Gratitude, Growth, and a Bright Future: Calvin Honors the Leadership of Provost Noah Toly
As Calvin University prepares for commencement, the community is also reflecting with gratitude on the leadership of Provost Noah Toly as he concludes his time in the role, marking a season defined by renewal, momentum, and deepened mission.
Toly arrived in 2021 during the final stretch of the COVID-19 pandemic, stepping into a campus still regaining its rhythm. What he remembers most is not disruption, but renewal.
“One of the most meaningful things for me has been watching life come back to campus,” Toly said. “To see students fully engaged again, in athletics, in the arts, in the classroom, that energy is what makes Calvin so special.”
A Campus Reawakens
In those early months, campus life was still shaped by distancing and uncertainty. But gradually, Calvin’s hallmark vibrancy returned; athletic events filled again, concerts and performances regained momentum, and students re-engaged fully in the rhythms of university life.
That return, Toly said, was more than operational; it was cultural.
“It reminded me that this is a deeply relational place,” he said. “When the community is fully present, you feel the difference immediately.”
Strengthening the Student Experience
A key focus of Toly’s leadership has been broadening opportunities across campus life, particularly in athletics and the arts, areas he describes as “rising tide” investments that benefit the entire university.
During his tenure, Calvin expanded its athletics program, including the addition of football, while continuing to strengthen one of the premier Division III athletic departments in the country. At the same time, the university invested in music, theater, visual arts, and interdisciplinary academic programming.
“These are investments that don’t belong to one department,” Toly said. “They shape the whole student experience.”
A Mission That Holds It All Together
Throughout his time as provost, Toly has emphasized Calvin’s mission of forming students who serve as agents of renewal in the world.
“What makes Calvin distinctive is how it draws on its Reformed Christian commitments in a generative way,” he said. “They shape how we think, how we teach, and how we engage the world.”
That mission, he added, is most visible to students.
“To watch faculty and staff invest so deeply in students, not just academically, but personally and spiritually, that’s the heart of this place.”
Leading Through a Complex Season
Toly’s tenure also included guiding the university through significant institutional conversations involving identity, governance, and the relationship between church and academy. His approach centered on listening, clarity, and shared discernment.
“I’ve learned the importance of listening first,” he said. “When people come together around shared purpose, even difficult challenges can be navigated faithfully.”
That commitment to dialogue was reflected in initiatives such as the Healthy Dialogue Series, which created space for thoughtful engagement across differences.
A Distinctive Community with Deep Roots
When asked what makes Calvin unique, Toly points to the strength that emerges from within.
“There’s a kind of grassroots energy here,” he said. “So much of what defines Calvin grows from faculty, staff, and students who are deeply committed to their calling.”
From nationally recognized sustainability efforts to programs like prison education and community partnerships in Grand Rapids, Calvin’s impact extends well beyond campus.
“Calvin exists for something beyond itself,” Toly said. “And that shapes everything we do.”
A Legacy of Leadership
University President Greg Elzinga offered a deeply personal reflection on Toly’s impact during a recent campus gathering honoring his service.
“Noah has helped us understand ourselves more clearly as an institution,” Elzinga said. “He has helped identify our strengths, clarify our commitments, and strengthen how we engage our deepest convictions with the world around us. He has led with nuance, coherence, and integrity during one of the most complex seasons in higher education.”
Elzinga also emphasized Toly’s ability to integrate ideas, mission, and public responsibility.
“In the truest sense, Noah has been a public intellectual, not in abstraction, but in vocation,” he said. “He has reminded us that ideas matter because people matter, and institutions matter because they shape lives. He has held together academic excellence, Christian conviction, and public responsibility without letting them drift apart.”
He added that Toly’s influence extends beyond leadership structure into the life of the community itself.
“Noah has strengthened Calvin internally and externally,” Elzinga said. “He has modeled intellectually rigorous leadership that is also deeply human, deeply generous, and deeply committed to students and mission.”
Hospitality, Generosity, and Community
Elzinga also pointed to the personal ways Toly, and his family have shaped campus life.
“Becky and Noah have opened their home to students in extraordinary ways,” he said. “From more than 100 Sunday dinners that have served more than a thousand student meals over time, to countless informal gatherings, their hospitality has created a culture of warmth and belonging that will be remembered for years.”
A New Chapter in Christian Higher Education
As Toly prepares for his next chapter, Elzinga expressed confidence that his influence will continue to shape Christian higher education nationally.
“Noah is uniquely gifted to help Christian colleges think deeply about how faith and intellectual rigor belong together,” he said. “What he has practiced here at Calvin will now help strengthen institutions across the country.”
Looking Ahead
Toly will next serve as a senior fellow with the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, supporting initiatives focused on faith and learning, and as a visiting fellow with the Center for Public Justice, leading their university-state relations project and contributing to efforts to rebuild trust between higher education and the public.
“I’m excited to continue working alongside institutions that are seeking to live out their mission with clarity and confidence,” Toly said.
A Full-Circle Commencement Moment
Toly’s final day as provost will coincide with commencement, an especially meaningful milestone, as one of his sons' graduates alongside him.
“It’s hard to imagine a better way to close this chapter,” he said. “To celebrate with students and families, and especially with my own son and future daughter-in-law, it’s incredibly special.”
As Calvin looks ahead, it does so with momentum, clarity, and confidence, shaped in part by Toly’s steady leadership during a season of change.
And, as President Elzinga noted, his impact will continue to ripple far beyond campus.
“Noah has helped prepare Calvin not just for the present moment, but for the future,” Elzinga said. “We are deeply grateful and we know his influence will continue to bless Christian higher education for years to come.”