Coming out of Fundamentalist Christianity is an autobiographical account of one
woman's journey from growing up in a rigid, troubled fundamentalist Christian
home where she discovered at an early age her attraction to women, and how she
survived and fled the oppression of her family of origin, later coming to terms with
and joyously embracing her sexual orientation and a life-affirming spiritual path. It
is an account of foolish errors and wise choices on the way to embracing all parts
of herself and her total humanity-the people, places, and experiences that
shaped those choices and helped form and inform who she is today. Her current
deep engagement in social justice activism is informed by and echoes her
daunting journey and reverberates through the last section of her book as she
takes to task not only Christian fundamentalism, but what she considers the naïve
and irrelevant politics of the gay and lesbian community. Reflecting on her personal
experience she states, "As a young-adult fundamentalist Christian, agonizing over
my sexual orientation, I might have found liberation, comfort, and affirmation had I
had access to a book that blessed it and illumined its compatibility with my
unquenchable heart's desire for the sacred."
An honest account of a woman accepting herself as a lesbian despite a
fundamentalist Christian upbringing. As a gay couple we feel less isolated because
Carolyn isn't afraid to criticize the LGBT community for their lack of interest in
compelling issues beyond same-sex marriage and AIDS.
-Philip Botwinick & Tom Nielsen, Organizers of the 2006 Local Solutions
To The Energy Dilemma Conference, NYC,Woodhaven, New York
Dr. Carolyn Baker's riveting personal experience and keen intellect combine to
illuminate the untruths, oppressions and mean-spirited culture that pervades our
society, politics, and religious institutions.
"Coming out" stories are legion, and each and every one is to be celebrated. Baker
goes even further. It is not only a journey of passionate self-discovery of one's
being and values. It is also an analysis of those cultural and religious systems
which on a daily basis, choose to oppress or to honor the diversity and inherent
value of each human being. Read, sense, know, and act.
-The Rev. Dr. Susan Beehler, El Paso, Texas, Retired Ordained Clergy,
United Methodist Church