The 'little fellow' with a big impact
Dale Cooper describes himself as an 鈥渦nusually ordinary little fellow,鈥 but of course, there鈥檚 no one in the Calvin College community that would agree with that assessment.
For 30 years, 鈥淐oop鈥 made his mark on the Calvin community, both in religion department classrooms and as the college鈥檚 chaplain.
鈥淗is pastoral heart has endeared him to generations of students,鈥 wrote Crystal De Weerd Unema 鈥67, who nominated Cooper for the award.
When he was 3 years old, his mother contracted polio and never left the iron lung to which she was confined; Cooper鈥檚 dad quit his job as an onion farmer and spent the next 39 years at her side.
The experience shaped his life. Today, reflecting on a career as a pastor of college students, he said, 鈥淭o be given the privilege of being able to enter the arena of human pain, in my case, with younger people at Calvin College, students who were in the hospital or bereaved, those were certainly among my most fulfilling parts of ministry.
鈥淧erhaps, probably, God used those circumstances in my family鈥檚 life so that I could minister to others,鈥 said Cooper.
He believes he had 鈥渢he best of three worlds鈥 as a college teacher and chaplain: he could teach, he could preach and he could be a pastor to 4,000 young people.
Among his favorite classes to teach were courses on John Calvin鈥檚 Institutes of the Christian Religion and the interim explorations of the contemplatives, especially Thomas Merton鈥攁nd the meaningful time spent taking students to the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky, where Merton lived.
Cooper said he is often asked if he is worried about the faith of the next generation and of the church they will be leading.
鈥淲ith as much sincerity as I can muster, I can tell you that I am not discouraged about the future of the church,鈥 he said.
鈥淎nd young people鈥攎ore specifically my students here at Calvin College鈥 have been instruments of God to give me fresh hope.鈥
bodyimage1 callout1It was always Cooper鈥檚 aim to walk alongside his students and to orient his ministry around five things: to help them feel understood; to feel accepted; to feel that they are loved; when necessary, that they are forgiven; and to feel that he, as their chaplain, is trustworthy and would keep his promises to them.
He is Calvinist-characteristically humbled by receiving the Faith and Learning Award and believes that perhaps the spiritual virtue of gratitude is the best response.
鈥淚 think that one of the ways God could be honored in this would be鈥攁t least for this little fellow鈥攖o cultivate gratitude,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t has given me the opportunity to reflect on the gifts God has given, and one of them is my long, long participation in the life of Calvin College.鈥
One thing鈥檚 for certain: 鈥淐oop鈥 is not a 鈥渓ittle fellow鈥 in the lives of hundreds and hundreds of Calvin graduates who had the blessing of his teaching, preaching and wise counsel.
鈥淩ev. Cooper has influenced students for years as a Christian role model,鈥 wrote Unema. 鈥淗is caring, counseling and spiritual guidance to Calvin students is superior 鈥 and he truly embodies and reflects the Christian values to which all Calvin alumni can aspire.鈥