This is a book that I was encouraged to read as part of the Fellows Program for the C.S. Lewis Institute.
Before reading Schaeffer, I had read a number of works by his acolytes: Nancy Pearcey, Os Guinness, Vishal Mangalwadi, and Darrow Miller. So, I had seen the good fruit that his ministry bore.
It would have been easy for him to underwhelm me because I rate each of those highly, therefore. However, I found this book engaging and encouraging.
There is something very appealing about how he understands the mark of the true Christian, and he does not restrict the Christian way to denomination or prepositional knowledge alone. He appeals to the scriptures to argue for a visible, but not just an organisationally visible church. As far as I can see now, there is something profoundly right about that.
As well as aforementioned visible and organisational elements, he makes a number of important distinctions, balancing love and holiness, belief and baptism, alongside the dynamics between Christians and how we might relate to non-Christians.
A lot of this is even more pertinent now, when we have unrepentant Onlyfans 'stars' claiming to be Christian with little or no concern for holiness. This is an affront to God's holiness and it is remiss of us not to call it out, in love.
It speaks to the shallow view that many folks have of conversion and 'Christianity'.
Overall, Francis's short book is worth mulling over. It is written in a simple, straight-forward fashion and he paints word pictures and provides examples to bring his key points home. They did not always land with me, but I appreciated this pastoral style. I think a major limitation of the book is the lack of focus on unjust institutions, and how we are to love our fellow Christians, and others, well as we wrestle intensely with institutions that are bent in an anti-Christian manner. This is probably more of an issue now than when he wrote this book.
Christians in the Anglosphere find themselves in a 'negative world', which is directly antagonistic to true Christians and true Christian institutions.
Yet, may his ministry and writings continue to bear good fruit.