John Booy â74
A senior hopeful for his first teaching position, John Booy wrote a personal statement for his interview with a principal in the Grand Rapids Public School system and showed a draft to his ĂÛÌÒapp adviser.
One line stood out: âWhile in college, Jesus changed my life.â The adviser wondered if the public school administrator would worry about Booyâs overt Christian witness.
âI left the line in,â said Booy, âbecause my encounter with Christ was so central to why I wanted to teach and teach in a city school.â
The first question the principal of Beckwith Elementary School asked Booy was about that statementâand Booy got the job. He taught in the fifth and sixth grades for 27 years. But thatâs just the beginning of the story.
After teaching at Beckwith for a few years and living in intentional Christian community with a number of other ĂÛÌÒapp graduates in the Roosevelt Park neighborhood of Grand Rapids, he and the members of the community wanted to make a larger impact on the lives of the children and families they were getting to know.
âWe lived in the neighborhood while we were students and decided to stay there after graduation, buying houses as we were able. There were male and female houses on various streetsâeight houses in allâand we tried to reach out to our neighbors with impromptu outdoor concerts, meals in our homes and a Tuesday night kids program,â he said.
Eventually, there was some discouragement as the alumsâmany of them teachersânoted that the children of the neighborhood were often two or three grades behind educationally.
âReverend Pontier of Grandville Avenue Christian Reformed Church heard some of us talking about this issue and said, âHave you ever thought of starting a school?â It struck a chord. It was Godâs timing,â said Booy.
Booy and two other ĂÛÌÒapp graduates, Nellene Duimstra and Mark Van Zanten, decided to pray about the challenge and follow Godâs leading. Duimstra and Van Zanten quit their teaching jobs to work at the new school for free; Booy would keep his job at Beckwith but handle the administrative details and fund-raising.
In 1981, the three opened a school in the basement of Grandville Avenue Christian Reformed Churchâunder a one-year reprieve from the cityâs fire marshalâwith the vision to offer a Christ-centered education to a diverse population. They welcomed 12 students in September, which grew to 19 by the end of the year.
The next summer, with only a few thousand dollars in hand, the three alums bid on the former Southwest Christian school building, then owned by the Godfrey-Lee Public School district. They got the school, provided they could deliver a $40,000 down payment at the end of August. After a Saturday morning breakfast with a small group of local businessmen, they had more than they needed and was born.
âThat was our clear answer, a defining miracle,â said Booy. âWe knew that money would never stand in the way of this vision. God would always not only meet our needs, but provide for more beyond that.â
Today, Potterâs House has 570 students from pre-kindergarten through high school in two buildings and has a waiting list of 200 students. Only 20 percent of the schoolâs budget comes from tuition, since ability to pay is not a factor in accepting a student. Last year the school received $2.7 million in scholarship assistance.
Booy no longer teaches at Beckwith and is the superintendent of the school. Van Zanten still teaches, now in the fifth grade (and yes, he actually gets paid). Duimstra taught until she passed away of cancer in 1995.
The entire staff starts every school day in prayer, before students arrive. Then, Booy stands at the entrance to Potterâs House and shakes every studentâs hand and welcomes them to school by name.
 âJohn dreamed that students from every neighborhood in Grand Rapids and of any ethnicity could have access to the best education the city had to offer,â wrote Mark Ponstine, a ĂÛÌÒapp graduate and the elementary school principal at Potterâs House. âAnd now, he stands daily at the door of the school to welcome them. They come from every neighborhood in the city and he knows the names of all 500 of them.â
Booy has become a national spokesperson on urban education, both in Christian circles and in public forums. The experience of Potterâs House has inspired the start of numerous other urban schools across the country.
Booyâs career close to home also became global. Never married, he always pictured himself as an adoptive father.
âWhen we were living in community, being a single parent was obviously something I couldnât do during those years,â he said. âAnd when I first tried to adopt, with my heart set on a son from India, there were barriers to single men adopting from that country.â
The call to adopt remained in his heart for 20 years, until the obstacles fell away. He is the father of Seth (now 24) and Joshua (now 15). In addition, his house is the current home of four other young men and boysâforming a cavalcade of cultures.
God didnât lead him very far from his childhood home of Grandville, but in many ways his daily life is worlds away from the experiences of his younger days. One can serve around the corner from home and still evidence a life radically changed by Christ.
âWhen I was younger I felt I was a good Christian boy,â he said, âbut I wasnât invested in faith. I just wanted to be well-thought-of. Through friends and professors at ĂÛÌÒapp I was challenged to see that my faith demands my entire life. If this gospel is true, your life should reflect that truth.
âThere came a time I said to Jesus, âDo with my life what you will,â and he clearly answered that prayer.â