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Calvin News

Calvin remembers Dale Brown

Tue, Oct 14, 2014
Matt Kucinski

He had a love for literary study, a passion for teaching and a wicked sense of humor. He was a good listener, a fierce competitor and a tenderhearted man.

These are just a handful of the ways those in the Calvin are remembering their longtime colleague , 65, who died on Friday, Oct. 10 in Bristol, Tenn. from injuries he suffered following a bicycle accident earlier in the week.

鈥淲e鈥檒l really miss him. And we are brokenhearted for his family and the community at King [University]. It鈥檚 a hard thing,鈥 said , English professor at Calvin.

鈥淗e was a sweet, comical, gentle man 鈥 what a fine, good, interesting human being he was, to me and to my family,鈥 said , English professor at Calvin.

鈥淗e cared a lot about students and their wellbeing. He had a pastoral quality to him and helped me think carefully about students as whole people,鈥 said , English professor at Calvin.

While Brown left Calvin College in 2007 to move closer to family and to found the at in Bristol, Tenn., he kept strong ties to the Calvin community, which he served for two decades.

Drawing out potential

Zwart had the opportunity to learn from Brown both as his student and colleague at Calvin. She says he was incredibly inspiring and had a knack for drawing out students鈥 potential.

鈥淗e saw in other people the things that they could accomplish before they saw them in themselves,鈥 said Zwart. 鈥淗e was an amazing person at kind of turning the course of people鈥檚 lives, making them braver, making them more generous.

鈥淚 won鈥檛 say that if it hadn鈥檛 been for Dale I wouldn鈥檛 have been a professor. But, I never would have done it with the same passion or clearness of vision,鈥 she added.

Adding voices to the conversation

Brown鈥檚 influence at Calvin stretched well beyond the students he served, and the colleagues he served alongside, to literary enthusiasts around the world. One of the most far reaching things he did at Calvin was help in shaping the vision for the college鈥檚 that brings together 2,000 readers, writers and literary enthusiasts from around the world every two years to talk about the intersection of faith and writing.

鈥淭hat intersection between what literature does and what faith means, that whole area was important to him throughout his career,鈥 said Zwart. 鈥淭o introduce people to the way literature can both affirm and challenge our faith and to introduce a wide group of people to that, not just the academic crowd, but also people who were more lay readers, that was hugely important to him.鈥

And it was something to which he dedicated his life鈥檚 work. In starting the Buechner Institute, Brown intentionally brought people together to have deep conversations around the intersection of faith and culture.

Living out a clear mission

鈥淗e always saw faith as compelling us to action for one another,鈥 said Karen Saupe, who worked with Brown from 12 years. 鈥淗e encouraged people to ask hard questions about their faith and not to easily accept everything. He thought Scripture should challenge us too.鈥

Saupe said one of the quotes Brown often referenced was 鈥淎 book must be an ice axe to break the sea frozen inside us,鈥 by Franz Kafka, a prominent 20th-century fiction writer.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why he taught. That鈥檚 why he did what he did at Calvin and the Buechner Institute and with the Festival,鈥 said Saupe. 鈥淗e thought that literature should challenge us and that it鈥檚 part of how we grow in our lives, in our faith.鈥

鈥淗e could quickly identify with writers and students who did not simply accept the doctrine as it was explained to them,鈥 said Vanden Bosch, who worked with Brown for two decades. 鈥淭hose people who had misgivings, who had doubts, they gravitated to Dale. He helped them find a way through those doubts, misgivings, and struggles. That was clearly his mission.鈥

Brown is survived by his wife Gayle and his two adult children Anne and Jonathan. A memorial service will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 16 in the student center complex at King University in Bristol, Tenn.


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