Calvin celebrates Refor-ween
Goblins, godzillas and ghouls: step aside as October 31 approaches on Calvin’s campus this year—John Calvin and Martin Luther would like to outdo you.
Calvin’s calendar is filled with the usual Halloween events this year: , a trick-or-treat fest for community kids, a masquerade dance and countless residence hall floor activities. But alongside these events are : two special chapel services, an open house at the (complete with a quiz and prizes), an , two lectures and .
60+ years of hymnsings
Given this line-up of events, this year will be the biggest celebration of Reformation Day the Calvin campus has ever seen. Typically, the college celebrates the holiday on a smaller scale.
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A headline in the October 27, 1949 issue of Calvin’s student newspaper reads “Student Hymn Sing Marks Reformation Day.” The news announcement details a “singspiration” in which “special musical numbers” were arranged for chapelgoers.
An item in the October 29, 2009 edition of the daily e-bulletin, “Student News” invites the Calvin community to a Reformation Day hymnsing not altogether unlike the 1949 chapel service held on Calvin’s Franklin campus.
In the years between the two announcements, Calvin College has, with varying degrees of consistency, celebrated Reformation Day with a Reformation-themed chapel service.
Reformation Day amnesia
Still, no one seems to remember these special services, or any other Reformation Day celebrations at Calvin.
When a is asked to recall significant Reformation Day celebrations at Calvin over the years, talk quickly turns to various Halloween goings-ons.
"What’s Reformation Day?” quips current professor of Ken Pomykala.
Some emeriti recall a Reformation Day prank students pulled in 1962 involving sweatshirts printed with a picture of 16th-century heretic Servetus standing over flames. Below the flames were the words "Servetus: Warmed by the Calvin Spark.” Students broke into the Calvin bookstore one night and posed wearing the shirts. They then superimposed heads of famous figures—JFK, Howdy Doody, Fidel Castro, John Calvin and even the late —on the figures wearing the shirts and printed the picture in Chimes (see picture below). The prank generated laughs—and then controversy—when the Detroit Free Press and other state media picked up on the story.
"Then we [Calvin professors] had to put out the fire,” said Professor Emeritus of English Steve Vander Weele, laughing heartily.
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Sweatshirts "worn" by famous figures like JFK, Howdy Doody and John Calvin bear a picture of the 16th-century heretic Servetus held over flames. The shirts say "Servetus: Warmed by the Calvin Spark."
And spiritual amnesia too
doesn’t recall celebrating the holiday during his 28-year tenure as the college’s spiritual leader. He regards the omission as a symptom of a sort of “spiritual amnesia.”
"As I look back over the years, I have a few regrets and this is one of them. … It was pretty thin stuff if we celebrated it at all,” Cooper said.
Cooper encourages the Calvin community to do more with Reformation Day than it has done in the past.
"In the Christian tradition, never has the future needed a past in the way it does today. To remember and be grateful for our ancestors in the faith is important from the point of view of gratitude, but it’s also important as we try to shape our heirs in the faith,” he said.
Meeter Center director agrees.
"Especially in this era when more and more of our students consider themselves non-denominational, it’s important to consider what our Reformed heritage is all about and what its legacy is for today,” she said.
Maag and her Meeter Center colleagues have organized or publicized Calvin will hold to celebrate Reformation Day this year. The special events are a part of a , who was born 500 years ago, in 1509.
Reformation = reaffirmation
For , coordinator of worship for , Reformation Day is more than a celebration of Calvin College’s namesake.
"I see it as an opportunity to reaffirm some of the basic truths that came out of the Reformation, to affirm sola Scriptura (by Scripture alone), solus Christus (Christ alone), sola gratia (by grace alone), sola fide (by faith alone), soli Deo gloria (glory of God alone),” Ryan said.
Ryan sent Friday chapelgoers out of Reformation Day chapel with Martin Luther’s famous hymn “A Mighty Fortress is our God.”
"The inclusion of ‘A Mighty Fortress’ is a way to say, ‘Yeah, we like Martin Luther, he’s a good guy!’” he said.
And lest anyone worries that Reformation Day is a triumphalistic holiday celebrated at the expense of other traditions, as Chaplain Emeritus Cooper worries it may have been when he was growing up, Ryan mentions another song that was a part of the Reformation Day hymnsing: "Your Grace is Enough,” by Matt Maher.
Maher, according to , is a Roman Catholic singer/songwriter/worship leader.