Frank Schaeffer

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Frank Schaeffer
Born (1952-08-03) August 3, 1952 (age 71)
Edith Seville

Frank Schaeffer (born August 3, 1952) is an American author, film director, screenwriter, and public speaker. He is the son of theologian and author

evangelical
household including Portofino, Zermatt, and Saving Grandma.

While Schaeffer was a conservative, fundamentalist Christian in his youth, he has changed his views, becoming a liberal Democrat and a self-described Christian atheist.[3][4] He lives north of Boston.[4]

Life and career

Schaeffer was born in Switzerland in 1952, the son of American missionaries Francis and Edith Schaeffer. He worked with his father and other members of the Religious Right in the 1970s making films, writing books, and speaking at churches and other venues. In the 1980s he continued to write on religious and political themes but also directed several Hollywood movies.[1]

He converted from

Calvinism to Eastern Orthodox Christianity in 1990[5] and gave lectures on his reasons for rejecting conservative evangelical Protestantism. He has criticized the traditional positions of the Orthodox churches on matters of sexual morality.[citation needed
]

Schaeffer's publishing house, Regina Orthodox Press, released Seraphim Rose: The True Story and Private Letters, a 2000 biography of hieromonk Seraphim Rose by Rose's niece Cathy Scott[6] that included Rose's sexuality, which was a topic of controversy among some Eastern Orthodox faithful after the book was published.[7]

In 2006, Schaeffer published Baby Jack, a novel about a US Marine killed in Iraq. He is also wrote non-fiction books related to the Marine Corps, including Keeping Faith: A Father-Son Story About Love and the United States Marine Corps, co-written with his son John Schaeffer, and AWOL: The Unexcused Absence of America's Upper Classes from Military Service and How It Hurts Our Country, co-authored with former Bill Clinton presidential aide Kathy Roth-Douquet.

In 2007, Schaeffer published his autobiography, Crazy for God: How I Grew Up As One of the Elect, Helped Found the Religious Right and Lived to Take All (or Almost All) of It Back, in which he goes into detail about growing up in the Schaeffer family and around

female sexuality.[8]

The two memoirs form the first and third book of what Schaeffer calls his "God trilogy". The second one, Patience with God: Faith for People Who Don't Like Religion (or Atheism) (2010), describes his spirituality as it exists since abandoning conservative evangelicalism. The first half contains critiques of both the New Atheists and of Christian fundamentalism.

Starting with his 2014 book Why I Am an Atheist Who Believes in God, he has described himself as an

atheist, saying that even though he attends church every weekend and prays,[3] "I do not always believe, let alone know, if God exists. I do not always know he, she, or it does not exist either, though there are long patches in my life when it seems God never did exist."[9] Schaeffer has stated that one of his goals of his book is to "unhook [young Evangelicals] from allegiance to the Bible".[3]

Political views

Schaeffer has gone from being a conservative Republican to becoming a liberal Democrat.[3][4]

When Schaeffer was young, he and his

Abortion and the Conscience of a Nation.[4]

Schaeffer has written: "In the mid 1980s I left the Religious Right, after I realized just how very anti-American they are (the theme I explore in my book Crazy For God)."[10] He added that he was a Republican until 2000, working for Senator John McCain in that year's primaries, but that after the 2000 election he re-registered as an independent.[10]

On February 7, 2008, Schaeffer endorsed Senator Barack Obama for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, in an article entitled "Why I'm Pro-Life and Pro-Obama."[11] The next month, prompted by the controversy over remarks by the pastor of Obama's church, he wrote: "[W]hen my late father – Religious Right leader Francis Schaeffer – denounced America and even called for the violent overthrow of the US government, he was invited to lunch with presidents Ford, Reagan and Bush, Sr."[12]

After the

2008 Russian-Georgian War, Schaeffer described Russia as a resurgent Orthodox Christian power, paying back the West for its support of Muslim Kosovar secessionists against Orthodox Serbia.[13]

On October 10, 2008, a public letter to Senator John McCain and

Baltimore Sun newspaper.[14] The letter contained an impassioned plea for McCain to arrest what Schaeffer perceived as a hateful and prejudiced tone of the Republican Party's election campaign. Schaeffer was convinced that there was a pronounced danger that fringe groups in America could be goaded into pursuing violence. "If you do not stand up for all that is good in America and declare that Senator Obama is a patriot, fit for office, and denounce your hate-filled supporters... history will hold you responsible for all that follows."[14]

Soon after Obama's inauguration, Schaeffer criticized Republican leaders:

How can anyone who loves our country support the Republicans now?

William F. Buckley and Ronald Reagan defined the modern conservatism that used to be what the Republican Party I belonged to was about. Today no actual conservative can be a Republican. Reagan would despise today's wholly negative Republican Party.[10]

In an interview on October 23, 2009, Schaeffer said his and his father's (Francis) position on abortion was co-opted by people looking for an issue that could shift political power within America.[15]

In 2012, Schaeffer criticized the Republican Party's opposition to abortion rights, something which received criticism from Rod Dreher and other conservative Christians.[16]

Works

Books

Films

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ .
  2. ^
    IMDb
  3. ^
    Huffington Post
    . Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e Oppenheimer, Mark (August 19, 2011). "Son of Evangelical Royalty Turns His Back, and Tells the Tale". The New York Times. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  5. . Schaeffer converted to Greek Orthodoxy in 1990
  6. – via Google Books.
  7. ^ "Lives of a Saint". Pomona College. April 13, 2001. Archived from the original on April 25, 2022. Retrieved December 15, 2022.
  8. ^ Smiley, Jane (July 8, 2011). "Jane Smiley reviews Frank Schaeffer's 'Sex, Mom, and God'". The Washington Post.
  9. ^ Piatt, Christian (May 13, 2014). "The God-Believing Atheist: A Q&A with Frank Schaeffer". sojo.net. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  10. ^
    The Huffington Post
    . Retrieved March 9, 2009.
  11. ^ Schaeffer, Frank (February 7, 2008). "Why I'm Pro-Life and Pro-Obama". The Huffington Post. Retrieved September 17, 2008.
  12. ^ Schaeffer, Frank (March 16, 2008). "Obama's Minister Committed 'Treason' But When My Father Said the Same Thing He Was a Republican Hero". The Huffington Post. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  13. ^ Schaeffer, Frank (August 12, 2008). "Why Russia Invaded Georgia: Payback Time from the Orthodox World to the West". The Huffington Post. Retrieved September 17, 2008.
  14. ^ a b Schaeffer, Frank (October 10, 2008). "McCain's attacks fuel dangerous hatred". Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on October 16, 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2008.
  15. ^ "God In America – Interview: Frank Schaeffer". God in America. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
  16. ^ Dreher, Rod (November 30, 2012). "Frank Schaeffer: Go To Hell, Pro-Lifers". The American Conservative. Retrieved April 2, 2016.

External links