Schaeffer on the Christian Life: Countercultural Spirituality
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Part of the Theologians on the Christian Life series.
William Edgar
William Edgar (DTheol, University of Geneva) is professor of apologetics and John Boyer Chair of Evangelism and Culture at Westminster Theological Seminary. William lives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Barbara. They have two children and three grandchildren.
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Schaeffer on the Christian Life - William Edgar
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Friendly, passionate, intellectual, and constantly engaged with people as well as ideas and contemporary affairs, Francis Schaeffer comes alive in Edgar’s objective but affectionate portrait. Rescued from the distortions of both lionizers and demonizers, here is Schaeffer as so many of us knew him in the great years of L’Abri—and with so much to contribute to our world today.
Os Guinness, author, A Free People’s Suicide
An engaging, fascinating account, seasoned with unusual insight into one of the truly original apologists of our time.
David F. Wells, Distinguished Research Professor, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
For many years I hoped that I could spend some time at L’Abri, but that was not God’s plan for me. Instead, God enabled me to become friends with many L’Abri alumni, of whom Bill Edgar is one. I have been impressed with the intellectual caliber of those men and women, but even more with their godly character. L’Abri evidently had a way of leading people from intellectual atheism, to conversion, to spiritual maturity. Bill’s book focuses, more than other L’Abri books, on this process of what we now call spiritual formation. The whole church can learn much from it. I commend this excellent book to all who seek to draw nearer to God.
John M. Frame, J. D. Trimble Chair of Systematic Theology and Philosophy, Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando
Francis Schaeffer was small of stature but a giant in his tenacious concern for truth, for God, for people, and for reality. He became convinced that Christian faith is the radical path for our own day, the realistic answer to the hard questions of a troubled modern world. William Edgar’s compulsively readable study of Schaeffer’s thought is set in the context of Schaeffer’s rough-edged life and his brilliantly inspired work in the L’Abri community he established with his remarkable wife, Edith. L’Abri, perched high on the slopes of a remote alpine valley, drew a motley procession of mainly young travelers from the ends of the earth. Schaeffer’s own, sometimes anguished, quest to communicate the ancient biblical text in a century of unprecedented historical changes attracted and opened doors for a generation of Christians. It also convinced many outside the faith with honest questions (like Bill Edgar himself) to follow the way of Christ. This engaging book captures the fire of Francis Schaeffer’s thought and concerns, and revisits and reinvigorates the still-urgent challenge he presented to the church in the modern world.
Colin Duriez, author, Francis Schaeffer: An Authentic Life
Dr. Edgar’s book on countercultural spirituality is a much-needed and trustworthy guide in the dark confusion of the postmodern world.
Wim G. Rietkerk, Trustee, L’Abri Fellowship, Holland
In a brilliant combination of personal recollections and thorough analysis, William Edgar demonstrates convincingly that the Schaeffers’ encounter with the triune God who is there is central to the rise, growth, and impact of L’Abri. This refreshing study will arouse the enthusiasm of all who yearn for a true spirituality that transforms minds and lives, regenerates the church, and ‘flows into the total culture.’
Pierre Berthoud, Professor Emeritus, Faculté Jean Calvin, Aix-en Provence
THEOLOGIANS ON THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
EDITED BY STEPHEN J. NICHOLS AND JUSTIN TAYLOR
Augustine on the Christian Life:
Transformed by the Power of God,
Gerald Bray
Bavinck on the Christian Life:
Following Jesus in Faithful Service,
John Bolt
Bonhoeffer on the Christian Life:
From the Cross, for the World,
Stephen J. Nichols
Calvin on the Christian Life:
Glorifying and Enjoying God Forever,
Michael Horton
Edwards on the Christian Life:
Alive to the Beauty of God,
Dane C. Ortlund
Lewis on the Christian Life:
Becoming Truly Human in the Presence of God
Joe Rigney
Lloyd-Jones on the Christian Life:
Doctrine and Life as Fuel and Fire
Jason Meyer
Luther on the Christian Life:
Cross and Freedom,
Carl R. Trueman
Newton on the Christian Life:
To Live Is Christ,
Tony Reinke
Owen on the Christian Life:
Living for the Glory of God in Christ,
Matthew Barrett and Michael A. G. Haykin
Packer on the Christian Life:
Knowing God in Christ, Walking by the Spirit,
Sam Storms
Schaeffer on the Christian Life:
Countercultural Spirituality,
William Edgar
Spurgeon on the Christian Life:
Alive in Christ,
Michael Reeves
Warfield on the Christian Life:
Living in Light of the Gospel,
Fred G. Zaspel
Wesley on the Christian Life:
The Heart Renewed in Love,
Fred Sanders
TitleSchaeffer on the Christian Life: Countercultural Spirituality
Copyright © 2013 by William Edgar
Published by Crossway
1300 Crescent Street
Wheaton, Illinois 60187
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, except as provided for by USA copyright law. Crossway® is a registered trademark in the United States of America.
Cover design: Josh Dennis
Cover image: Richard Solomon Artists, Mark Summers
First printing 2013
Printed in the United States of America
The author’s Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. 2011 Text Edition. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Trade paperback ISBN: 978-1-4335-3139-2
PDF ISBN: 978-1-4335-3140-8
Mobipocket ISBN: 978-1-4335-3141-5
ePub ISBN: 978-1-4335-3142-2
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Edgar, William, 1944–
Schaeffer on the Christian life : countercultural spirituality / William Edgar.
p. cm.—(Theologians on the Christian life)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4335-3139-2
1. Schaeffer, Francis A. (Francis August) 2. Evangelicalism. 3. Christian life. I. Title.
BR1643.S33E34 2013
248.4—dc23 2012031495
Crossway is a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.
To Dick and Mardi Keyes,
who embody the spirit of L’Abri
for our generation
Contents
Series Preface
Preface
1 A Personal Introduction to Francis Schaeffer
PART 1 THE MAN AND HIS TIMES
2 The Journey to L’Abri
3 L’Abri and Beyond
PART 2 TRUE SPIRITUALITY
4 Fundamentals
5 Freedom in the Christian Life
6 Applications
PART 3 TRUSTING GOD FOR ALL OF LIFE
7 Prayer and Guidance
8 Affliction
9 Life in the Church
10 Engaging the World
Afterword: Concluding Reflections on Francis Schaeffer
Appendix: Titles in The Complete Works of Francis A. Schaeffer
SERIES PREFACE
Some might call us spoiled. We live in an era of significant and substantial resources for Christians on living the Christian life. We have ready access to books, DVD series, online material, seminars—all in the interest of encouraging us in our daily walk with Christ. The laity, the people in the pew, have access to more information than scholars dreamed of having in previous centuries.
Yet for all our abundance of resources, we also lack something. We tend to lack the perspectives from the past, perspectives from a different time and place than our own. To put the matter differently, we have so many riches in our current horizon that we tend not to look to the horizons of the past.
That is unfortunate, especially when it comes to learning about and practicing discipleship. It’s like owning a mansion and choosing to live in only one room. This series invites you to explore the other rooms.
As we go exploring, we will visit places and times different from our own. We will see different models, approaches, and emphases. This series does not intend for these models to be copied uncritically, and it certainly does not intend to put these figures from the past high upon a pedestal like some race of super-Christians. This series intends, however, to help us in the present listen to the past. We believe there is wisdom in the past twenty centuries of the church, wisdom for living the Christian life.
Stephen J. Nichols and Justin Taylor
PREFACE
When I was first approached to write this book, I declined. There have been a number of significant biographies of Francis Schaeffer, as well as a thorough accounting of his family’s life and times by Edith Schaeffer. Much of this material is thoughtful, though some of it is merely hagiographical, and some of it unjustly critical. To be sure, I have my own take on this extraordinary ministry and its astonishing founder. Indeed, it is because of L’Abri that my own eyes were opened to the beauties of the Christian faith many years ago. But it seemed to me that there was plenty of material and that one more study would be extraneous. Besides, opinions run strong, even this many years after Dr. Schaeffer’s departure from this earth, and my temperament is sensitive, making me particularly susceptible to the inevitable criticisms such a book would receive.
A couple of things changed my mind. The first is that despite all of the analysis already done on Francis Schaeffer and the work of L’Abri, very little has been said in any kind of depth about their most significant raison d’être, that is, Christian spirituality. There is a need for a careful study of the subject Schaeffer himself considered central to all his work. Second, I began to think how important to my own thinking and self-evaluation such a study could be now nearly fifty years after my initial encounter with the man. Not, I trust, a thinly veiled attempt at self-discovery, which would be not only narcissistic but also of little benefit to the reading public, the present exploration has afforded me the opportunity to think through issues that matter greatly to the church and the world. No doubt I could have accomplished that without publishing a book on the subject, but there is something about getting words on a page, and then receiving peer review, that can help make such a task more than personal musings, edifying or not. Third, I have always been grateful to Crossway for their vision, especially their desire to promote the work of L’Abri and the thought of Francis and Edith Schaeffer. Writing this book gives me the chance to respond in gratitude to that vision and possibly to make a small contribution to its goals.
The format of this volume needs a word of explanation. Because I was privileged personally to witness many of the themes and personalities connected with Francis Schaeffer and L’Abri, I have begun and ended with some narrative involving my own story. Thus, the first chapter is a personal introduction explaining the way in which I saw Francis Schaeffer up close and personal.
In the afterword I offer a few concluding personal reflections. They are not meant to distract from the analytical portions of the book, but to make them more personable. I trust the reader will enjoy these reflections rather than be put off by them.
Is Francis Schaeffer in the same league as Saint Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Wesley, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and the other figures in the Theologians on the Christian Life series? Had you asked me twenty years ago, I would have said no. It would be hard to overstate my love for the man. However, I thought he had neither the academic standing nor perhaps the influence wielded by these giants. His writings and films often seemed dated, and his principal legacy is no doubt people, not a movement based on revolutionary ideas. I was always a bit troubled by comparisons made between him and C. S. Lewis, whose stature is nothing if not towering. But today I gladly agree that Schaeffer belongs to this hall of fame.
A legacy of people is just the reason why. Schaeffer’s importance is because of the way he could take God, thinkers, and truth and make them so profoundly exciting—to people! Os Guinness, one of Schaeffer’s closest associates, tells us he has never met anyone like him anywhere who took God so passionately seriously, people so passionately seriously, and truth so passionately seriously.
¹ While a number of Schaeffer’s ideas or historical assessments could and should be put into question, what is unquestionable is the way Francis Schaeffer moved from the heart of the Christian faith, or true spirituality,
into every realm of life, with absolute continuity and astonishing freshness, and communicated all of that to so many people. I am honored to be asked to help defend such a legacy.
One challenge that presents itself in discussions of a figure such as Francis Schaeffer is that he was not typically speaking as a systematic theologian in an academic setting. Like many thinkers and spokespersons called for such a time as this
(Est. 4:14), he responded to his generation with those portions of the truth he deemed most needful. Although he was committed to preaching the whole counsel of God
(Acts 20:27), he naturally did not spend an equal amount of time on every locus of theology. If you are looking for an extended treatment of, say, the nature of the covenant or the ethics of marriage and divorce, you should probably look elsewhere. Schaeffer had his views on such subjects and indeed knew the big picture, as his series on the Westminster Standards will attest, but the balance of his work was on apologetics, cultural analysis, the defense of the Bible, and the like.
Thus, some of what you read in these pages may seem one-sided. Most frequently, though, that is not because Schaeffer was unbalanced, but because he was acutely aware that to respond to all kinds of issues but not the most urgent ones is to fail to herald the gospel at that point. Schaeffer often quoted a saying attributed to Martin Luther, but in fact spoken by the character Fritz
in a historical novel, whose voice supports Luther’s ideas: If I profess, with the loudest voice and the clearest exposition, every portion of the truth of God except precisely that little point which the world and the devil are at that moment attacking, I am not confessing Christ, however boldly I may be professing Christianity.
² Schaeffer also used to say fairly regularly that his own writings were only one aspect of the work of L’Abri. If one wanted to obtain a full grasp of the overall message, one needed to consult not only Edith’s books, but also his sermons and lecture series. This I have endeavored to do.
I wish here to express my thanks to a number of people and institutions that have given me much-needed though ill-deserved support throughout the writing of this book. First, I thank my kind and generous editors at Crossway for their inspiration and also their meticulous editing work. They represent the gold standard.
Second, I would like to express my thanks to three people who have brought particular insight to this project. The first is my wife, Barbara, who not only caught a number of infelicities but also made helpful editorial comments. She also sacrificed our dining room table for the better part of four months so that I could spread all my sources out for easy access. The second is Colin Duriez, Schaeffer’s biographer, who not only has been most encouraging to me but also made a number of very helpful editorial comments.
Third, I am very grateful to Jerram Barrs, whose wise and pointed comments made this a much better book than it might have been. Finally, thanks are due to Westminster Theological Seminary, which was kind enough to rearrange my schedule so that I could have blocks of time in which to work on this text. The president, the dean, my dear colleagues, and the staff of the seminary have supported me in my lifelong attempts at saying no to the urgent, and yes to the vital.
William Edgar
Philadelphia
¹ Os Guinness, Fathers and Sons,
Books and Culture 14, no. 2 (March/April 2008): 33.
² Elizabeth Rundle Charles, Chronicles of the Schönberg-Cotta Family (New York: Thomas Nelson, 1864), 276.
CHAPTER 1
A PERSONAL INTRODUCTION TO FRANCIS SCHAEFFER
Schaeffer might be dismissed as a scholar or even original thinker (though it can be argued he was both, but particularly the latter), but his realistic, existential Christianity is remarkable and perhaps unique for someone of his biblical orthodoxy in his generation and is the secret, perhaps, of his impact on many people of diverse backgrounds and nationalities.
COLIN DURIEZ
First Impressions
I hopped off the mail bus on a warm afternoon in July 1964, having asked the driver, Arrêtez-vous, s’il vous plaît, à L’Abri.
The name L’Abri means The Shelter,
and it was first coined by Francis Schaeffer in Champéry, the village in Switzerland where the family had lived before relocating to Huémoz-sur-Ollon, a tiny village in the Protestant canton de Vaud. The name is based on Psalm 91:1:
He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High
will abide in the shadow of the Almighty.
I was unaware of any of the history of this magical place, arriving at the Schaeffers’ door as a rising college junior, aged nineteen.
My whole life was about to change. I was not a believer at the time and so was unaware of many of the claims for the Christian view of the world. Yet, thanks to a man named Joe Brown, I had become intrigued and was open to hearing about spiritual matters in a way I had never been before. A marvelous instructor at Harvard College, Harold O. J. Brown (1933–2007), presented the glories of the Christian faith to his classes during the academic year 1963–1964. By the spring Joe and I had become good friends. He saw that I was spiritually hungry, and he urged me to visit his friend Francis Schaeffer over the summer, in the hopes that I could learn more about the same worldview that he had labored to commend in his lectures. Indeed, as I would soon learn, he really sent me there in the hopes that I could embrace the Christian faith.
Joe was a teaching assistant for a large course in the history of Western epic and drama, known affectionately as Hum 2
by the students. The main lecturer was the legendary John Finley, crafter of America’s postwar general education approach to university studies. As an article about him in the Harvard Crimson put it, in appearance he combined the best traits of Henry James’s English gentleman and Robert Frost’s New England farmer.¹ His concern was that a person was not truly educated if he became so specialized that he lost sight of the big picture, including issues such as meaning, fulfillment, and human flourishing. This meant students had to be much more aware than they typically were of Western history and traditional humanistic values.
Hum 2 was a large class, and so for practical reasons it was broken down into smaller groups, called sections. Here students could have a more personalized access to the material. Our section instructor was Joe, who was working in the History Department of the graduate school, writing his dissertation on Laski (Johannes Alasco), the Polish reformer of the sixteenth century. Joe was unabashed (though tactful), even brilliant, in his presentation of evangelical Christianity in contrast to various worldviews held by the ancient Greeks or the modern absurdists. All of it was new and immensely fascinating to me, a young man in my late teens. Joe and I became friends and had many long conversations about matters of faith and life.
So, on the strength of Joe’s recommendation, as I traveled through Europe with my brother and a backpack full of essentials, I looked for a chance to check out Francis Schaeffer. In mid-July my brother returned to the States. Now on my own, I took the train down from Zürich, where we had been visiting a colleague of our dad’s, to the beautiful city of Lausanne, on the shore of Lake Geneva. I had called in advance and got Mrs. Schaeffer on the phone. She could not have been more welcoming and said that Joe Brown was their good friend. He had no doubt alerted them to my possible visit. She invited me to stay for the weekend, which was a bit curious to me but very agreeable.
The day was Saturday, and I had some time to kill, so on the way to L’Abri I visited the Lausanne Expo 1964, a fascinating display of technology and economic opportunities, couched in the culture of the Cold War. The Swiss architect Marc Saugey had the idea of using large tents for a major part of the Lausanne exhibition. They were meant to symbolize the Swiss Alps with their snow and rocks. They involved membrane structures swinging about and housing artistic and futuristic technological offerings.²
After the visit to the expo, I caught the train over to Aigle, a sprawling town at the foot of the Chablais Alps, just beyond the lake to the east. Then, I switched to a cog railroad train up the steep mountain to the small town of Ollon. Perfectly timed, the mail bus then stopped at the station to pick up passengers on their way