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I Fired God

My Life Inside—-and Escape From—-the Secret World of the Independent Fundamental Baptist Cult

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A compelling memoir and account of the Independent Fundamental Baptist church and its shocking history of religious abuse.
Jocelyn Zichterman was born, raised, married into, and finally, with her family, fled the Independent Fundamental Baptist church. Founded by the fiery preacher Bob Jones, with several hundred thousand members, IFB congregants are told they must not associate with members of other Baptist denominations and evangelicals, with an emphasis on secrecy, insular marriages within the church, a subservience for women, and unusual child raising practices.
In I Fired God, Jocelyn Zichterman systematically details the IFB's disturbing history, exposing a cult-like atmosphere of corruption, greed, and abuse. Having been initiated into its innermost circles, Zichterman knows that the gentle demeanor America sees in the form of the Duggar clan on 19 Kids and Counting disguises the truth about the darker side of the church.
With written documentation and sources so thorough that law enforcement has used her work as a foundation for criminal prosecutions, Zichterman exposes the IFB with revelations including:
- The disturbing world of abuse within the IFB and doctors and teachers who cater exclusively to church members and fail to report physical and sexual abuse
- The IFB-controlled Bob Jones University, which issues degrees of questionable value while making vast sums of money for its founders
- The way the IFB influences politics on the local, state, and national level, and protects its abusive culture under the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion

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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2013
      A damning memoir of life under the thumb of the Independent Fundamental Baptist Church, from former member Zichterman. Although it appears that the author's father is a seriously disturbed individual in his own right, the teachings of the IFB leave little to the imagination regarding the place of women in their worldview, where submission is their due--and they pay for even the smallest infraction with bloody lashings. Not that the boys went unbeaten, and Zichterman would sing quietly to her doll as her brothers got the rod. Under the guise of godly discipline, the IFB nurtured paranoia, "a clandestine subculture that breeds fear and suspicion," in which the members "have no idea that charitable organizations and government authorities exist that could offer them counseling and protection." So they remain silent, and the girls remain silent before the physical and sexual abuse. It is unnerving--even infuriating--to read of Zichterman's ordeal--all the fear, depression, guilt and pain, in a tone that is not so much unvarnished as vulnerable, the thrum of something evil playing right under the surface as she would curl up and weep at another episode of her father's wrath. When she was 18, her father was still whipping her, ordering her to remove her clothes before administration, in a grotesque sexual sadism. But Zichterman's story is more than a grisly tale of abuse. It is a glimpse into what is potentially happening in thousands of families caught in the IFB orbit. She eventually broke from the church, an act of heroism that it is difficult to imagine given such obvious brainwashing. An incendiary piece of work that will hopefully encourage other victims to escape the IFB's web.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2013

      Raised in the secret world of the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) church, Zichterman aims here to shed light on a faith that is largely unknown in mainstream America although it has hundreds of thousands of followers. The IFB movement grew out of the Doctrine of Separation conceptualized by Bob Jones (founder of Bob Jones University) in the 1950s, teaching believers to separate from other faiths, including other Christian sects, to avoid being secularized and compromising the true faith. The IFB approach can spawn paranoia in its adherents and give rise to fear. Children in the IFB are mostly homeschooled so that they only learn what the church wants them to know. Followers present a perfect image of godly living while terrible stories of abuse lurk under the surface. In this compelling autobiography, Zichterman candidly describes the physical and emotional abuse she experienced at the hands of her father, noting that hers was not an isolated case. While her resentment with the church from which she has now escaped is clear in the writing style, her courage in speaking out against this network of believers and offering clear documentation is laudable. VERDICT Zichterman's compelling and moving book will appeal to readers of memoir and those interested in fringe U.S. religious sects existing today.--Keri Youngstrand, Dickinson State Univ. Lib., ND

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2013
      Zichterman provides an insider's account of growing up under the influence of America's network of Independent Fundamentalist Baptist (IFB) churches and educational institutions. Her personal experiences and those of her siblings appear to substantiate cultlike practices that isolate and degrade women and impose unholy terror on young men. Still, much of the personal horror relates to Zichterman's mentally unstable father, who is prone to violent rages. The gut-wrenching accounts of physical and sexual abuse in the name of God and the IFB are disturbing, yet with or without this brand of Christianity, her father might have operated as a severely disturbed person. Also, Zichterman somehow pairs off with a kindhearted husband, who she describes as representing the highest IFB ideals (they were eventually forced to leave the church). Even so, the author's allegations that the IFB provides a soil rich for abuse and domination are believable. This is one edgy, thought-provoking odysseyfrom oppressed child to ultimate whistle-blower.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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