Memoir of a Misfit: Finding My Place in the Family of God
 

Memoir of a Misfit: Finding My Place in the Family of God

by Marcia Ford, Marcia Ford

"In a sense, of course, all believers are strangers in a strange land— some, as they say, are just stranger than others. That would be my friends and me." Like Marcia Ford, most of us have felt, at one time or another, as if we are on a different wavelength from the rest of the world. Try as we might, we don't fit in— not in society and certainly not in the church. Despite our best efforts at... (read more)

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Overview: Amazon Reviews

A Funny, Fresh and Frank Memoir
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2004-03-29
Marcia Ford claims she's always felt like a "misfit," and for most of her life, she says people have looked at her "funny." Initially, she thought it was because her family was so weird, walking down the sidewalk in a straight line, as they often did. But at the age of ten, when she was away at camp and her family moved without telling her, Ford found herself standing in a room full of strangers who were all looking at her funny. And lo and behold, she wasn't with her family. Unfortunately for Ford, the funny looks continued long after she was "born again" and desperately tries to fit in with other Christians.

In MEMOIR OF A MISFIT, Ford writes what it's like to be a square peg trying to fit into a round hole --- something most of us can relate to, especially within church walls. But what sets Ford apart from the rest of us "misfits" in Christendom is her willingness to stop embracing the impossible ideal of what a Christian is supposed to look, act and feel like and just be...herself. On the way there, though, she runs around in circles, trying everything --- promiscuity, marriage, drugs, alcohol, suicidal thoughts, fundamentalist Christianity, finally chucking all religion --- before eventually coming around, thanks to a couple of Christians showing her unconditional love, to a new faith and realistic understanding of God.

At certain points in her narrative, I felt Ford was sharing too much personal information and it made me a tad uncomfortable. But it works because she writes her tragic tale with so much honesty and tongue-in-cheek wit that it keeps you from getting bogged down in just how sad her story really is. Maybe it's because there's so much to read between the lines.

I thought about Ford's words and my status as a "misfit" as I sat in church last weekend, surrounded by people who all seem to have their act together. Everyone was smiling. Everyone looked so perfect. During the sermon, I actually turned every which way, scanning the crowd to see if I could find someone, anyone not fitting that mold Ford desperately had to break free from before she was able to have an honest and growing relationship with God. I was a hair's breath away from asking the person sitting behind me if she ever questioned anything or if she had any problems. I admit, Ford's book made me wonder how much of myself I had checked at the sanctuary door without noticing before that moment.

Ford's bottom line? Breaking free. And that bottom line serves several purposes: First, to admonish fellow Christians to allow others to discover God loves them, quirks and all. To deny that basic tenet of the Christian faith narrows the Gospel message to one of "fitting in." Her life story echoes Jesus' words in Matthew 9 as he scolds the Pharisees, "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick...I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners."

Ford's should serve as encouragement to other misfits in the church --- and all of us fit into that category, really --- to stop contorting ourselves into acceptance. Right now. Her journey of faith hasn't exactly been a straight line, but thankfully, she's forged a path for all of us who love God but have been turned off by the church. She wants us to come back and try again. This time, not looking around, comparing ourselves to others but rather looking up and getting to know God --- the God of misfits.

--- Reviewed by Diana Keough

Long overdue
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2003-11-29
Every once in a while a book sticks in the back of your mind. Among the few books that has done that for me is Memoir of a Misfit. It isn't so much the style of writting or the subject matter though I suppose that both touch a place of my life my "too cool for school" attitude was created to overcome. In a word, it's honesty. Not simply honesty to describe events and choices without tayloring or coloring but honesty to admit the silly, colorfull, comical, and often tragic choices misfits tend to make. Every misfit wants a family. Every misifit wants to understand the science of belonging. And every misfit wonders late at night when lonelyness is at it's worst what kind of horrible bargaining could put an end to the fear and isolation the a part of daily life.
Memoir may not be the story of your life but, if you have felt this way at all, it may tell the story of your thoughts and feelings. Don't miss out on it.
touched...
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2003-09-28
I really don't know whatto say,but I suppose everyone says that. I must admit that so many things you've said made me laugh because I knew that you were me with every word. Finding myself alone in a corner asking... no, screaming at God; demanding answers to why he has left me. I find myself answering "of course not" to the question "how are you" all the time and staring in the mirror wondering why people find me so interesting to stare at. What's wrong with me? You managed to bring into words the feelings I could not. Thank you. And thank you for Liz.
-Tieshia
Making life easier to live...
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2003-09-21
It was an incredible experience to read into the world of Marcia Ford. I found myself unable to put it down, thinking, what could possible happen to her next!? She has been through so many hardships, most that she can look at now with a humor that makes life seem easier to live. I myself am still searching for that home that is so frequently spoken of in this book. I learned so much from her life, and thanked God that I didn't have to learn it the hard way like she did. Her strength encouraged me a great deal. The day I finished I let a friend borrow it. It is the kind of story that HAS to be shared because different people will gain differently from it.
Honest Search
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2003-08-01
Marcia Ford is an authentic child of the '60s, affected by the swirling tempests of Vietnam, flowering drug use and societal disintegration. Yet, she found her way out of this morass of rebellion -- only to discover manipulative forces at work in the church as well. She writes about all this with a verve and an eye for detail that is both humorous and insightful. I think what I liked best about this book was that, in the end, the author maintained her faith instead of the all-too-common: "Life stinks, everyone's a hypocrite and we're all oppressed" infantile musings that pass for philosophy. This book is a page turning delight.
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