Frank Schaeffer
Autor de Crazy for God
Sobre El Autor
Frank Schaeffer is the author of the New York Times bestseller Keeping Faith and the memoir Crazy for God. His novels including Portofino, have been translated into nine languages. He and his wife, Genie, live in Massachusetts and have three children.
Créditos de la imagen: Photo by Lance Cpl. Patrick M. Fleischman, cropped by uploader (marines.mil)
Series
Obras de Frank Schaeffer
Why I am an Atheist Who Believes in God: How to give love, create beauty and find peace (2014) 87 copias
Sex, Mom, and God: How the Bible's Strange Take on Sex Led to Crazy Politics--and How I Learned to Love Women (and… (2011) 86 copias
The Great evangelical disaster 1 copia
Basic Bible studies 1 copia
The Mark of a Christian 1 copia
Fast Food Nation 1 copia
Letter to Lucy: A Manifesto of Creative Redemption—In the Age of Trump, Fascism and Lies (2018) 1 copia
Why I Converted to Orthodoxy: Frank Schaeffer Interview (The Calvin Forum) | Streaming Video 1 copia
AWOL 1 copia
Wired to Kill [VHS] 1 copia
An Act of Love 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Semper Fi: Stories of the United States Marines from Boot Camp to Battle (2003) — Contribuidor — 31 copias
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Nombre canónico
- Schaeffer, Frank
- Otros nombres
- Schaeffer, Francis A.
Schaeffer, Franky - Fecha de nacimiento
- 1952-08-03
- Género
- male
- Nacionalidad
- USA
- Lugar de nacimiento
- Champery, Switzerland
- Lugares de residencia
- Switzerland
Massachusetts, USA - Ocupaciones
- writer
film director
screenwriter - Relaciones
- Schaeffer, Francis A. (father)
Schaeffer, Edith (mother)
Miembros
Reseñas
Premios
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 38
- También por
- 1
- Miembros
- 2,518
- Popularidad
- #10,194
- Valoración
- 3.6
- Reseñas
- 51
- ISBNs
- 79
- Idiomas
- 3
- Favorito
- 1
Crazy for God is a memoir by Frank Schaeffer, who grew up in a very conservative religious household, one that physically roamed throughout his childhood until they landed in their own commune for people to come and learn their holier-than-most viewpoints. What began as an evangelical camp for those looking to escape or rebound from the peace & love generation, Frank witnessed his parents become religious dignitaries at a level they never expected, causing internal strife about what they wanted to be, healers and teachers, and what they had become, weapons.
Having an interest in politics and especially the dangerous mixing of that with religion, the title of this book grabbed me, but politics is merely the context for a much deeper story here, the one between Frank and his family. While finding himself imprinted with his parents views on God, the Bible and the true reason for living, Frank found himself at odds with himself. His internal voice did not match the outer voice he using to appease those around him. Eventually, as his parents find themselves in the middle of this religious revolution in politics, Frank breaks with the family’s creed and has to deal with the consequences.
While I was hoping for more insight into some of the backroom deals made to further the religious right and episodes of hypocrisy in the face of their proposed beliefs, what I got was a profile of a son watching his father lose himself in a movement far beyond his control. The memoir, while being from Frank’s perspective, is more about his father and the toll inflicted on him by the far-right conservative block he helped build with his teachings. It was almost ironic that it grew to something he couldn’t even recognize or control, because that seems to be the fate of almost all religions. I wonder day after day what the early prophets would think of the religions they helped start all those years ago.
In opposition to his father, Frank’s mother revels in the power and glory that the movement grows to and takes each and every chance to bask in the glory of the powerful people in her orbit. The relationship between his parents is another area where the story dives underneath the waves of religious fervor and shows the strain and tension wrought upon people when they are thrust from normalcy into celebrity. What they preach to their followers in the open air of their living room and lecture halls is utterly and totally tossed out the window behind closed doors. It became increasingly impossible for both parents to feel they were doing the right thing when the definition of that was in total contention.
Another chasm that opened widely between Frank’s father and the movement was his treatment of the gay lifestyle. He believed that you can be gay and still love God, but those that rose in the ranks of the religious right alongside him were aghast at the idea. Frank’s father relegated himself farther and farther away from the spotlight, which after many years had begun to burn. By this point Frank himself had turned against the teachings of his parents and while still having his own personal faith had come to the conclusion that his parents’ methods were far from anything he wanted to pass on.
In the end, Crazy for God will resonate less with the political and religious crowd and more with those who have ever had to break the tethers of their parents and blaze a trail in complete opposition to what they were brought up to believe.… (más)