Francis SchaefferFrank Schaeffer was a key player in the early days of the Religious Right. Along with his father, the evangelical apologist Francis Schaeffer (pictured), he successfully mobilized millions of American Christians to pursue an aggressive political agenda based on a handful of conservative causes – abortion and homosexuality being top priorities.

His memoir, 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, has polarized opinion. In the book, he is scathing about his parents’ fundamentalism, as well as their personal failings (although contrary to some of the fiercest criticism, he is as forthcoming in showing them genuine affection as he is in exposing their flaws), and even more scathing of the Christian Right he helped to create.

A major contour of the story is the Schaeffers’ journey from a simple faith and ministry to a world of politics and manipulation. It seems to me this journey reflects the unfortunate path of the ex-gay movement from a place of pastoral concern to the political lobbying all too familiar today. With this in mind, I’d like to share the following passages from the book. First, from Chapter 10, describing the Schaeffers early on in the days of their Swiss L’Abri Christian community:

My parents’ compassion was sincere and consistent. And they never allowed belief to make them into bigots. I grew up in a community where homosexuals (the term “gay” was not in use) were not only welcomed but where my parents didn’t do anything to make them feel uncomfortable and regarded their “problem” as no more serious (or sinful) than other problems, from spiritual pride – a “much more serious matter,” according to Dad – to gluttony. And I never heard any of the nonsense so typical of American evangelicals today about homosexuality being a “chosen lifestyle.”

My parents weren’t given to calling their friends liars. So when our friends who were homosexual – Mom was always open, as was Dad, about which students were or weren’t gay – told my parents they had been born that way, not only did they believe them, but Dad defended them against people who would judge or exclude them.

Dad thought it cruel and stupid to believe that a homosexual could change by “accepting Christ” – or, for that matter, that an alcoholic could be healed by the same magic. Dad often said “Salvation is not magic. We’re still in the fallen world.”

Dad always counseled gay men and women against getting married to a heterosexual if they were doing it in the expectation that it would change them, let alone to impress their parents. This was in the late 1950s and early 1960s, when few people in secular circles, let alone evangelical circles, would even admit that there were gay people.

Move forward 20 years, and Frank had led the family to the forefront of the burgeoning US Christian Right. How things had changed (from Chapter 54), as the Schaeffers found themselves in league with Reconstructionists such as Gary North and Rousas Rushdoony:

John Calvin, Oliver Cromwell, and the nastier Old Testament prophets were the Reconstructionists’ heroes. And according to the law in John Calvin’s Reformation Geneva, women pregnant out of wedlock were to be drowned along with their unborn babies, and of course homosexuals were to be killed and heretics burned at the stake.

Dad regarded Rushdoony as clinically insane. And Rushdoony’s program, if realized, would have included the execution of homosexuals and adulterers. … And we Schaeffers were helping them expand their national base, because they were showing up at our events and using some of our books to give their views a little more credibility. And I was on the [Reconstructionionist] Rutherford Institute board as a founding member, along with Gary North. … All I could do was to bitterly regret what I’d gotten [Dad] into. I still do.

I am reminded of Jim Bakker’s confession that he started out “loving people and using things,” and ended up “using people and loving things.” Frank Schaeffer’s experience is a timely reminder to those in the ex-gay movement who have lost sight of loving and ministering to people, and have instead become caught up in the mechanics of the right-wing political machine.

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