| A CHANGED LIFEJane Fonda's Christian JourneyBy Donald L. HughesSpecial to ASSIST News Service
 CBN.com  
                ATLANTA, GA (ANS) --   Sometimes the most unlikely people become followers of Jesus, at least   from the human perspective. But the Lord takes us all on a unique journey, and   Jane Fonda is no exception. The only thing about her journey that separated her   from others is that she has long held a place in the public   spotlight. Who is the Real Jane Fonda? Jane Fonda was the daughter of the legendary actor Henry   Fonda, and his wife Frances Brokaw. Her father became legendary by playing   heroic characters in movies like The Grapes of Wrath and Twelve Angry Men.   However, it does not seem he was as heroic in real life, as he was abusive to his   family. Her mother committed suicide in a mental institution when Jane was 12.   Jane Fonda attended Vassar College, and during that time struggled with bulimia.   Not really sure of her direction in life, she ended up studying at Lee   Strasberg's Actors' Studio. Today she has made over 80 film appearances and won   Academy Awards for her work in Klute (1971) and Coming Home (1978) and has   been nominated five other times.
 The Years as an Activist
 So much of her career was about finding herself. Once she   was involved in acting, she excelled. Later she married movie director Roger   Vadim because she was taken by his “European intellectualism,” which most people   identify with liberalism. Fonda was the loser in this relationship too, for   Vadim, who had been formerly married to Bridget Bardot publicly ridiculed Jane,   and she took the heat for starring in his 1968 failure,   Barbarella.
 However, armed with a liberal worldview, Jane Fonda became   a political activist and received wide criticism for visiting Hanoi in the mist   of the Vietnam War. She has since apologized for this act saying. “It hurt so   many soldiers. It galvanized such hostility. It was the most horrible thing I   could possibly have done. It was just thoughtless.”
 
 Peter Fonda, her   brother, probably summed up the Hanoi visit in the most accurate way. He said,   “Her heart was in the right place, but her head wasn't.” Jane Fonda continued to   be outspoken about political issues, and was later married to radical activist   turned politician Tom Hayden. She and Hayden divorced in 1989 after a 16 year   marriage.
 
 A Season of Changes
 
 In the late 1970's Fonda   turned her attention to being a film producer (The China Syndrome, 9-5, and   On Golden Pond among others) and later produced and starred in a series of   popular exercise videos.
 
 In 1991 she did something that shocked those   close to her, and that was marrying Ted Turner, founder of CNN. Turner was a   conservative, but worse, he often acted in unrefined ways and is known as, “The   Mouth of the South.” He has verbally attacked Christians on many occasions and   once said, “Christianity is a religion for losers.”
 
 Turner said it was   his wife's conversion to Christianity that was responsible for the divorce that   ended their nine year marriage. In a New Yorker magazine article Turner said,   “She just came home and said: 'I've become a Christian.' That's a pretty big   change for your wife of many years to tell you. That's a shock.”
 
 How Jane Met Jesus
 
 Fonda's conversion did not come overnight. She was on   a very specific spiritual journey for two years before receiving the Lord. One   of her close friends says that embracing Christ was “very real, very deep” for   Fonda according to a published report.
 
 Several Christian friends in   Atlanta were among those involved in Fonda's path to Christ. These are said to   include Ginny Millner, wife of Georgia Republican leader Guy Millner, and Nancy   McGuirk, whose husband is an executive in Turner Broadcasting, according to an   article in the Washington Times.
 The key figure in Jane Fonda's spiritual search may have   been her chauffeur according to the article. When Ted Turner became upset when   she began attending Atlanta's fashionable Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Fonda   asked her chauffeur where should she go. The chauffeur invited her to attend his   church, the predominantly black Providence Missionary Baptist Church. She   accepted the invitation, and became a regular there. 
 The Rev. Gerald   Durley, pastor of the church was quoted by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as   saying, “I am extremely impressed with the genuineness and sincerity in [her]   search for spirituality and wholeness.”
 
 Jane Fonda has not tried to   capitalize on her faith, and this is a credit to the character she has shown   throughout her life. As a person of conviction, she is not likely to turn away   from Jesus.
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              articles on CBN.com 
 Donald L. Hughes is the editor of JesusJournal.com, an online magazine that   deals with faith and culture. He earned degrees from Azusa Pacific University,   Wheaton Graduate School and Princeton Theological Seminary. More from ASSIST News 
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