Was lonnie frisbee gay

Lonnie Frisbee: The Gloomy Story of a Hippie Preacher

His life was a precursor to many of the ministry scandals of today

Editor’s Note:Lonnie Frisbee was born on June 6, 1949.Had he lived, he would be 72 on Sunday.

Lonnie Frisbee is a identify mostly lost to history, but he could be one of the most influential persons in the modern evangelical movement.There’s no mistrust that he is the man who put the “freak” in “Jesus Freak.”And in his being we see some of the top and worst of evangelicalism.And in the way evangelical leaders dealt with him we see a pattern of cover-up that extends even to today.

But to understand that, a bit of his biography is helpful.

Lonnie Frisbee was a quintessential baby-boomer, born in 1949 and fully immersed in the hippie movement of the 1960s.He was in San Francisco during the famous 1967 “Summer of Love,” and even then, at age 18, he was a compelling figure, winning awards for his painting and becoming established in the “gay underground” for his dancing and bohemian attitudes and profligate drug use.He described himself as a “nudist, vegetarian hippie.”His rootlessness may own been a outcome of a dim home life when he was a child.He was raped

‘Jesus Revolution’ filmmaker explains why they chose not to share Lonnie Frisbee's sexuality

By Jeannie Ortega Commandment, Christian Post Reporter

Revivalist Lonnie Frisbee is featured in the new film "Jesus Revolution," which showcases how the flawed minister was used greatly during the Jesus Movement of the 1970s. The filmmakers said they intentionally chose not to address his struggles with homosexuality.

"Jesus Revolution," now showing in theaters nationwide, was inspired by the true story of the spiritual awakening that swept Southern California in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The Kingdom Story film, in collaboration with Lionsgate, was directed by filmmakers Jon Erwin ("I Can Only Imagine") and Brent McCorkle and produced by Kevin Downes. 

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In the movie, Pastor Greg Laurie and his wife, Cathe, foremost known for leading Harvest Christian Fellowship, represent a young, wayward generation. But after meeting Frisbee, a charismatic hippie street preacher, they find themselves at the church of Pastor Chuck Smith.

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“But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us.” – 2 Corinthians 4:7

Much like when I investigated the controversy surrounding Smith Wigglesworth, there is some contention surrounding the ministry of Lonnie Frisbee. The movie Jesus Revolutioncould not address the full scope and power of his ministry. In addition, it does not address the stigma that almost had him erased from the recorded history of the Jesus revolution movement(s).

Lonnie Frisbee – Saintly Relentless Pursuer of God or Serial Sinner & False Prophet?
The person of Lonnie Frisbee and how God used him has intrigued me for decades. As mentioned in my previous post, we had some small contact with him but his life and ministry had a decisive impact on our lives. Over the last not many decades, I have interpret and watched everything that has become available about his life. Based upon his personal testimony and the testimony of those closest to him, I provide the following thoughts:

The Catalyst

Lonnie Frisbee was the catalyst God used to instigate and stir up several powerful moves of God – starting in California an

Jesus Revolution and the tragedy of Lonnie Frisbee

When Calvary Chapel pastor Chuck Smith said he wanted God to carry a hippie to his door, because he didn’t realize hippies, he meant it as a joke. But when Lonnie Frisbee showed up, he wasn’t joking. And right there in Smith’s kitchen, a movement was born.

The modern film Jesus Revolution tells that movement’s origin story, which doubles as the origin story for Harvest Ministry founder Greg Laurie. In 1969, Laurie was a lost teen from a broken home when he encountered Smith and Frisbee’s joint ministry. He quickly linked the thousands of young people whose mass conversions and Pacific Ocean baptisms would turn heads around the earth. A mere two years later, he was planting his own church.

The production has over-performed at the box office, raking in an impressive $15 million for opening weekend. Christian movies usually aren’t my thing, but I’m a certified 60s/70s nerd with an interest in the history around “the Jesus people,” so I was curious. As I read up on Lonnie, Chuck Smith’s mysterious hippie guest, I especially wondered how the film would deal with his story. The dynamic evangelist was directly responsible for a wave of c