The Banner has a subscription to republish articles from Religion News Service. This story by Bob Smietana was published on religionnews.com. The Banner may publish its own article connected to this news, but in the meantime shares this coverage. The article has been edited for length, and a quote from and link to Calvinâs position have been added.
For years, Calvin University, a leading evangelical school in Grand Rapids, Mich., has tried to walk a fine line of being welcoming to LGBTQ students while still enforcing traditional Christian Reformed Church views on sexuality.
The school sponsors a for gay students, gave an alumni award to an LGBTQ graduate, and last year saw a as student body president.
But after a Calvin professor officiated a wedding last fall for an LGBTQ staffer at a campus-based research center, putting both employees in violation of school policy, school leaders tried to resolve the matter quietly. The Center for Social Research, part of the school since the 1970s, was allowed to , and the staffer was able to stay.
Things changed when Chimes, the Calvin student newspaper, about the reason for the split. Chimes later Nicole Sweda, the Calvin staffer whose marriage led the research center to leave Calvin.
âIâm not going to be ashamed for being queer,â Sweda, who ultimately quit her job in order to speak openly about her wedding, said in the Chimes interview. âIâm not going to be ashamed for being married to Annica.â
The events reveal the dilemma facing many Christian schools, who want to welcome a diverse range of students to their campus while upholding their beliefs that marriage is for one man and one woman and that sex outside marriage is sinful.
Striking that balance has become increasingly difficult in recent years as more and more young Americans, including students at Christian schools, identify as LGBTQâa recent Gallup survey that 1 in 5 Americans born between 1997 and 2003 say they are LGBT.
âI want Calvin to be honest,â said Sweda. âIf they are going to cut ties with staff members, faculty, and an entire center over this, then just say that. And stop promoting things that make Calvin look more welcoming.â
When Sweda and Annica Steen decided to marry in the fall of 2021, they knew their wedding day would be bittersweet: Amid the celebration there would be the pain of rejection by friends and family who disapproved of their relationship on theological grounds. The couple wanted to find someone to officiate who could capture the range of emotions they were feeling. Because the wedding would be a civil ceremony, the couple was not looking for a clergyperson, but still someone they admired.
âRight away Joe came to mind,â said Sweda, referring to Joseph Kuilema, an assistant professor of sociology and social work at Calvin who had been a friend and mentor to Sweda.
Last Oct. 15, Kuilema stood with the couple in front of a gathering of family and friends and pronounced them legally married.
Things began to unravel in January when Sweda was summoned to a meeting at the provostâs office, where, Chimes, Sweda was told that her marriage violated university policy and that she could no longer stay at Calvin.
She told Chimes, âIf they had fired me that day, that would have been fine by me.â Sweda told Religion News Service that fellow staff and supervisors were aware of the marriage.
But instead of firing Sweda, the school told her it was working on an alternative solution: to spin off the Center for Social Research, which is largely self-sufficient. In February, the center, which performs surveys and other research projects for nonprofits, businesses, and churches, plans to become independent by the end of April 2022.
Neil Carlson, director of the Center for Social Research, the split between the school and the center was amicable. âWe still have a desire to stay in social and economic proximity with the community; itâs not a bad breakup, more of a âletâs just be friends,ââ he said in February.
Carlson declined to speak to RNS, directing press inquiries to a Calvin spokesman. That spokesman declined to discuss personnel matters.
Provost Noah Toly did confirm that all faculty and staff, including those at the center, are required to follow the schoolâs employment policies, which bar sex outside of a marriage between a man and a woman. He also said that hiring managers and supervisors are required to enforce the policy.
Despite the research centerâs pending move, Sweda decided to quit her job in March because, she told RNS, she would otherwise have to keep quiet about her marriage until CSRâs departure from Calvin was completedâsomething she was unwilling to do.
Meanwhile, Chimes has reported that Kuilemaâs contract renewal might have been delayed because of his participation in the wedding, and his future at Calvin might be in jeopardy.
Though he has taught at Calvin since 2008, Kuilema, who declined a request for an interview, was by the schoolâs board in 2018.
Calvinâs policies reflect the position of the Christian Reformed Church. At this yearâs denominational annual synod, a report from a Committee to Articulate a Foundation-laying Biblical Theology of Human Sexuality will be presented. Made available to member churches in the fall of 2020, the report affirms the churchâs traditional beliefs.
A precursor report approved in 2016 bans pastors and church leaders from officiating weddings of same-sex couples. That report allows church members to take part in such weddings as long as they realize that such weddings are sinful.
âCalvin is an institution of the Christian Reformed Church in North America, and our positions and policies are intended to follow its doctrines,â said Toly. âWe donât follow the doctrines of the church because we have to,â he added. âWe follow the doctrines of the church because we believe thatâs the right thing to do.â
Toly also confirmed that Calvin employees, both gay and straight, have left the school for violating the schoolâs policies. When an employee violates policy, the school would prefer to bring that employee into compliance with policy, but doing so is not always easy or possible, he said.
âJoining a community or institution almost always means inheriting positions and submitting to rules made by others, even if we donât agree with all the rules, wouldnât make those rules ourselves, or want to change the rule,â he said. âThis need to live within a doctrinal framework and set of rules we donât make is heightened in a confessional institution. Colleges and universities arenât the only places where this happens, but theyâre great places for students to grapple with this reality.â
Not all Calvin students or alums who disagree with the school want to break ties. Ryan Struyk, a Calvin graduate and journalist who the schoolâs 2021 young alumni award, says the schoolâs mission still inspires him. Though he disagrees with the schoolâs beliefs about sexuality, he taught a journalism class as adjunct professor last spring.
âI taught my course with a robust, wholehearted Reformed Christian perspective, even though Iâve also come to a different conclusion than the university about how God calls me to live in this specific area,â he said. âI have no doubt that many LGBTQ Christians like me have much to offer Calvin and its students. We should be able to do so. Calvinâs mission still inspires me today, and my deep desire is to live out my place in that mission, no matter who I marry.â
Kelsey Coburn, former coordinator of student support and sexuality programming at Calvin, said the tensions between the universityâs policies about sexuality and the reality of studentsâ lives made it difficult for staff to be supportive of LGBT students.
While at Calvin, Coburn oversaw the Sexuality and Gender Awareness support group for LGBT students. She said she felt pressure to support the schoolâs policies, which she felt limited her ability to care for students.
âCalvin wants to present that they are more than happy to have conversations across ideological divides, but the reality is that the CRC is not affirming,â Coburn said. Calvinâs position on homosexuality, as articulated in an , includes the understanding that, âChastity is the biblical pattern for ordering the sexual dimension of our lives, and honors sexual relations as having their proper place in a marriage relationship between a man and a woman.â
Sweda said she might return to the center after it becomes independent or might find another job. Until then, Sweda and her wife plan to enjoy their first year as a married couple.
âI donât think we were expecting this in our first year of marriage,â she said. âThis incident isnât going to cloud the celebration of our wedding and our marriage.â
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