Francis
Schaeffer was a pioneer in the field of apologetics and the development
of a Christian response to the anti-supernaturalism which dominated
western thought in the 20th century. He worked out a biblical
and evangelical philosophy which proved to be a challenging alternative
to emptiness and despair which characterised secular Europe at that
time. Schaeffer also understood that the cultural shift was especially
reflected in the arts and was able to help a number of us who were
trying to develop a Christian approach to creativity in these
influential areas of life. Here, Ray Evans, of Grace Community
Church, Bedford, provides us with a brief overview of Schaeffer’s
contribution to Christian thought and action.
Francis Schaeffer became one of the most influential Christian
leaders of the twentieth century. He came from a humble working-class
background in Philadelphia, studied under Gresham Machen at Westminster
Seminary for a while, was the pastor of some small churches in the USA,
and then spent most of his life in Europe, to which he had come at the
end of World War 2 as a missionary. Never seeking ‘fame’ or ‘a
name’, God used him to help his church at a time when she faced, and
still faces, the massive challenges brought about wherever western
culture and ‘worldview’ have spread.
Married to Edith, and blessed with four children of their own, the
Schaeffers settled in total obscurity in Switzerland. Initially they
lived at Champéry, but the Roman Catholic officials of that canton
requested they leave and they moved to what became their home for many
years, the tiny village of Huémoz in the canton of Vaud. The thrilling
story of how God opened the way for them to move there and start the
distinctive ministry called ‘L’Abri’ (French for ‘Shelter’) is
told in a book of that name. It is a ‘must read’ book!
They were determined to demonstrate several things in the ministry of
L’Abri. First there was to be a true outworking of trust and
dependence on God in all circumstances – a demonstration that the
unseen supernatural world really exists. So, for example, they committed
themselves to prayer, asking that God would send the individuals to them
that would find their ministry helpful, and that God would provide all
necessary resources of money, housing personnel and so on. They saw, and
the work continues to see, real and powerful answers because, as he
would often say, ‘God is there’. Francis’ book ‘True
Spirituality’ (again another superbly helpful book) was born out of
the desire to show what really living a Christian life looks like when
we ‘moment by moment rely on the ministry of the Holy Spirit, who is
given to us because of the finished work of Christ on the cross’.
Then they wanted to demonstrate that Christianity has true and
reasonable answers to the questions of the human heart. He, Edith and
the growing family of children (which in time included sons-in-law such
as the author Ranald Macaulay) found themselves inundated with young
people that ‘God sent’; people with dark confusion in their minds
and deep hurts and problems in their souls.
Too often Schaeffer was written off because others caricatured him as
‘an intellectual’ and not ‘earthed’ in real life. Perhaps this
was because some of his earliest books that were released to the general
public (‘The God Who is There’, ‘Escape from Reason’, and ‘He
is There and He is not Silent’) grappled with the ‘big ideas’ that
hugely affect modern Western life. These ideas were not couched in
conventional religious terms, or they were ideas that most pastors would
avoid. Yet young people in large numbers found someone who could talk
their language and could demonstrate that the Bible had
answers that made sense, and which met our deepest spiritual needs.
He wrote several books and preached many messages (these are still
available through the L’Abri tape ministry), that are great examples
of Biblical exposition. One of my favourites is ‘Joshua and the Flow
of Biblical History’ which gives a flavour of what it must have been
like to sit under his clear thinking mind and pastorally warm heart. The
answers that he showed the Bible gives have stood several generations of
evangelical Christians in good stead as they in turn seek to help modern
people understand the gospel and feel its power.
The Schaeffers also wanted to show that Christianity is not ‘dehumanising’
but makes us what we should be – ‘whole’ people in true ‘community’
with one another. This community life will never be perfect (he used to
say "If it’s perfection or nothing, it will always be nothing in
this life"), but there can be real and substantial ‘healing’
– in our innermost being, in our relationships with one another, with
the wider world, and with the environment. L’Abri and each local
church/community of Christians should be like a ‘pilot plant’ which
shows what life could be like when the primary relationship – that
with our Maker - is restored on the basis of ‘the finished work of
Christ plus nothing’. Too often the church has ended up being nothing
more than a conventional institution where religiosity, and not vibrant
Christianity, is dominant. His was a clarion call to true reformation
and genuine spirituality.
Chalet
Bellevue at L’Abri, Switzerland. Photo: Michael D. Shivers
Later in life, Schaeffer turned in his speaking and writing to some
of the big moral challenges of our age. Years before others woke up to
the problems, he could see where dominant secularism was taking whole
cultures: to the devaluing of human life both at its beginning and at
its end; to a proud and defiant declaration of ‘autonomy’ in our
sexuality; to a creeping compromise in the church about God’s
authoritative and trustworthy revelation (what he called ‘true truth’
[true in all that it affirms about history and science and not just in
the ‘spiritual ideas’]); and to a general malaise in the population
as a whole where the majority would settle for ‘personal peace and
affluence’.
He predicted that most would put up with any amount of moral change
and evil as long as it was ‘Not In My Back Yard’ and as long as
there was ongoing material prosperity to keep filling the dull ache of
the soul. The ‘Christian base’ which for so long had informed
Western thinking and public life would become only a folk memory as
secularism gradually became dominant. The ruling elites, who are in
place in all areas of the culture – politics and the bureaucracy of
the modern state, the judiciary, the universities, the arts and media
– have their thinking and action informed by a ‘worldview’ where
the God of the Bible and our Lord and Saviour are relegated to ‘personal
prejudice only’. He is not allowed to influence anything significant
according to this outlook. Indeed that ‘tolerance of a belief in God’
can soon become an antipathy to any mention of his claims on us, and
that can get enshrined in public law and attitudes. All this sounds
familiar now doesn’t it, but it was almost unthinkable when he spoke
about it in the 60s and 70s.
Tragically we are now living with many of the consequences he so
powerfully preached and wrote about. Though some of his writings now
feel a bit dated (he used lots of contemporary illustrations to show his
main points were anchored in ‘real life’), many of them are still
enormously helpful. They are biblical, sane, wise and insightful. They
are passionate, heartfelt and godly. They are full of lament at sin, and
sorrow at ‘lostness’; they are deeply imbued with love for God and
Christ, and tender towards needy people. They are still a timely and
necessary cry we should listen to. Too many others who have written on
similar ‘cultural analysis themes’ lack Schaeffer’s all round
spiritual credibility. In a short life where one cannot hope to ‘read
everything’ that Francis and Edith have written would repay the one
who takes the trouble to delve into them handsomely.
God greatly blessed this ‘man and wife team’, and they have put
many of us in their debt as they shared those blessings in a life of
gracious Christian self-giving. May you go on to prove that in your
experience too as you learn from these faithful servants of their risen
Lord.