Calvin celebrates 900 graduates
More than 900 graduates participated in the college鈥檚 95th annual Commencement ceremony, held in late May in Van Noord Arena on Calvin鈥檚 campus. The graduates represented more than 60 majors within the arts and humanities, social and natural sciences, and professional programs.
This year鈥檚 class joins the 62,000 Calvin alums working and serving around the corner and across the globe.
Graduate Brianna Marshall, a geology major from Sacramento, Calif., reflected, 鈥淐alvin made me think more deeply about the world and to realize that all aspects of life are important to God, not just the explicitly religious ones. I learned through my courses and experiences that God wants us to be passionate about bringing reconciliation and justice to every part of creation.鈥
鈥淚 remember the first time my adviser told me to apply to present my research at a conference鈥攊t seemed so impossible, but with his encouragement it became reality several times over,鈥 said Maria Cupery, a linguistics major from Istanbul, Turkey, who was awarded the prestigious Lynn Fellowship at Purdue University.
At the ceremony, student senate president Jona Eigege addressed the class with 鈥淗ow (Not) to Change the World.鈥 鈥淭his past semester I took Chemistry 101,鈥 he said. 鈥溾 really believe that what God calls us to be in His work of renewing the world is catalysts. We are catalysts of the Kingdom.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 interesting about catalysts is that they are never interested in product; they鈥檙e all about reactants,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we truly want to be agents of renewal in God鈥檚 world, we need to be about the process. This truth is evident when we make the world our lab and examine it through the lens of history.鈥澛
Commencement speaker Mark Labberton, president of Fuller Theological Seminary, then challenged the graduates to 鈥済o and be finite.鈥 鈥淵our future is not about the major arcs of your life; it will be about the increments of your life,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ife is lived one day at a time.
鈥淒o you want to be a great scientist? Then be at the lab every day. Do you want to be a writer? Then write every day. If you want to be an artist, then paint and sculpt, and it will all come down to what you do on any one day,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or it鈥檚 in that focus of particularity that we discover some of the greatest riches of imagination and heart and mind that God has given us. To discover the deep richness of wonder, of worship, of discovery, of innovation鈥攖hese are all great things鈥攚e do them all just a day at time.鈥