(from Udo Middelmann)
Edith Rachel Merritt Seville Schaeffer died on March
30, 2013 in her home in Gryon, Switzerland, where she had moved 13 years ago to
be surrounded by memories, her music, her son’s paintings and the detailed care
organized daily by her daughter Deborah Middelmann. She was born on November 3,
1914 as the third daughter of Dr. George Hugh and Jessie Maude Seville in
Wenchau, China, where her parents ran a school for girls and taught the Bible
in Mandarin.
Edith Schaeffer marked her life with the expression
of rich ideas, often rebellious against the staid and superficial life she saw
among Christians. The oldest sister became a communist in New York of the 30ies,
the second eloped. Edith Seville married
Francis August Schaeffer in 1935 and in no way was she the typical pastor’s or
missionary wife. She turned her active mind to work with her husband, teaching
first seminary wives to think and to question, to create and make of life
something of integrity, as her husband so wanted her to do.
To put her husband through 3 years of seminary she
tailored men’s suits, made ball room gowns and wedding dresses for private
clients. From whole cow skins she made belts sold in New York stores. With very
little money she prepared tasteful and varied meals. She painted a fresco on
the ceiling of the vestibule in the little church her husband pastored in Grove
City, while he attached a steeple to it with the elders’ help. They lectured
together and encouraged many to use their minds to understand what they believed
and how to respond to the intellectual and cultural ideas around them. Together
they travelled and taught in churches and university halls from Finland to
Portugal, helping people understand Christianity as the truth of the universe,
not a personal faith, and pointing out the cultural and philosophical pitfalls
in everyone’s way.
She lived her life as a work of art, an exhibition
of true significance and a portrait of a generous, stunning and creative
personality. She always sought ways to draw on life’s opportunities to show
that human beings are made for the enrichment of everyone’s life, for the
encouragement of people. This was a central part of the work she and her
husband engaged in from the very start of their life together. She was in all
things generous. When books provided royalties she used all of it to give her
four children and their families annual reunions for the cousins to know each
other.
When she left the work of L’Abri after her husband’s
death she started the Francis A Schaeffer Foundation with Udo and Deborah
Middelmann to safeguard his papers and the ideas that underline their life, to make
them available for a wider audience. She found people interesting anywhere,
engaged in conversation and so met the most amazing individuals. She talked,
for instance, with the author Andre Aciman, standing in line for tickets to
Carnegie Hall in NY and found out that he had had our village doctor, Dr.
Gandur, as his pediatrician in Alexandria, Egypt. He was so grateful to be in
touch through her with his old doctor.
She enjoyed people in the streets, in airplanes and
over the phone, wherever she found them or when they could reach her. She
stayed up nights to help someone out of their distress or need. With much
imagination she served her meals with stunning decorations made from twigs and
moss, field flowers and stones. Duncan from Kenya once remarked: “This is the
first place where I see the beauty of the truth of the Bible consistently
carried over into all areas of life.”
After the death of her husband in 1984 Edith
Schaeffer added a whole new chapter to her life. She continued to write books,
lectured widely and returned twice to her place of birth in China. She investigated
the making the Baby Grand Piano she had received as a gift at the Steinway
factory in New York and presented “Forever Music” in a concert at Alice Tully
Hall in New York with the Guarneri Quartet. Through Franz Mohr, the chief piano
voicer at Steinway she came to know musicians like Rostropovich, the pianists
Horowitz and Rudoph Serkin, the Cellists YoYo Ma and Ya Ya Ling, and also the
guitarist Christopher Parkening. She organized concerts and elaborate
receptions for musicians and friends in her home in Rochester, MN. When she met
B. B. King at the International Jazz Festival in Montreux he gave her his pass
to the evening’s concert. Once on vacations on the island of Elba, Sonny
Rollins noticed her beauty and rhythm in the audience as she danced during his
concert, came off the stage and danced with her.
Today she “slipped into the nearer presence of
Jesus”, her Lord, from whom she awaits the promised resurrection to continue
her life on earth and to dance once again with a body restored to wholeness.
If you wish to honor Edith Schaeffer’s life you can
support her intense commitment to the work of the Francis Schaeffer Foundation,
Jermintin 3, CH -1882 Gryon, Switzerland
2 comments:
I was saved at 25 out of a life of debauchery, perversion, and rebellion. As a revolutionary and active organizing communist, I was Damascus roaded.
The Bible became my only truth, and the Schaeffers taught me how to live it with my gifts and calling.
One quote, in particular, from Edith changed my life forever. To wit, "We may live in a pluralistic society, but we do not live in a pluralistic universe."
Easter 2013 will forever be remembered with her passing.
Steray,
Many thanks for your testimony on behalf of God's work though Edith Schaeffer. I am pleased that you chose to share it here.
Best to you on all counts.
God bless!
MB
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