kids with special needs."
Love for creation is naturally linked to one's love for God. Bosch,
a geography major from Grand Rapids, says that his professors are not
afraid to vocalize their faith. "Some of the most passionate professors
for religion (faith in God) are the geography professors…the awe
and amazement (is what) they try to reveal to us every day. They genuinely
see God in the natural world." Bosch adds that the connection between
faith and reason is a given that many of the professors at Calvin strive
to articulate and model.
Bosch feels privileged to have taken courses with professors that
have encouraged him to learn in the light of faith. Bosch elaborates:
God has given us two obvious ways to learn about him, scriptures and
creation. In his studies, he was encouraged to explore "the wonder
of both."
Wonder also motivates research done by the department. Though too complex
and varied to do justice here, a few examples of questions that the
geography, geology and environmental studies professors are asking might
help understand the scope of this research. Ralph Stearley, professor
of geology, explores such questions as "How do planets move matter
around internationally?" and "Why is there such a lack of
liquid on other planets?" Johnathan Bascom, who specializes in
the area of African studies, asks questions such as "What is the
relationship between refugee resettlement and rural development in Africa?"
and has published articles and books exploring the answer. Aay, who
does "historiographic retrieval," explores the work of Christian
thinkers in the field of geography whose work is "significant but
undervalued and needs to be brought to light." Davis Young, internally
known for his writing, has made significant contributions in the area
of the relationship between geology and Christianity.
It's surprising to think that Calvin has not always had a geology,
geography and environmental studies department. In l950, seminary student
Tymen Hofman and some of his classmates wrote a letter to the board,
explaining that Calvin ought to offer courses in geology that could
give a Christian perspective on "the ages of rocks and the long
history of living organisms preserved as fossils." It took another
17 years before Clarence Menninga was hired. When he arrived in 1967,
Menninga began teaching the first courses in geology at Calvin.
Eleven years after Menninga arrived, Young joined him and the geology
program expanded to a minor. When James Clark joined the faculty in
1982, the program expanded to a major. Geography was added to the program
with the arrival of Henk Aay in 1982; three years after his arrival,
a minor was established, and in another three years, students could
earn a geography major. Aay was also instrumental in establishing the
environmental studies program, a program that Aay says was launched
"a bit late" but in response to "a growing awareness
of environmental issues."
In a world that is at times chaotic and where people seem not to care
about each other or their earth, even professors of geology, geography
and environmental studies can grow discouraged. But Curry says that
her students "are amazingly optimistic and hopeful. They hold to
the vision of healing that their faith in God gives them." Aay
agrees, "That's true, you know. It's often the students that keep
you going." Without knowing it, the students who take classes in
the basement of North Hall give their professors the courage to keep
to the task at hand, or as Bascom expresses it, "to plow the small
field" they've been given. |