Lonnie Frisbee
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person Lonnie Ray Frisbee (June 6, 1949 – March 12, 1993) was an American Charismatic evangelist in the late 1960s and in the 1970s; he was a self-described "seeing prophet".<ref name=prophet>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=divorce/> He was known for his hippie appearance.<ref>Annette Cloutier, Præy To God: A Tasteful Trip Through Faith: Volume One, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, p. 437.</ref><ref name=testimony/> He was notable as a minister and evangelist in the Jesus movement.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/><ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/>
Eyewitness accounts of his ministry, documented in the 2007 documentary Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher portray Frisbee; he became a charismatic spark igniting the rise of Chuck Smith's Calvary Chapel and the Vineyard Movement. They are two worldwide denominations and among the largest evangelical denominations beginning at that time.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/><ref name="ggs">Glen G. Scorgie, A Little Guide to Christian Spirituality: Three Dimensions of Life with God, Chapter 8-"An Integrated Spirituality", Zondervan, 2009, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN.</ref> Reportedly, "he was not one of the hippie preachers, but rather that "there was one—Frisbee".<ref name=one>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref><ref name="Ears on Their Heads, But">Template:Cite web</ref> His brand of ministry was named power evangelism'. Later he was harshly criticized for his great focus and concentrating heavily on the Holy Spirit and the gifts of the Spirit, often by individuals in the same churches which he co-founded.<ref name="mirwor">John Crowder, Miracle workers, reformers and the new mystics, Destiny Image Publishers, 2006, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, pp. 103–6.</ref>
Frisbee influenced prophetic evangelists including Jonathan Land, Marc Dupont, Jill Austin and several others.<ref name="mirwor" /> Frisbee co-founded the House of Miracles commune and found many converts. The House of Miracles grew into nineteen communal houses; they later moved to Oregon to form Shiloh Youth Revival Centers, the largest and one of the longest-lasting Jesus People communal groups.
Frisbee had an evangelical ministry while privately socializing as a homosexual man, before and during his evangelism career, although in interviews he said that he never believed homosexuality was anything other than sin in the eyes of God.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/> Both denominations he helped found prohibited homosexual behavior, and he was later excommunicated by the denominations because of his active sexual life. They first removed him from leadership positions, and later fired him.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/> He is portrayed by Jonathan Roumie in the 2023 film Jesus Revolution, which highlights his ministry with Chuck Smith and the impact he had on Greg Laurie's evangelism.<ref name="Frisbee documentary">Template:Cite video</ref>
Early life and career
Frisbee was mostly raised in a single-parent home and was exposed to "sketchy, dangerous characters" as a child.<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/><ref name="lost boy"/> While researching his documentary, Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher, filmmaker David di Sabatino stated Frisbee's brother claimed Lonnie was raped at the age of eight. Also revealed in the film was that Frisbee ran away frequently and entered into Laguna Beach's homosexual underground scene with a friend when he was 15. Di Sabatino further commented that an incident such as the alleged rape, "fragments your identity", and that he saw Frisbee's homosexuality as a flaw.<ref name=testimony/><ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/> During his childhood, Frisbee's father ended up leaving their home, and the boy, fatherless. His mother later tracked down and married the former husband of the woman Frisbee's father became involved with.<ref name="dsw"/>
Lonnie Frisbee showed intense interest in the arts and cooking.<ref name="dsw"/> He won awards for his paintings and even appeared as a featured dancer on Casey Kasem's mid-60s TV show Shebang.<ref name="dsw"/> He exhibited a "bohemian" streak and regularly ran away from home.<ref name="dsw"/> As a teen he became involved in the drug culture as part of his spiritual quest,<ref name="dsw"/> and at fifteen he entered Laguna Beach's homosexual underground scene with a friend.<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/><ref name="lost boy"/> His spotty high school education left him barely able to read and write.<ref name="lost boy"/> At 18 he joined thousands of other flower children and hippies for the Summer of Love in San Francisco in 1967.<ref>Don Lattin, Jesus Freaks: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge, HarperCollins, 2008, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, pp. 31–3.</ref> He described himself as a "nudist-vegetarian-hippie".<ref name="mirwor"/>
Frisbee's unofficial evangelism career began as a part of a soul-searching LSD acid-trip as part of a regular "turn on, tune in, drop out" session of getting high.<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/> He would often read the Bible while on a trip.<ref name="dsw"/> On a pilgrimage with friends to Tahquitz Canyon outside Palm Springs, instead of looking for meaning again in mysticism and the occult, Frisbee started reading the Gospel of John to the group, eventually leading the group to Tahquitz Falls and baptizing them.<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange"/> A later acid-trip in the same area produced "a vision of a vast sea of people crying out to the Lord for salvation, with Frisbee in front preaching the gospel."<ref name="dsw"/> His "grand vision of spreading Christianity to the masses" alienated his family and friends.<ref name="dsw">David W. Stowe, No Sympathy for the Devil: Christian Pop Music and the Transformation of American Evangelicalism, UNC Press Books, 2011, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, pp. 23–9.</ref> Frisbee moved to San Francisco where he had won a fellowship to the San Francisco Art Academy.<ref name="dsw"/> He soon met members of Haight-Ashbury's Living Room mission. At the time he talked about UFOs, practiced hypnotism, and talked about dabbling in occultism and mysticism.<ref name=mysticism>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> When Steve and Sandi Heefner and Ted and Connie Wise first met him, they said he was talking about "Jesus and flying saucers". Frisbee converted to Christianity and joined their first street Christian community, The Living Room, a storefront coffeehouse commune of four couples in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco started in 1967.<ref name="thousands"/><ref>Stephen J. Nichols. Jesus Made in America: A Cultural History from the Puritans to the Passion of the Christ, InterVarsity Press, 2008, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, pp. 124–5.</ref> He quit the art academy and moved to Novato, California, where the Heefners and Wises set up a commune and later reconnected with his former girlfriend Connie Bremer, whom he then married. The community was soon dubbed The House of Acts after the community of early Christians in the Acts of the Apostles. Frisbee designed a sign to put outside the house, but was informed that if he gave it an official name, it would no longer be considered a mere guest house and would be subject to renovations. The community took the sign down to avoid the financial obligation. Frisbee continued painting detailed oils including several of missions.<ref name="lost boy"/>
Jesus movement, Calvary Chapel
Chuck Smith had been making plans to build a chapel out of a surplus school building in the city of Santa Ana, near Costa Mesa, when he met Frisbee. Smith's daughter's boyfriend John Nicholson was a former addict who had turned to Christianity. When Smith said he wanted to meet a hippie, John brought home Frisbee (who was hitch-hiking), so he could meet people to talk about Jesus and salvation.<ref name="lost boy">Greg Laurie, Ellen Vaughn, Lost Boy: My Story , Gospel Light, 2008, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, pp. 81–3, 85–9, 106.</ref> Frisbee and his wife Connie joined the fledgling Calvary Chapel congregation and Smith was struck by Frisbee's charisma. Smith said, "I was not at all prepared for the love that this young man would radiate."<ref name="thousands">Template:Cite book</ref> Frisbee became one of the most important ministers in the church when on May 17, 1968, Smith put the young couple in charge of the Costa Mesa rehab house called "The House of Miracles" with John Higgins and his wife Jackie. Within a week it had 35 new converts. Bunk beds were built in the garage to house the new converts.<ref name="lost boy"/> Frisbee led the Wednesday night Bible study, which soon became the central night for the church attracting thousands.<ref name="thousands"/> Frisbee's attachment to the charismatic Pentecostal style caused some disagreement within the church, since he seemed focused more on gaining converts and experiencing the presence of the Holy Spirit than on teaching newer converts Biblical doctrine.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/> Chuck Smith took over teaching and welcomed Frisbee into his church.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Frisbee's appearance helped appeal to hippies and those interested in youth culture, and he believed that the youth culture would play a prominent role in the Christian movement in the United States. He cited Joel the prophet and remained upbeat despite what the young couple saw as unbalanced treatment, as Frisbee was never paid for his work and another person was hired full-time as Smith's assistant.<ref name="Ears on Their Heads, But"/>
The country was being swept with a youth movement with California as an epicenter.<ref name="wkm">W. K. McNeil, Encyclopedia of American gospel music, Psychology Press, 2005, Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN, p. 59.</ref> The counterculture of hippies and surfers hung around the beaches; music and dancing to the music was the main form of communication.<ref name="wkm"/> Frisbee walked on the beaches during the day to convert the young people; he brought them to church for the nightly services.<ref name="wkm"/>
The House of Miracles grew into a series of nineteen communal houses that later migrated to Oregon to form Shiloh Youth Revival Centers, the largest and one of the longest lasting of the Jesus People communal groups which had 100,000 members and 175 communal houses spread across North America.<ref name="Regulating Religion">Template:Cite book</ref> This may have been the largest Christian communal group in U.S. history.<ref name="Regulating Religion"/>
From 1968 to 1971, Frisbee was a leader in the Jesus movement, bringing in thousands of new converts and influencing Calvary Chapel leaders including Mike MacIntosh and Greg Laurie, whom he mentored.<ref name= "The First Jesus Freak orange"/><ref name= "thousands"/>
Fame
"Jesus Freaks", or "Jesus People" as they were often called, were documented in media including the Kathryn Kuhlman I Believe In Miracles show; Frisbee was a featured guest on the show talking about Jesus, the prophets, and quoting scripture.<ref name=freaks>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> By 1971, the Jesus Movement was covered in the media with major media outlets like Life, Newsweek and Rolling Stone reporting on it. Frisbee, due to his prominence in the movement, was often photographed and interviewed. Also in 1971 Frisbee and Smith parted ways because their theological differences had become too great. Smith discounted Pentecostalism, maintaining that love was the greatest manifestation of the Holy Spirit, while Frisbee was strongly involved in theology which centered on spiritual gifts and New Testament experiences. Frisbee announced that he would leave California altogether and go to a movement in Florida led by Derek Prince and Bob Mumford which taught a pyramid shepherding style of leadership and was later referred to as the Shepherding Movement.<ref name="lost boy"/>
In 1973, the Frisbees divorced because Frisbee's pastor had an affair with his wife. Frisbee mentioned that in a sermon he gave at the Vineyard Church in Denver a few years before he died.<ref name=divorce>Template:Cite web</ref> Connie later remarried and Lonnie left the organization.
Vineyard movement
Meanwhile in May 1977, John Wimber laid the groundwork for what would become the Association of Vineyard Churches, also known as the Vineyard Movement. He witnessed the explosive growth of Calvary Chapel and wanted to build a church which embraced the healings and miracles that he had previously been taught were no longer a part of Christian life.Template:Citation needed He began teaching and preaching about spiritual gifts and healings, but Wimber held that it wasn't until May 1979, when Frisbee gave his testimony during an evening service at what was then the Yorba Linda branch of the Calvary Chapel movement (later the Anaheim Vineyard Christian Fellowship), that the charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit took hold of the church.<ref name=gifts>Template:Cite book</ref>
Since his early days at Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, Frisbee shifted in his emphasis from evangelism to the dramatic and demonstrative manifestation of the power of the Holy Spirit. After speaking Frisbee invited all the young people 25 and under to come forward; he invited the Holy Spirit to bring God's power into their lives. Witnesses say it looked like a battlefield as young people fell and began to shake and speak in tongues.<ref name=tongues>Template:Cite book</ref> The young kids, many in junior high and high school, were so "filled with the Spirit" that they soon started baptizing friends in hot tubs and swimming pools around town.
The church catapulted in growth over the next few months and the event is credited with launching the Vineyard Movement.<ref name="Movement">Template:Cite book</ref> After that time Frisbee and Wimber began traveling the world, visiting South Africa and Europe. Frisbee was a much sought-after preacher with his "Jesus-like" look getting him instant recognition from South Africa to Denmark.<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange" /><ref name="Ears on Their Heads, But" /> While there, they purportedly performed many healings and miracles for people.<ref name="mirwor" /> As reported by many who were there, Frisbee was integral to the development of what would later become Wimber's "Signs and Wonders theology".
Sexuality revealed
Although Frisbee's homosexuality was documented as a "bit of an open secret in the church community" and that he would "party" on Saturday night then preach Sunday morning, many in the church were unaware of his "other life."<ref name=open>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Eventually some church officials felt that Frisbee's inability to overcome sexual immorality became a hindrance to his ministry. An article in The Orange County Weekly, headlined "The First Jesus Freak," chronicles Frisbee's life in which Matt Coker writes, "Chuck Smith Jr. says he was having lunch with Wimber one day when he asked how the pastor reconciled working with a known homosexual like Frisbee. Wimber asked how the younger Smith knew this. Smith said he'd received a call from a pastor who'd just heard a young man confess to having been in a six-month relationship with Frisbee. Wimber called Smith the next day to say he'd confronted Frisbee, who openly admitted to the affair and agreed to leave."<ref name="The First Jesus Freak orange">Coker, Matt. "The First Jesus Freak" Template:Webarchive. OC Weekly, March 3, 2005. Retrieved May 17, 2007.</ref>
By his own account,<ref>Lonnie Frisbee with Roger Sachs, Not By Might, Nor By Power:Set Free,Template:ISBN, p23-24</ref> Frisbee was raped by a man who had attended one of Lonnie's revival meetings six years prior. Lonnie says "Over the next few weeks, this man began to spread it around that he had a sexual relationship with Lonnie Frisbee. He told people, including church leaders, that he had sex with me. Not true. I was violently forced at knifepoint totally against my will. His lies caused me years of not being able to minister, as this accusation spread throughout the Christian community." He describes next some of the fallout. "I gave in to drugs and sexual temptation. I had become deceived and overpowered. I had been constantly accused of things, mostly of which I didn't do---so why not live up to my reputation? That was more or less my subconscious justification for crossing the lines. I blamed everyone else, including the church."
However, Frisbee stated that he never characterized himself as a homosexual: "... in the last segment of my life story. I said it was a counterfeit. But I would like to go into the subject a little more at this time... I stated 'I never lived the gay lifestyle,' I would like to add that I have never even considered myself a homosexual at all, even though I had been molested for years as a child, had sexually experimented as a part of the rebellious 'free love generation'... and there is also my disappointing backsliding days in the mid-eighties."<ref>Lonnie Frisbee with Roger Sachs, Not By Might, Nor By Power:Set Free,Template:ISBN, p210-211</ref>
In 2005, film critic Peter Chattaway interviewed David Di Sabatino (director of the documentary Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher) for Christianity Today; they spoke about addressing Frisbee's homosexuality with his family. Di Sabatino said, "I brought to light some things that not a lot of people knew. I've been in rooms with his family where I've had to tell them that he defined himself as gay, way back. Nobody knew that. There's a lot of hubris in that, to come to people who loved him and prayed for him, and to stand there and say, 'You didn't really know this, but...'"<ref name=testimony>Template:Cite web</ref> In the same interview Di Sabatino also said, "His early testimony at Calvary Chapel was that he had come out of the homosexual lifestyle, but he felt like a leper because a lot of people turned away from him after that, so he took it out of his testimony—and I think that's an indictment of the church."<ref name=testimony/>
Death
At the time of his death in 1993, a brain tumor was named as the cause. A source claimed Frisbee contracted AIDS and died from complications associated with the condition;<ref name="lost boy"/> At his funeral at the Crystal Cathedral, Calvary Chapel's Chuck Smith eulogized Frisbee as a spiritual son and said he was a Samson-like figure, saying that he was a man through whom God did many great works, but that he was the victim of his own struggles and temptations.<ref name=funeral>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Some saw this as further maligning Frisbee's work and an inappropriate characterization at the service.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/> Others including Frisbee's friend John Ruttkay, saw the Samson analogy as being spot on, and said so at his funeral.<ref name="Frisbee documentary"/> Frisbee was interred in the Crystal Cathedral Memorial Gardens.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In popular culture
Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher
David Di Sabatino produced and directed the video documentary: Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher. Narrated by Jim Palosaari, it received an Emmy Award nomination from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (San Francisco/NorCal chapter).
Finished in March 2005, Frisbee was first accepted to the Newport Beach Film Festival where a showing at the Lido Theater was sold out. The theater is not far from the Blue Top commune, a Christian community of young hippie believers which was run by the Frisbees in the late 1960s. The documentary was also accepted to the Mill Valley (2005), Reel Heart (2005), Ragamuffin (2005), San Francisco International (2006), New York Underground (2006) and Philadelphia QFest (2006) film festivals. The edited version of the movie was shown on San Francisco's KQED in November 2006; the film was released on DVD in January 2007.
A soundtrack featuring the music of The All Saved Freak Band, Agape, Joy, and Gentle Faith was released in May 2007.<ref name=Emmy>Template:Cite web</ref>
Jesus Revolution
The 2023 movie Jesus Revolution starred Jonathan Roumie as Lonnie Frisbee, and Kelsey Grammer as Pastor Chuck Smith. The movie's theme is the rise of the Jesus Movement and features Frisbee as one of the film's main characters.
See also
References
Further reading
External links
- Template:Find a Grave
- Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher, official site
- Template:IMDb title
- Lonnie Frisbee's testimony (preaching) on Mother's Day at Pastor John Wimber's Church, May 11, 1988, part 2; audio only with extensive photo slideshow. It is believed by some that this very meeting inspired the Vineyard Church movement (trailer on video gives date of 5-11-88, however vineyardusa.org states that this occurred in 1980).
- Lonnie Frisbee ministering at Tom Stipe's Vineyard Christian Fellowship in Denver, Colorado
- Lonnie Frisbee related videos on YouTube
- photo of Frisbee
- Understanding Ministries -- Lonnie Frisbee : The Problem of Charismatic Hypocrisy by Paul Fahy, a theological criticism of charismatic religion allowing 'emotion' to triumph over doctrine, using Lonnie Frisbee as case study and example.
- Interview with Connie Frisbee discussing Lonnie in response to Frisbee:The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher
- American evangelicals
- American Charismatics
- American Christian mystics
- Members of the Calvary Chapel
- American Protestant ministers and clergy
- Prophets in Christianity
- Jesus movement
- Protestant mystics
- People from Costa Mesa, California
- People from Novato, California
- LGBTQ people from California
- LGBTQ Protestant clergy
- AIDS-related deaths in California
- 1949 births
- 1993 deaths
- 20th-century evangelicals
- 20th-century Christian mystics
- Association of Vineyard Churches
- 20th-century American people