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Former Calvin Professor Sues After Losing Job for Performing Queer Wedding

Por Bob Smietana
wedding calvin transgender queer
Calvin University professor Joe Kuilema, right, officiates the wedding of Nicole Sweda and Annica Steen on Oct. 15, 2021. (Photo courtesy of Nicole Sweda)

A former Calvin University professor who Perdió su empleo after performing a wedding for a transgender former student has sued the evangelical school for retaliation and discrimination.

In a complaint filed Friday, lawyers for Joseph Kuilema, who taught social work at Calvin from 2008 to 2022, alleged that school officials fired the former professor due to his support of LGBTQ students and that they retaliated against him for complaining about a film shown on campus that he believed was racist.

The complaint also alleges that Calvin discriminated against one of Kuilema’s former students after he performed their wedding and that he was fired after complaining about the school’s actions. Kuilema’s attorneys argue school officials at the Grand Rapids university violated Michigan’s civil rights law.

Calvin is affiliated with the Christian Reformed Church, whose doctrine defines “adultery, premarital sex, extra-marital sex, polyamory, pornography and homosexual sex” as sinful. In 2022, the church voted to make that doctrine confessional — meaning churches, church members and church-affiliated institutions are expected to agree with the teaching in order to remain in good standing. Before 2022, church members could disagree with the teaching as long as they agreed to abide by it.

In a statement, a Calvin spokesman said the university has long allowed faculty to have diverse viewpoints but also has clear rules about conduct.

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“While there is room for personal disagreement with CRC doctrine, the university has clear expectations for employees regarding teaching, scholarship and personal conduct and follows established processes to review alleged violations of those expectations and to determine appropriate responses,” the spokesperson said. “We are confident those processes were followed in this case and plan to defend this lawsuit in court. At this time, the university has no further comment on active litigation.”

The complaint details Kuilema’s long-running dispute with school policy.

In 2016, according to the complaint, he began working on a history of LBGTQ employees who had been fired by the school, in hopes of publishing the piece in the student newspaper. The complaint alleges that he was blocked from doing so.

calvin college crc christian reformed stand
Universidad de Calvin en Grand Rapids, Michigan. (Foto de Andy Calvert, cortesía de la Universidad de Calvin)

Kuilema also “routinely and openly expressed concerns about Calvin’s treatment of and toward LGBT+ people,” according to the complaint.

While he did inform students about church teaching, Kuilema did not attempt to persuade students to follow that doctrine.

“Rather, he was bluntly honest and vocal with his students, fellow faculty and fellow Calvin community members whenever he disagreed with the CRC’s position, particularly in regard to its positions regarding LGBT+ persons,” stated the complaint.

Despite support from his fellow faculty members, Kuilema was denied tenure at the school in 2018 but continued to teach there on a series of renewable contracts. His attorneys allege that while he was allowed to disagree with church teaching, board members criticized his “tone and strategy.”

That “tone and strategy,” according to the complaint, included advocating for LGBTQ students and for students of color.

In an interview, Kuilema said things had long been rocky between him and the university.

“I’ve been a thorn in Calvin’s side for a long time,” he said. “They tried to get rid of me a couple of different times. This was about my advocacy, around racism and around homophobia.”

Kuilema’s contract was up for renewal when school officials learned he had officiated the wedding. According to the complaint, he spoke with his pastor and the chair of his department to see if officiating it would violate the “Christian Reform faith or the values of Calvin.”

According to the complaint, he received “unanimous support that officiating the wedding was consistent with such belief.”

The professor’s attorneys also argue that he was acting as a private citizen and not a Calvin professor when he officiated the ceremony. They note he is not a pastor and does not perform any religious role at the school.

The attorneys argue the wedding, between a former student who identifies as a transgender man and a lesbian woman, did not violate church teaching. The church’s teaching addresses sex, not marriage, they argue, and the school did not have a policy about civil marriage.

Kuilema’s attorneys allege the university stacked the committee that decided his fate, replacing a supporter with an outspoken critic. They also allege he was a vocal critic of a decision to show a film titled “How Jack Became Black” on campus, which he believed perpetuated racism against students of color. His opposition to that film, they argue, was also a significant factor in his termination.

The lawsuit was filed at a time when Calvin, like other evangelical schools, is trying to navigate religious teachings on sexuality with changing societal ideas. According to data from the Public Religion Research Institute, almost a quarter of Americans under 30 (23%) identify as LGBTQ — and many young Americans, including college students, support LBGTQ rights.

After the CRC’s 2022 vote to make its teaching on sexuality confessional, Calvin allowed faculty who disagreed with the policy to file “statements of confessional difficulty.” The school’s board voted to allow those faculty to keep their jobs, reportado Chimes, the student newspaper. 

Those statements, conocido in the CRC as “gravamina,” were rare in the past, de acuerdo a an explainer on the CRC’s website. They have become more common after the 2022 decision and are meant to be part of a friendly process to “seek a fuller understanding of the gospel.”

Some regional groups of churches, known as classes, have filed proposals to clarify the use of statements during an upcoming denominational meeting, the CRC’s official magazine reported. There are also proposals to punish churches that do not enforce church teaching.

In March, several Calvin officials, including the school’s president and provost, met with leaders of the Abide Project, a conservative denominational group that supports the church’s teaching on sexuality, de acuerdo a Chimes.

They also offered to meet with representatives of All One Body, which supports LGBTQ rights, and Better Together, which takes an agree-to-disagree approach, the student newspaper reported. 

Abigail Ham, who just completed her term as editor-in-chief for Chimes, said that when news of Kuilema’s termination broke last year, there was a great deal of tension at Calvin over LGBTQ issues. Some of the tension eased this fall, she said, after the school’s board decided to retain faculty who dissented from church teaching about sexuality.

“That gave relief to some of the anxiety faculty had been feeling for some time,” she said.

Now there are concerns about the discussion at this year’s denominational meeting, known as a Synod, where there will be debates over how to enforce church teaching.

“If things get ugly there, then things could get really charged and divided on campus,” she said.

Ham hopes that the lawsuit and debates over sexuality won’t define Calvin’s public image. The students and culture, she said, are much more affirming than the institution.

Kuilema said he believes he had the religious freedom to perform the wedding without breaking any church or university rules. He said he got an online ordination from the same website that ordained celebrities like Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.

Kuilema said he no longer teaches at a religious school but instead is now on the faculty of Grand Valley State University. He filed the lawsuit because he believes Christian schools should have to abide by nondiscrimination laws.

“I don’t think that religious institutions should have a blank check to discriminate,” he said.

Bob SmietanaBob Smietana es reportero nacional de Religion News Service.

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15 Respuestas

  1. It would simply never occur to me to begin attending a Seventh-Day Adventist church and then try to convince them to start meeting on Sundays. Or to try to tell an Orthodox Jewish synagogue that they should serve bacon at synagogue events. Or suggest to a Catholic church that they should stop mentioning Mary. Whatever I may think of those tenets, anyone attending any of those institutions knows up front what they believe, and it’s a fool’s errand to try to get them to change their minds. If you like ham sandwiches, don’t expect to have them served at the local mosque fellowship hour (if Muslims have fellowship hours).

    So what is with all of these people with anti-evangelical beliefs and practices showing up at evangelical churches and schools expecting to win converts? You won’t; it’s a fool’s errand. Find another place where you’ll be more at home.

      1. For anyone who’s either in the Christian Reformed Church, or who wants more information, my advice is to find news sources within the CRC as the best way to really learn what’s going on. Outside reporters simply can’t gather enough info to thoroughly understand the context of most of the things they report on like this. Chances are, there are ordinary people within that denomination who know who all the “players” are, know the history, understand insider language and technical terms. These people may help run some kind of online group, or even put out an old-time newsletter. I used to subscribe to such a news magazine which had been founded by the editor’s mother, and originally copied off on mimeograph in her basement.

        1. Rhonda,
          I think you’ve made a good comment. I am in the United Methodist world and I am routinely frustrated with coverage by the Roys Report, which is typically mostly accurate but seems to leave out the most important details or emphasize the wrong parts of the story. I don’t believe it is deliberate, but maybe does reveal some unconscious bias.

          Nonetheless, I am grateful for the Roys Report, and read it regularly, often sharing content, even though the truth it reveals frustrates and hurts me.

          1. This article and most of those on the latest happenings within the United Methodist Church come from Religion News Service. We have a small staff and simply cover everything, so having a partnership with an organization like RNS is very helpful. That said, if you notice something is missing, please reach out to us through our contact page. Accuracy is critically important to us.

            Rhonda, is there something in this article that’s amiss? If so, please be specific so we can address the issue.

        2. @Rhonda,

          The CRC has gone from 315,000 adherents in the early 1990s to around 200,000 in 2022. I could go into the reasons but it is all bad news.

          I know people who are just trying to keep things going, given that so many people have left the denomination.

          The RCA is in the same state of decline.

          The article only highlights some of the issues facing the CRC.

          This with the backdrop that the U.S population is now at 335 million.

          I do wish TRR would lighten up on Calvin College, and perhaps go after Wheaton College, Liberty or perhaps Baylor university. Baylor by itself has enough issues for a 100 articles.

    1. A decades long tradition in our family at Easter is ham for dinner – I was wondering this year if ham dinners at Easter was/is to spite the Jews. Pork also offends Muslims.
      A current heretical movement in some CRC churches in the Grand Rapids, MI, area is to find common ground regarding sexuality and calling it a “third way”.

  2. Why do non-Christians insist on working at a Christian school? Why do non-Christian students attend a Christian school? And then both groups insist the school change to accommodate their sin? If you have a problem with the Bible, don’t associate with a Christian school.

    1. Marty F,

      It is to subvert from the inside what the school claims to stand for, and to see if the leaders will stand up to their satanic inversion of God’s laws/how many students they can lead astray. The only positive that comes out if these situations is that we learn what schools are living the truth and those that are more worried about bad press, loss of tuition, not God’s judgement.

      1. Lisa M,

        You know them by their actions, not their words.

        Do they earnestly follow the Commandments, do they keep to what Jesus describes as a marriage established by God, or are they trying to redefine/subvert that definition?

        “The lawsuit was filed at a time when Calvin, like other evangelical schools, is trying to navigate religious teachings on sexuality with changing societal ideas.”

        There is nothing to navigate. The culture does not define God’s Laws, if you choose to follow Jesus and serve God, there are restrictions to your behavior/lifestyle. This does not mean you instantly become perfect, but there is a fundamental change in your heart that does not support/perform/participate in what displeases/contradicts God. Sin is sin, regardless if it under heterosexual or homosexual behaviors.

  3. “They have become more common after the 2022 decision and are meant to be part of a friendly process to “seek a fuller understanding of the gospel.”

    The gospel is the same. It has not changed. Little children understand it.

    I would submit seeking “a fuller understanding of the gospel” is code for trying to change it to fit in with current sinful ideas. Someone should probably let people know the gospel cannot be changed.

    Oh, God’s standards are unchangeable, too.

  4. What you sow you shall reap. Calvin has brought this on themselves, they have not stood for biblical truth and their liberal theology will eat them from the inside. God is not mocked, He will purify His church. I hope that those in the CRC will turn to God and believe Him.

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Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.