

I would - I've been with all of them at this point and would not take anything for the experience. I have been with what I would have considered back in the day the Froot Loops. I got to serve in - all the way from the Frozen Chosen. MOORE: So these things are delightful to me. And it was like, I'm really going to need you to wake up, really going to. I had her around the waist, and I literally swung her back up. MOORE: Literally, she dropped in my arms - I have never had this happen in my life - dropped in my arms.

And you kind of whispered to her, please get up, 'cause they. RASCOE: You know - and, I mean, there was a funny thing where you said in one of your conferences that one of the women - you laid hands on her and she fell out. And I think it was - I really have had trouble fitting because I have a very Pentecostal personality, and I was more demonstrative and more enthusiastic than my world was accustomed to. You're on to the reason why I didn't just become controversial a couple of years ago. MOORE: I got to tell you, Ayesha, 'cause you are on to something. They were seeming a little more Pentecostal, but you a Baptist. RASCOE: I always found it amusing because you were kind of having these experiences that - a little more mystical. RASCOE: I have to say that reading this - I grew up Pentecostal. RASCOE: In the book, you talk about growing up as a Baptist in Arkansas. Now, in her new memoir, "All My Knotted-Up Life," she tells a story of splitting with the church that raised her and about surviving abuse as a child. A firestorm ensued that would end with her leaving the Southern Baptist denomination in 2021. Moore spoke out against him and didn't back down. Then came Donald Trump and the infamous "Access Hollywood" tape. I'm talking about selling out arenas all over the country with her women-focused Bible study events. RASCOE: So, yes, I'm so glad to have you here.īeth Moore was the epitome of a modern Southern Baptist and a model for Southern Baptist women - and not just Southern Baptist women, evangelical women. MOORE: Oh, you know, I knew we would connect as women, but I didn't know if we would have faith in common. I found it in Walmart, started reading it. I have to say, I've read "Portraits Of Devotion."īETH MOORE: See, I didn't know if you'd have any familiarity, really.
