Although this book was published in 1982, it is startlingly relevant to our times 40 years later. Though "Franky Schaeffer" was a rightist Christian when he wrote this book, unfortunately, Frank turned into an angry anti-Christian who identifies as a "Christian Atheist" - someone who follows select Christian principles from Jesus, but rejects the intervening, benevolent, One True God as well as some core principles of the Way of Jesus (which can be summed up by love for God, as well as love for others that leads them to righteousness).
In this book, old Franky Schaeffer tackles the secularist humanist control ("hegemony," you might call it) over every key factor of our society - media, education, the sciences, the arts. What's interesting to me is the utter shock and anger with which this is met. Whereas for most Christians nowadays this is no surprise, for old Franky Schaeffer, this was an overturning of centuries of America's tradition and a revisioning of America from a Judeo-Christian nation to a secular humanist nation.
Schaeffer decries Christian passivity in the face of this silent revolution and calls for Christians to take action. Ultimately, the call to action is much needed in our own time.
Since Franky the Christian became Frank the radical anti-Christ, a natural question is begged: have the views in this book been shown to be wrong?
My argument is twofold.
On the one hand, there was clearly something in Schaeffer's philosophy that was a bit too focused on the state of the nation. It transcended social action, seeking justice and doing righteousness and became something more of "Let us take our nation back." This mentality produces less a Christianity that uses spiritual weapons against spiritual foes, and more a Christianity that uses weapons of the flesh to impose its own will.
But that is not how Christ defeated the Satanic force. He defeated it through meekness, humility, submission (to the will of His Father), bold proclamation of the truth, through a forehead as hard as flint that withstood the impressions of the world (Ezekiel 3:9), through zeal for the house of the Lord, through the denunciation of the proud, by laying down His life for His friends. And so, there is something that does taint Schaeffer's argument. It is even notable in the workings of Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority (with which the Schaeffers were in league) - which although we must thank God for their work and (indeed, they did much good). we should admit that they might have been lacking in some of the spiritual weapons of Christ in their cultural warfare. Better to wage that war with the armaments of Christ.
On the other hand, there is something needed here: a call to action, a denunciation of comfortable Christian passivity, a call for holy and righteous anger against sin and transgressions multiplying in our culture, a call for Christian involvement in the media, arts, sciences, politics, laws (though in a flavor more in keeping with Christ).
May the Lord preserve us from turning from Franky's to Frank's. May He keep His people humble and in step with the nature of Christ. May He harden our foreheads like flint against the vices of our culture. May He put fire in our mouths to proclaim His Laws and His Good News.