
“Is there anything else you’d like to share?” asks the job interviewer. A college-age DeVon Franklin makes a quick, silent plea to God: “I’ll tell her about the Sabbath—after I get the internship.” But then something makes him relent. He states his commitment to not work between sunset on Friday to sunset on Saturday, because of his Seventh-day Adventist beliefs. In response, he hears the relief-giving words: “We can work around it.”
“This laid the foundation for everything. Since then, [the Sabbath] has never been a problem,” says Franklin, now in his thirties. He is the vice president of production for Columbia Pictures, a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment, so “everything” encompasses a lot. As his website shows, Franklin has participated in making films such as The Karate Kid, The Pursuit of Happyness, and Jumping the Broom. He has worked with Will Smith, Angela Bassett, and T.D. Jakes. Franklin also helped produce Whitney Houston’s last movie, Sparkle.
“Growing up, I thought we were ‘can’t-ventists,’ ” Franklin relates. But he later learned that “integrity sets you and me apart.” Franklin was raised in Oakland, Calif., where working for the non-profit Oakland Citizens Committee for Urban Renewal (OCCUR) led to his career-changing internship. “You have no idea that what you’re doing now sets you up for your future,” Franklin says. Against the well-meant advice of church members, Franklin followed God’s path for him: the streets of Hollywood. Franklin attended the University of Southern California, earning a bachelor of arts in business administration, and a minor in cinema-television. During his junior year, word of Franklin’s work at OCCUR eventually earned him a new job: intern for Will Smith and James Lasstier, which began his film career.
“My faith gives me a competitive advantage to really help people,” Franklin says. For some, the “evils” of the film industry seem incompatible with a Christian lifestyle. Franklin thinks that’s wrong. “I would go to church and be taught ‘faith and works’ and then hear that I can’t go into the film industry and be who God wants me be.” He wondered, “Am I supposed to be faithful or fearful?” The now-studio executive stepped forward in faith, and found that “faith works, but you have to embrace it.”
An Adventist advantage applies in Hollywood, too. “Being brought up as Seventh-day Adventist has brought me more opportunities,” says Franklin. “People respect the power and the courage to take a stand.” The studio executive tells about a Sabbath showdown while filming The Karate Kid in China. “It was the first movie I oversaw by myself. We were in Beijing, China, and we hadn’t finished shooting by sunset.” Franklin was the only Sony representative on the site. “If I compromise [my beliefs] now, where does it stop?” he asked himself. “I love Sony, but I love God more.” Franklin called it a day. “The movie didn’t blow up—but it did at the box office,” he says. That Sabbath, he was reading the Bible in the Olympic Village, when he got the idea for a new project: a book, Produced by Faith.
“You are the star of your own story,” believes Franklin. According to his website, “Produced by Faith uses the process of making a movie to encourage you to fight for your dreams and to never give up on your faith.” Franklin leads readers from “The Big Idea,” through “Development Hell,” and “God’s Green Light” to a successful, Christ-centered life. “God has a plan to direct a hit out of your life, when you let him produce your life,” Franklin says. In addition to his work in film production, he is also a preacher and a motivational speaker.
“My life ain’t sanitized. Because it was hard, this makes the victory even greater,” says Franklin. When he chooses movies to produce, he doesn’t limit himself to a rating. “I focus on content, on virtuous material,” the producer says. He makes sure that questionable content is “not gratuitous, not over-the-top, and serves the story.” “Integrity sets us apart [from others],” says Franklin, who teaches others how to use their integrity to best advantage—in this world and the next.
He quotes Methodist evangelist D.T. Niles, “I’m just one beggar trying to tell other beggars where to find bread.” But Franklin is using a megaphone and his own life.
Franklin is not the only Seventh-day Adventist working in a mainly secular industry, of course. For example, Swedish conductor Herbert Blomstedt, a Spectrum contributor, attracts notice for his refusal to rehearse between sunset on Friday until sunset on Saturday. He does conduct concerts on Sabbath, in part because he considers performances to be expressions of his commitment to God.
True—doing something as “irrational” as not working one day a week, in a 24/7-work-week culture, draws attention. But it also makes career sense: it shows commitment to spiritual values in an industry that values profit more. What aspects of Adventism would best show integrity? There are 28 Fundamental Beliefs of Seventh-day Adventism. What would it look like to live out other sacred values in the public eye of the secular world?
Taking a stand may mean taking the Sabbath day off. For DeVon Franklin, it specifically means turning off his BlackBerry and calling it a wrap. Despite his success in the spotlight, he’s still waiting for the ultimate hit. “In heaven, with a premiere in eternity, I want others to look at the screen of life, and I don’t want to say a word,” says Franklin. “I just want to point at the screen, which will say, Produced by Faith.” And that’s his successful take.
DeVon Franklin spoke to the Pacific Union College community on Thursday, February 26, 2012.
—Midori Yoshimura is an English and Spanish double major and Honors student at Pacific Union College.
I will only say that I have always been worried as an Adventist about how limited our career options seem to be. Can we conscientiously be pilots? (No guarantees of Sabbath observance)
Supermarket owners? (Alcohol and meat etc.)
It is just something I wonder about. Can we not make an impact in other areas outside of education and medicine?
Can we be CEOS? Run NGOs? Invent? Sculpt and paint?
Personally I am not sure I would take the Hollywood path. I am hoping God has him there for a reason. That would be exciting. In any case, my prayer is that God leads him and keeps him faithful.
Thank you Midori, for this thoughtful story.
It really is all about the Sabbath, isn't it!
Thank you Midori! Nicely said!
" as an Adventist about how limited our career options seem to be."
This is something that is never clarified and left up to each individual. Yet when put into practice, there is often condemnation if an individual's judgment is not approved by the church.
Are there SDA pilots? Airline stewards? These are certainly not 5/day week jobs but work around the clock, as do many other professions. If one's work is legal, in demand, and serves others, why should there be limitations on sabbath when we all eat, travel, and carry on necessary tasks on that day just as on other days? Are only denominational employees the ones who must travel on sabbath, sleep in hotels, and eat in restaurants--on sabbath? We know they do, but do they have "special dispensation"?
Are hospital janitors, cooks, clerks not just as necessary as physicians and nurses?
Do police and their dispatchers offer a necessary service on every day of the week?
What services are Adventists willing to forego on sabbath? Travel, restaurants, ambulance services, gas stations? If we use any of these services should we not expect Adventists to offer them? Or should we be thankful for the non-Jews who can lawfully provide them while we would not do them ourselves?
Anyone care to address this?
Elaine
An Adventist working in Hollywood is about as appropriate as an Adventist working for a brothel, a brewery or a cigarette manufacturer. Sure you may be able to keep the Sabbath, but you are working against God and for the enemy. Hollywood is antiChristian and the movies it churn out are about promiscuity, violence, lying, cheating, spiritism etc. Even when there is a positive, it's usually mixed in witha a liberal dose of the above. And when they present Christian themes, watch for the twist to turn the truth around and make it a lie.
There are simply some industries where God's people do not belong.
Elaine,
Since there are and have been many family members in denominational employment, I can say that there has been many different responses to what one should do or not do...
At one point in time some relatives who worked in dietetics were told to "donate" their Sabbath pay to the church!?! I've had other relatives who would travel on the Sabbath if it was to promote the church (pastor/principal) but not on other occasions. I've also had relatives that did not want their rooms cleaned on sabbaths in hotels because the maids shouldn't be working on the sabbath.
There has always been more "leeway/dispensations" for those who work directly in the medical professions as opposed to the educational, or other service occupations. Never made a lot of sense to me that the nurse/doctor was more important than the janitor/food service personnel that kept the rooms clean or served patients food on the sabbath.
Kim
There are simply some industries where God's people do not belong.
*******************
Daniel and his three friends were conscripted into government service in Babylon. They received pagan names, and received a thorough indoctrination into Babylonian history, religion, and cosmology. They went to work for what was essentially an anti-God power, whose name was used a euphemism for such throughout the Scriptures. They could have refused to get involved, albeit very likely on pain of death. Instead, they went into the fray, remained publicly faithful, and reached a blood thirsty, pagan tyrant with message of the true God.
None of it would have happened if they remained on the sidelines for fear of contaminating their purity.
Thanks...
Frank
"For example, Swedish conductor Herbert Blomstedt, a Spectrum contributor, attracts notice for his refusal to rehearse between sunset on Friday until sunset on Saturday. He does conduct concerts on Sabbath, in part because he considers performances to be expressions of his commitment to God."
I well recall that statement about Blomstedt. It appears then that all you have to do is call it a "performance" an expression of commitment to God and that makes it all OK. A reasonable person could expect that a builder of a cathedral or church could engage in the same type of reasoning that appears suspiciously like casuistry. I'm not Blomsted's judge as only God can judge. One can make observations, however, about overt activity.
MARANATHA!
"There are simply some industries where God's people do not belong."
Yes, radio and television come to mind, certainly. Both are filled with all manner of falsehoods, celebrity worship, and debaucheries.
So get rid of the Adventist Media Center and deep-six Adventist World Radio. H.M.S. Richards Sr. and Jr., Bill Fagel, and George Vandeman were working for the devil. (Many claimed that, of course.)
Or maybe, just maybe, when Jesus sends us (see John 17) into a tasteless, dark, hating world, He meant we are to be transforming agents, bringing salt, light, and love.
False analogy alert: Brothels, breweries, and cigarette manufacturers make one product only. The same cannot truly be said of any media outlets--whether music, news, film, TV, or even (ahem) blogs.
In today's economy with so many unemployed and seeking work, what about any job is inconsistent with Adventism? Delivering soda? Meat, including pork? Driving limos to Friday night parties?
This is the one topic pastors and denominational employees often preach on as few have ever lived or worked outside the SDA ivory tower where there is never a sabbath problem. How many have heard such pastors tell members that if there is ever a question of sabbath work to feed their family, they should, nevertheless, refuse such work and pray for food and rent payments and, just like Uncle Arthur's stories, their needs will always be met by angels or fellow members. How's that been working today?
Elaine
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