| Francis Schaeffer |

Founder of L'Abri community |
| Born |
1912-01-30
|
| Died |
1984-05-15
|
| Occupation |
Christian Philosopher & Church Leader |
| Spouse |
Edith Seville |
Francis August Schaeffer (30 January 1912 –
15 May 1984)[1] was an American Evangelical Christian theologian, philosopher, and Presbyterian pastor. He is most
famous for his writings and his establishment of the L'Abri community in Switzerland. Opposed to theological modernism, Schaeffer
promoted an orthodox Protestant faith and a presuppositional approach to Christian
apologetics, which he believed would answer the questions of the age. A number of scholars credit Schaeffer's ideas with
helping spark the rise of the Christian Right in the United States. He is the father of
author and filmmaker Frank Schaeffer.
Education and Early Career
Schaeffer grew up in Germantown, Pennsylvania.
In 1935, Schaeffer graduated magna cum laude from
Hampden-Sydney College. The same year he married Edith Seville, the daughter of
missionary parents who had been with China Inland
Mission founded by Hudson Taylor. Schaeffer then enrolled at Westminster Theological Seminary in the fall and studied under Cornelius Van Til (presuppositional apologetics)
and J. Gresham Machen (doctrine of
inerrancy).
In 1937, Schaeffer transferred to Faith Theological Seminary, graduating in 1938. This seminary was newly formed as a result of a split in the Presbyterian Church of America (now the
Orthodox Presbyterian Church) and the Bible Presbyterian Church, a Presbyterian
denomination more identified with Fundamentalist Christianity and
premillennialism. Schaeffer was the first student to graduate and the first to be
ordained in the Bible Presbyterian Church. He served pastorates in Pennsylvania
(Grove City and Chester) and
St. Louis, Missouri. He later left the BPC and joined the less-radical
Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod[2], a forerunner of the Presbyterian Church in America.
In 1948, the Schaeffer family moved to Switzerland and in 1955
established the community called L'Abri (French for "the shelter"). [1] [3]
In 1954, Schaeffer was awarded the honorary Doctor of
Divinity degree from Highland College in Long Beach, California.
In 1971, Schaeffer received the honorary Doctor of
Letters degree from Gordon College in Wenham, Massachusetts.
In 1982, John Warwick Montgomery nominated
Schaeffer for an honorary Doctor of Laws degree, which was conferred in 1983 by the Simon Greenleaf School of Law, Anaheim, California in recognition of his apologetic writings and ministry. [4]
Apologetics
Schaeffer's approach to Christian apologetics was primarily influenced by Herman
Dooyeweerd, Edward John Carnell, and Cornelius Van Til, but he was not known to be a strict presuppositionalist in the Van Tillian
tradition. In a 1948 article in The Bible Today, Schaeffer explained his own apologetics and how he walked a middle path
between evidentialism and presuppositionalism. [5] J. Budziszewski summarizes the article about this middle path
approach by writing:
- Presuppositionalists, he held, are right to assert that the ultimate premises of Christian and anti–Christian systems of
thought are utterly at odds. On the other hand, evidentialists are right to assert that between Christian and anti–Christian
systems of thought there is always a point of contact. The reason for this point of contact, he argued, is that nonbelievers
cannot bring themselves to be completely consistent with their own presuppositions, and this inconsistency is a result of common
grace. "Thus, illogically," he wrote, "men have in their accepted worldviews various amounts
of that which is ours. But, illogical though it may be, it is there and we can appeal to it." [6]
Schaeffer came to use this middle path as the basis for his method of evangelism which he called Taking the roof
off. [7] An example of Taking the roof off in
written form can be found in Schaeffer's work entitled Death in the City. [8] Nancy Pearcey also describes two
books by Schaeffer, Escape From Reason and The God Who Is There in this way:
- In these books, Schaeffer explains the history of the two-story division of knowledge, often referred to as the fact/value
split. He also describes his highly effective apologetics method, which combined elements of both evidentialism and
presuppositionalism. [9]
Legacy
Today, more than twenty years after his death, his teachings continue in the same informal setting at The Francis A. Schaeffer
Foundation in Gryon, Switzerland. It is led by one of his daughters and sons-in-law as a small
scale alternative to the original L'Abri Fellowship International which is still operating in nearby Huemoz-sur-Ollon and other places in the world. Covenant
Theological Seminary also has established the Francis A. Schaeffer Institute directed by a former English L'Abri member,
Jerram Barrs. The purpose of the school is to train Christians to demonstrate compassionately
and defend reasonably what they see as the claims of Christ on all
of life. [10]
Schaeffer popularized, in the modern context, a conservative Puritan and Reformed perspective.
Political Activism
Francis Schaeffer is credited with helping spark a return to political activism among Protestant evangelicals and
fundamentalists in the late 1970s and early 1980s, especially in
relation to the issue of abortion. Schaeffer called for a challenge to what he saw as the increasing influence of secular
humanism. Schaeffer's views were expressed in two works, his book entitled A Christian Manifesto, as well as a film
series, Whatever Happened to the Human Race?.
A Christian Manifesto
Schaeffer's A Christian Manifesto [11] was
published in 1981. The name of the book is intended to position its thesis as a Christian answer to The Communist Manifesto and the Humanist
Manifesto documents of 1933 and 1973. Schaeffer's diagnosis is that the decline of Western Civilization is due to
society having become increasingly pluralistic, resulting in a shift "away from a
world view that was at least vaguely Christian in people's memory ... toward something completely different". Schaeffer argues
that there is a philosophical struggle between the people of God and the secular humanists.
In a sermon also titled "A Christian Manifesto", [12]
Schaeffer defines secular humanism as the worldview where "man is the measure of all
things," and in the book he claims that critics of the Christian Right miss the mark by confusing the "humanist religion" with
humanitarianism, the humanities, or love of humans. He describes the conflict with secular humanism as a battle in which "these
two religions, Christianity and humanism, stand over against each other as totalities." He writes that the decline of commitment
to objective truth that he perceives in the various institutions of society is "not because of a conspiracy, but because the
church has forsaken its duty to be the salt of the culture." Schaeffer explains:
- A true Christian in Hitler's Germany and in the
occupied countries should have defied the false and counterfeit state and hidden his Jewish
neighbors from the German SS Troops. The government had abrogated its authority, and it
had no right to make any demands.
He then suggests that similar tactics be used to stop abortion. But Schaeffer argues he is not talking about a theocracy:
- State officials must know that we are serious about stopping abortion,...First, we must make definite that we are in
no way talking about any kind of theocracy. Let me say that with great emphasis. Witherspoon, Jefferson, the American Founders
had no idea of a theocracy. That is made plain by the First Amendment, and we must continually emphasize the fact that we are not
talking about some kind, or any kind, of a theocracy. [13]
Christian Reconstructionists Gary
North and David Chilton, were highly critical of A Christian Manifesto and
Schaeffer. [14]
Their critical comments were prompted, they wrote, by the popularity of Schaeffer's book (pp.116-17). They suggested that
Schaeffer supports pluralism because he sees the First Amendment as freedom of religion for all; and they themselves reject
pluralism (pp.128-29). Pointing out negative statements Schaeffer made about theocracy, North and Chilton then explain why they
promote it (pp.121-22). They extend their criticism of Schaeffer:
- "The fact remains that Dr. Schaeffer’s manifesto offers no prescriptions for a Christian society. We mention that
merely in the interests of clarity, for we are not sure that anybody has noticed it up to now. The same comment applies to
all of Dr. Schaeffer’s writings: he does not spell out the Christian alternative.(pp. 127-28; emphasis North and
Chilton)"
Influence of Schaeffer on the Christian Right
Christian Right leaders such as Tim LaHaye have
credited Schaeffer for influencing their theological arguments urging political participation
by evangelicals [15]. Randall Terry, the founder of Operation Rescue, also
acknowledged the influence of Schaeffer.
Beginning in the 1990s, critics began exploring the intellectual/ideological connection between
Schaeffer’s political activism and writings of the early 1980s to contemporary religious-political
trends in the Christian Right, sometimes grouped under the name Dominionism, with mixed
conclusions.
Sara Diamond [16] and Frederick Clarkson [17]
have written articles tracing the activism of numerous key figures in the Christian Right to the influence of Francis Schaeffer.
According to Diamond: "The idea of taking dominion over secular society gained widespread currency with the 1981 publication
of...Schaeffer's book A Christian Manifesto. The book sold 290,000 copies in its first year, and it remains one of the
movement's most frequently cited texts." Diamond summarizes the book and its importance to the Christian Right:
- In A Christian Manifesto, Schaeffer's argument is simple. The United States began as a nation rooted in Biblical
principles. But as society became more pluralistic, with each new wave of immigrants, proponents of a new philosophy of secular
humanism gradually came to dominate debate on policy issues. Since humanists place human progress, not God, at the center of
their considerations, they pushed American culture in all manner of ungodly directions, the most visible results of which
included legalized abortion and the secularization of the public schools. At the end of -- A Christian Manifesto, Schaeffer calls
for Christians to use civil disobedience to restore Biblical morality, which explains Schaeffer's popularity with groups like
Operation Rescue. Randall Terry has credited Schaeffer as a major influence in his life.
Frederick Clarkson explains that this had practical applications:
- "Francis Schaeffer is widely credited with providing the impetus for Protestant evangelical political action against
abortion. For example, Randall Terry, the founder of Operation Rescue, says: "You have to read Schaeffer's Christian Manifesto if
you want to understand Operation Rescue." Schaeffer, a longtime leader in Rev. Carl McIntire's splinter denomination, the Bible
Presbyterian Church, was a reader of Reconstructionist literature but has been reluctant to acknowledge its influence. Indeed,
Schaeffer and his followers specifically rejected the modern application of Old Testament law."[18]
Analyses of Schaeffer as the major intellectual influence on Dominionism can be found in
the works of authors such as Diamond[19] and
Chip Berlet. [20]
Other authors argue against a close connection with dominionism, for example Irving Hexham
of the University of Calgary, who maintains that Schaeffer's political position
has been misconstrued as advocating the Dominionist views of R. J. Rushdoony, who
is a Christian Reconstructionist. Hexham indicates that Schaeffer's
essential philosophy was derived from Herman Dooyeweerd, not Rushdoony, and that
Hans Rookmaaker introduced Schaeffer to his writings. [21] Dooyeweerd was a Dutch legal scholar and philosopher, following in the
footsteps of Neo-Calvinist Abraham Kuyper.
Frank Schaeffer
Francis Schaeffer's son, Frank Schaeffer, became a Hollywood film director and
successful author, writing internationally acclaimed novels depicting life in a strict, fundamentalist household including
Portofino, Zermatt, and Saving Grandma. Critics say these books denounce his upbringing, along with his
father. He is most recently the author of Baby Jack, a novel about a Marine killed in Iraq. He is also known for his best
selling non-fiction books related to the United States 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 Clinton presidential aide, Kathy
Roth-Douquet. Frank Schaeffer has distanced himself from many of his father's views and has converted to the Greek Orthodox church in 1990 which he says "embraces paradox and mystery." [22]
Writings
Francis A. Schaeffer wrote twenty-two books, which cover a range of spiritual issues. They can be roughly split into five
sections, as in the edition of his Complete Works (ISBN 0-89107-347-7):
- A Christian View of Philosophy and Culture: The first three books in this block are known as Schaeffer's "trilogy,"
laying down the apologetical, philosophical, epistemological, and theological foundation for all his work.
- A Christian View of the Bible as Truth
- Genesis in Space and Time: Argues that an almost literalist view of Genesis as historically true is fundamental to the
Christian faith.
- No Final Conflict
- Joshua and the Flow of Biblical History
- Basic Bible Studies: Biblical studies on the fundamentals of the faith.
- Art and the Bible
- A Christian View of Spirituality
- No Little People: Argues that Christians should never despair of having a significant life of realisations, small as
they seem to be.
- True Spirituality: The spiritual foundation for Schaeffer's work, as a
complement to the theological and philosophical approach of most other books. Useful for gaining a balanced view of the whole of
Schaeffer's life and ministry.
- The New Super-Spirituality: Claims the intellectual decadence of students and the counter-culture from the late
sixties to the early seventies can be traced back to the conformism of their fathers, only with fewer moral absolutes, and
predicts the contamination of the church. Offers an analysis of Postmodernism.
- Two Contents, Two Realities: First presented as a position paper at the First International Congress on World Evangelization at
Lausanne, Switzerland in 1974.
- A Christian View of the Church
- A Christian View of the West
In addition to his books, one of the last public lectures Schaeffer delivered was at the Law Faculty, University of
Strasbourg. It was published as "Christian Faith and Human Rights", The Simon Greenleaf Law Review, 2 (1982-83) pp. 3-12.
Most of his writings during his Bible Presbyterian days have not been collected, nor reprinted in decades.
In addition to the five volume Complete Works listed above there were also two books by Dr. Schaeffer published after
his death:
- Dennis, Lane T. (ed) Letters of Francis A. Schaeffer, Crossway Books, Westchester, 1985.
- Schaeffer, Francis A. The Finished Work of Christ: The Truth of Romans 1-8, Crossway Books, Wheaton, 1998.
Notes
- ^ a b
- ^ Francis A. Schaeffer, "A Step Forward", The
Presbyterian Journal, 6 March 1974, pp.7-8. Retrieved 7 September 2007
- ^ Michael S. Hamilton, "The Dissatisfaction of Francis
Schaeffer," Christianity Today, 3 March 1997, Vol. 41, No.
3, Page 22. Reprinted at A Tribute to Mark Heard. Accessed 2006-08-25.
- ^ L. G Parkhurst. "Appendix A: Chronology of the Life of Francis Schaeffer,"
in Francis Schaeffer: The Man and His Message, Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1985, pp. 213-215.
- ^ Schaeffer, Francis, "A Review of a Review", in The
Bible Today, October 1948, pp. 7-9. Accessed 2006-08-21. Reprinted at PCA Historical Center.
- ^ "Evidentialists and Presuppositionalists - J. Budziszewski Replies" by J. Budziszewski,
Correspondence section of First Things, May 2000.
Accessed 2006-08-21.
- ^ William Edgar, "Two Christian Warriors: Cornelius Van Til and Francis A.
Schaeffer Compared," Westminster Theological Journal, Vol. 57, No. 1, Spring 1995, pp. 57-80.
- ^ Schaeffer, Francis, "Chapter 9: The Universe and Two
Chairs," in Death in the City, Reprinted at Nehemiah's Prayer Watch. Accessed August 22, 2006.
- ^ Nancy Pearcey, 2004, Total Truth: Liberating Christianity From Its
Cultural Captivity, Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, p. 453.
- ^ Our Purpose FSI home page. Accessed 2006-08-26.
- ^ Francis Schaeffer, 1982, A Christian Manifesto, (revised
edition),Crossway Books. ISBN 0-89107-233-0
- ^ Schaeffer, Francis (1982). "A Christian Manifesto." Retrieved
2005-06-24.
- ^ Schaeffer, Francis, A Christian Manifesto, in The Collected
Works... Volume 5, pp. 485-486.
- ^ Gary North and David Chilton. "Apologetics and Strategy", in Tactics of
Christian Resistance: A Symposium, Gary North Ed. Tyler Texas: Geneva Divinity School, 1983, pp.100-140.
- ^ Tim LaHaye, 1980, The Battle for the Mind, Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming
H. Revell, p. 5
- ^ Diamond, Sara (1994). "Dominion Theology: The Truth About the Christian
Right's Bid for Power," Z Magazine (column) February 1995. Online: here.
- ^ Clarkson, Frederick (1994). "Theocratic Dominionism Gains
Influence". The Public Eye Magazine VIII (1 & 2).
- ^ Clarkson, Frederick. (1995). “Christian Reconstructionism: Theocratic
Dominionism Gains Influence.” In Chip Berlet (Ed.), Eyes Right! Challenging the Right Wing Backlash (pp. 59–80). Boston:
South End Press. Revised and included in Clarkson, Eternal Hostility. http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v08n1/chrisre2.html
- ^ Sara Diamond, 1995, Roads to Dominion: Right–Wing Movements and
Political Power in the United States, New York: Guilford, pp. 246-249.
- ^ Chip Berlet and Matthew N. Lyons, 2000, Right–Wing Populism in
America: Too Close for Comfort, New York: Guilford Press, pp. 212-213.
- ^ Hexham, Irving, "The Evangelical Response to the New Age," in
Perspectives on the New Age, edited by James R. Lewis & J. Gordon Melton, State University of New York Press, Albany, New
York, 1992, pp. 152-163, and especially p. 322 Note 16.
- ^ "Fundamentalists to the Right, Fundamentalists to the Left" by Frank Schaeffer, from
Beliefnet.com. Accessed 2006-08-26.
Critical Assessments
- Boa, Kenneth D., and Robert M. Bowman, Faith Has Its Reasons: An Integrative Approach to Defending Christianity, NAV
Press, Colorado Springs, 2001.
- Burson, Scott R. and Jerry L. Walls. C.S. Lewis and Francis Schaeffer: Lessons for a New Century from the Most Influential
Apologists of Our Time. Leicester: InterVarsity Press, 1998.
- Coward, Harold., Pluralism: The Challenge to World Religions, Orbis Books, Maryknoll, 1986.
- Cunningham, Stuart, "Towards A Critique of Francis Schaeffer's Thought", Interchange, 24 (1978) pp. 205-221.
- Dennis, Lane T. (ed) Francis A. Schaeffer: Portraits of the Man and His Work, Crossway Books, Westchester, 1986.
- Follis, Bryan A., Truth With Love: Apologetics of Francis Schaeffer, Crossway Books, Wheaton, 2006.
- Fowler, Robert Booth, A New Engagement: Evangelical Political Thought 1966-1976, William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids,
1982.
- Hexham, Irving, "The Evangelical Response to the New Age," in Perspectives on the New Age, edited by James R. Lewis
& J. Gordon Melton, State University of New York Press, Albany, New York, 1992, pp. 152-163.
- Kubsch, Ron (ed.), Wahrheit und Liebe: Was wir von Francis Schaeffer für die Gegenwart lernen können, VKW, Bonn,
2007.
- Morris, Thomas V., Francis Schaeffer's Apologetics: A Critique, Baker Book House, Grand Rapids, 1987.
- Parkhurst, Louis Gifford, Francis Schaeffer: The Man and His Message, Tyndale House, Wheaton, 1985.
- Parkhurst, Louis Gifford, Francis and Edith Schaeffer, Bethany House, Minneapolis, (1996) available online
- Ramsey, George W., The Quest for the Historical Israel, SCM Press, London, 1982, pp. 107-115.
- Roper, D. L., "A Sympathetic Criticism of Francis Schaeffer's Writings," Interchange, 41 (1987) pp. 41-55.
- Ruegsegger, Ronald W. (ed) Reflections on Francis Schaeffer, Zondervan, Grand Rapids, 1986.
- Stadler, G. Thomas, "Renaissance Humanism: Francis Schaeffer Versus Some Contemporary Scholars," Fides et Historia 2
(June 1989)pp. 4-20.
External links
Schaeffer,Francis
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