November 22, 2003 == MEDIA ADVISORY
In August 1954, when Steve Lambers was 24 years old, he and his wife Ardene
applied to become missionaries. On the application form Steve wrote frankly
about the difficulties missionaries face. But, he said, "we are convinced in
our hearts that Christ would help to bear the burdens and that we would be
happy in bringing the 'joyous message.'"
Lamberts went on to bring that joyous message to the mission fields in Nigeria
for nine years (from 1955 to 1964). Later in life, say former colleagues, he
continued to quietly bring joy to whatever he did during a 23-year tenure
(1969-1992) as a librarian at Calvin College.
Friends remembered Lambers this week aft er he died on November 20 after
suffering a heart attack. He was 74 years of age, having turned 74 on the day
of his death.
"Steve was a good colleague," said former Calvin librarian Conrad Bult, who
worked with Lambers all 23 years at Calvin. "When I think of him I picture a
guy with a little bit of a whimsi cal smile - someone who was optimistic and
worked hard. He was a devout man and very loyal to Calvin. he made an
important contribution to the college."
Lambers was born November 20, 1929 in Butterworth Hospital and attended Central
High School and th e n Calvin College, graduating from the latter in 1951 with
a history major and minors in English and sociology. For four years after
graduating he taught at Allendale Christian School. He then spent the nine
years in Nigeria, returned to the U.S. and t aught at East Paris and Creston
Christian schools for five years and then began working at Calvin.
His labor at Calvin included many special projects. Lambers was instrumental
in the library beginning an anniversary/obituary file, consisting of over
10,000 such notices garnered from such publications as The Banner and De
Wachter. That project was spurred, in part, by Lambers keen interest in
genealogy. He also established copious files for the library on well-known
Calvin alumni - people such as author Peter DeVries and screenwriter/director
Paul Schrader.
"He was really interested in history," recalled former colleague Bult. "And he
enjoyed organizing things. His work at Calvin was often behind-the-scenes, but
his labors were important labors that still benefit people."
Lambers labors also benefitted his church - Oakdale Park Christian Reformed
Church. He served in a variety of capacities, including as an elder and as
editor of the church's centennial book. And he served on the school board of
Oakdale Christian School.
Lambers is survived by his wife Ardene, six children - Steve Jr., Rebecca,
Michael, Sarah, Benjamin and Polly - and numerous grandchildren whose sporting
events he was a regular attender of.
In fact, Bult remembers convers ations over coffee at Calvin that often turned
to family.
"He talked about his family a lot," he said. "His family meant a great deal to
him."
Visitation for Lambers will be from 2-4 pm and 7-9 pm on November 23 at Zaagman
Memorial Chapel on Burton Street in Grand Rapids and then again from 10-11 am
at Oakdale CRC on November 24. The funeral service will follow at 11 am at the
church.
-end-
Received on Sat Nov 22 10:03:02 2003
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