Jesus Movement
The Jesus Movement was the Christian component of the Hippie Movement, composed of the Jesus People or Jesus Freaks. It arose spontaneously on the American West Coast in the 1960s and 1970s and spread throughout North America and Europe. It was a portion of one of the periodic Awakenings that occur in American history, in which the values of American society are radically altered.
Related Topics:
Jesus - Christian - Hippie - 1960s - 1970s - North America - Europe - Awakening
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The Jesus Movement was a counter-counter cultural movement. Some people became disenchanted with American life and became hippies; later some hippies became disenchanted with hippie values and became Jesus Freaks. The term "Jesus Freak" was originally a pejorative label, but then taken on as a name by the Jesus People. They kept many of the mannerisms and style of the hippies, but changed the content. Hence, free love became free love of God and people (see agap?); phrases like "One Way" supplanted the focus on the individual with a focus on God; "Just Drop Jesus" replaced dropping acid.
Related Topics:
Hippie - Pejorative - Free love - God - Agap? - Jesus - Acid
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Jesus People were known for great openness and honesty. They were primitivist in theology, seeking to return to the original life of the early Christians. They often therefore viewed the American church as apostate and took a decidedly anti-American stance in general. They called for a return to simplicity and Holy Poverty, and were against materialism.
Related Topics:
Primitivist - Theology - American - Apostate - Anti-American - Poverty - Materialism
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Jesus People had a strong belief in the miraculous, signs and wonders, healing, demonic possession and exorcism, and a rejection of the excluded middle. They tended to be strongly evangelistic and millennialistic. What they lacked in theological depth, they made up for in zeal for Jesus Christ and love of others. They strived for social justice and seemed to simply be in love with Jesus. Some of the most read books by those within the movement included Ron Sider's Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger and Hal Lindsey's The Late Great Planet Earth.
Related Topics:
Miraculous - Demonic possession - Exorcism - Excluded middle - Evangelistic - Millennialistic - Social justice - Ron Sider - Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger - Hal Lindsey - The Late Great Planet Earth
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Perhaps the most illustrative aspect of the Jesus Movement was its communal aspect. Most Jesus Freaks lived in communes. Although there were some like the Calvary Chapel movement who did not, these remained more on the fringe of the movement. Within the commune the group became more important than the individual, and communal sharing of possessions was the norm. Some of these communes became highly authoritarian.
Related Topics:
Commune - Calvary Chapel - Authoritarian
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Unlike most Christian movements, there was no single leader of the Jesus Movement. Some of the larger names included Lonnie Frisbee, who along with Chuck Smith started the Calvary Church movement. Most churches in the United States rejected the Jesus Freaks. Frisbee was the primary evangelist and responsible for the growth of the Calvary churches; Smith was one of the few pastors who welcomed in the Jesus Freaks, and thus allowed for the dramatic future growth of his affiliate church network.
Related Topics:
Lonnie Frisbee - Chuck Smith
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Another early leader was Linda Meissner, who formed the Jesus People Army in Seattle. She later joined her group with the Children of God, not discovering until later the practices of that group. One of her disciples was Jim Palosaari, who along with his wife Sue started a number of Christian communes, discipleship schools (to develop theological depth), and rock groups. One group toured through Europe, developing Christian music and drama; another eventually became Jesus People USA (JPUSA), the largest and most enduring of the Jesus People communes.
Related Topics:
Linda Meissner - Jesus People Army - Seattle - Children of God - Jim Palosaari - Discipleship - Jesus People USA
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In the UK, the Jesus Army was among the groups most influenced by the Jesus Movement, embracing (former) hippies, bikers and drug addicts among others. Many of the church adopted a communal lifestyle, which still continues.
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