Teaser Trailer
Introducing the full-cast audio drama based on Addie Zierman’s memoir about growing up “on fire” for God, and what happened when that fire went out.
Full Trailer
Addie Zierman was the 1990s evangelical poster child who dreamed of doing big things for the Lord. But that all changed when her fire for God burned out. This full-cast dramatic audio adaptation of Addie’s memoir launches Sept. 24.
Part One: Obsession
Addie Zierman grew up “on fire” for God in the ‘90s, not understanding the dark side of this us-versus-them evangelical Christian faith she’d inherited.
Bonus: 'Shiny Happy People,' See You At The Pole, and When Someone Else Tells Your Story
Addie Zierman, Lizzie Goldsmith, and Aria Sivick talk about toxic relationships, religious trauma, the legacy of the book “When We Were on Fire,” and other themes and key moments from the first episode of the audio drama.
Part Two: Disillusion
Being “on fire for God” all the time is starting to take its toll on Addie Zierman as she starts college in Minnesota, meets a boy named Andrew, and heads overseas for a year that will change her life.
Bonus: It Is Not Well With My Soul, Deconstruction Origin Stories, and Life Imitating Art
Lizzie Goldsmith’s faith deconstruction experience started on the floor of a church in England. For Addie Zierman, it came from a deep feeling of never belonging.
Part Three: Rebellion
Addie Zierman is depressed, angry at the Church People, and feeling lost in her life, her faith, and her marriage. What will it take for her to find her way back? Is going back even possible?
Bonus: The Importance of Swear Words, Vulnerability, and Learning To Say What You Need
In a conversation with Lizzie Goldsmith and Aria Sivick, Addie Zierman revisits her hardest year, talking about dark nights of the soul, wanting to be loved, and the role of swearing in this story.
Part Four: Redemption
On the other side of her darkest year, Addie Zierman faces the demons from her past and decides what to hold on to and what to let go of as she moves into a new stage of her life.
Bonus: What We Believe Now, That Childbirth Scene, and Remembering Rachel Held Evans
Why Addie Zierman stopped writing publicly for several years. Plus, our complicated relationships with Christianity, and our favorite memories from the audio drama Listening Party.