Lonnie Frisbee
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Lonnie Frisbee (1949, Costa Mesa, California - March 12, 1993) was an American "hippie" Pentecostal evangelist in the late 1960s and 1970s. He worked in conjunction with Chuck Smith's Calvary Chapel movement and he was the key figure in the Jesus Movement.
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[edit] Lonnie's life
He was a prominent, homosexual art student at the San Francisco Art Academy when he met members of the Haight-Ashbury's Living Room mission. At the time, Lonnie talked about UFOs and practiced hypnotism. When the missionaries first met him, they said he was talking about "Jesus and flying saucers".
Lonnie soon converted to Christianity and quit the art academy to move to a Christian community in Novato, California, along with his wife Connie. The community was soon dubbed The House of Acts (named after the community of early Christians in the Acts of the Apostles). Lonnie 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 small community could hardly afford this, so the sign came down.
[edit] Jesus movement, Calvary Chapel
Lonnie and his wife had left the commune of the House of Acts to go to Southern California. Chuck Smith, meanwhile, 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 Lonnie Frisbee. Lonnie was soon to become one of the most important ministers in the church.
Lonnie's unkempt appearance (he greatly resembled the standard portraits of Jesus, a frail man with long hair and a beard) helped appeal the youth culture to his message, and Lonnie believed that the youth culture would play a prominent role in the Christian movement in the United States. He cited Joel the prophet.
Lonnie's attachment to the Pentecostal movement (so named after the events at Pentecost in Acts of the Apostles), however, caused some disagreement within the church, since Lonnie was focused more on gaining converts than on helping them learn sound doctrine. Chuck Smith, however, took up that job and welcomed the shoeless hippie clothed in street attire when he arrived at Chuck's church one day. The two worked greatly to bring hippies and young people to Jesus Christ. Under Lonnie Frisbee's ministry his most visible convert was evangelist Greg Laurie.
Smith then asked Lonnie and Connie to depart to San Francisco circa 1968. Smith had set up a community house there called the House of Miracles which had been established in May 1968. Within a week, it had 35 new converts. Lonnie and Connie were to run it with John Higgins and his wife Jackie.
[edit] Lonnie to win fame
By 1971, the Jesus Movement had broken in the media, and major media outlets such as Life Magazine, Newsweek and Rolling Stone Magazine were covering it. Lonnie, due to his prominence in the movement, was frequently photographed and interviewed in the magazines.
It was also in 1971 that Lonnie and Chuck Smith parted ways because their ideological differences had become too great. Smith discounted Pentecostalism, maintaining that love was the greatest manifestation of the Holy Spirit, while Lonnie was also strongly involved in theology centering on spiritual gifts. Lonnie 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 coined as the "Shepherding Movement".
[edit] Lonnie and Connie divorced
In 1973, Lonnie and Connie divorced, and Connie later remarried. Lonnie left the organization.
In 1980, Lonnie was invited by John Wimber to go to what was then a Yorba Linda branch of the Calvary Chapel movement, to preach. Since his early days at Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, he had made a shift in his emphasis from evangelism to the dramatic and demonstrative manifestation of the power of the Holy Spirit. When Lonnie preached at Wimber's church on that Mother's Day, people reported some unusual happenings. In the aftermath of the Mother's Day meeting, a number of reported miraculous healings shortly thereafter.
After this time, Frisbee and Wimber began travelling the world, going to such places as South Africa and Europe. While there, they claimed to have performed many healings and miracles for people. As reported by many who were there, Frisbee was integral to the development of what would become Wimber's "Signs and Wonders theology".
[edit] Lonnie died from AIDS
Lonnie contracted AIDS and he died on 12 March 1993 from complications. [1]
[edit] See also
[edit] External sources
- A documentary of Lonnie's life has been put together by David Di Sabatino.
- Video of Lonnie Frisbee at Tom Stipe's church.
- Video of Lonnie Frisbee Memorial Service at Crystal Cathedral-Chuck Smith, Phil Aguilar and guests...
- Lonnie Frisbee: Homosexuality, Marriage and Mumford
[edit] Movie Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher
- Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher produced and directed by David Di Sabatino, a Jester Media production
- Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher at IMDB