They came to San Francisco seeking something more —
something significant, something transcendent. By the summer of 1967, a
half-century ago this year, nearly 100,000 hippies and counterculture
kids had gathered in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood to drop acid,
indulge in free love, and escape the confining strictures of their
middle-class upbringings. They wanted to join the revolution.
Yet the utopia called the Summer of Love wouldn’t last,
and, after the movement faded out, not all of them went back to
professional career paths. Disillusioned by bad trips and a sense that
their pursuit of hedonism had been empty, thousands of burned out
hippies soon experienced something possibly even more revolutionary than
tuning out and turning on: a born-again religious conversion.
Sex, drugs, and — Jesus? It’s not what the Summer of Love
generally calls to mind. But of all the things that came out of San
Francisco in 1967, perhaps none was more unexpected, or more
consequential, than the Jesus Freaks or, as they were more commonly
known, the Jesus People.
How the Summer of Love helped give birth to the Religious Right - Vox
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