How do we make our way back into love, beauty and creation? Aside from voting for Joe Biden? Discover my book Letter to Lucy: A Manifesto of Creative Redemption—In the Age of Trump, Fascism and Lies, a multi-touch book about art, love and parenting, from the fall of the Byzantine Empire to the prophetic music of Green Day and everything in between. Read the first chapter for free on your kindle fire or iOS device. Available now on Apple Books and Amazon Kindle Fire. Want more political videos and commentary? Show your support.
Caught between the beauty of his grandchildren and grief over a friend’s death, Frank Schaeffer finds himself simultaneously believing and not believing in God—an atheist who prays. Schaeffer wrestles with faith and disbelief, sharing his innermost thoughts with a lyricism that only great writers of literary nonfiction achieve. Schaeffer writes as an imperfect son, husband and grandfather whose love for his family, art and life trumps the ugly theologies of an angry God and the atheist vision of a cold, meaningless universe. Schaeffer writes that only when we abandon our hunt for certainty do we become free to create beauty, give love and find peace. Available now at Amazon. Want more political videos and commentary? Show your support.
In 1998, Frank Schaeffer was a bohemian novelist living in “Volvo driving, higher-education worshipping” Massachusetts with two children graduated from top universities. Then his youngest child, straight out of high school, joined the United States Marine Corps. Written in alternating voices by eighteen-year-old John and his father, Frank, Keeping Faith takes readers in riveting fashion through a family’s experience of the Marine Corps: from being broken down and built back up on Parris Island (and being the parent of a child undergoing that experience), to the growth of both father and son and their separate reevaluations of what it means to serve. Available now at Amazon. Want more political videos and commentary? Show your support.
If one is evangelical, it means he believes Jesus is the Savior of mankind. To be a Christian means to follow Jesus. I no longer consider Franklin Graham or Jerry Jr. as either evangelical or Christian. Yes, one cannot know nor should he even comment about whether those two are saved. Yet, a Christian can and should consider whether he is following an actual Christian. Most of my extended family follows, or at least believes, the teachings of Graham and Jr. It is an impossible up hill climb to convince them they are astray, yet keep trying Frank. I believe you should and all Christians should speak up.
The saved/unsaved dichotomy should be rejected. It quickly devolves into a No True Scotsman fallacy because it saved are proven every day to be no more moral than the unsaved.
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If one is evangelical, it means he believes Jesus is the Savior of mankind. To be a Christian means to follow Jesus. I no longer consider Franklin Graham or Jerry Jr. as either evangelical or Christian. Yes, one cannot know nor should he even comment about whether those two are saved. Yet, a Christian can and should consider whether he is following an actual Christian. Most of my extended family follows, or at least believes, the teachings of Graham and Jr. It is an impossible up hill climb to convince them they are astray, yet keep trying Frank. I believe you should and all Christians should speak up.
The saved/unsaved dichotomy should be rejected. It quickly devolves into a No True Scotsman fallacy because it saved are proven every day to be no more moral than the unsaved.
Dear Frank, I love you for being a voice of reason.