Karen Zerby

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Karen Elva Zerby (U.S. citizen; legally changed name to Katherine Rianna Smith in 1997, and uses the pseudonyms Maria David, Maria Berg, Maria Fontaine, Mama Maria and Queen Maria) is the current leader of The Family International, a new religious movement. She was born in Camden, New Jersey on July 31, 1946.

Zerby joined the group, then called Teens for Christ in 1969. After becoming a private secretary to David Berg, the group's founder, a sexual relationship started between the two. In a prophecy titled "A Prophecy of God on the Old Church and the New Church", Berg explained that he had been told by God to leave his first wife, Jane Miller, who represented the "old church", for Zerby who became his soi-disant second wife, who represented the "new church".

With David Berg's health declining in later years, Zerby began to take a leadership role within the group. Upon his death in October 1994 she assumed full leadership of the group and married her long-time partner Steven Douglas Kelly (legally changed name to Christopher Smith, and known to members as Peter Amsterdam or King Peter).

Senior Family leadership including Zerby has long attempted to keep their photographs and legal names from common circulation (see: Category:Secrecy). Although by now most of the group's members have seen photographs or video footage of Karen Zerby and Steven Kelly, their identities and location are still heavily guarded by those members working closest to them. Prior to being released here on xFamily.org, recent photographs of Karen Zerby, Steven Kelly and most World Services (WS) members were not readily available even to fulltime members of The Family. This long-standing policy was changed to a limited extent in March 2005, a few days after The Family's discovery of photos of Zerby some of their other top leaders on this website.

Photos

Karen Zerby, early 2000s
Karen Zerby & partner Steven Kelly
Early 2000s
Karen Zerby (left) & Barbara Ann Emerson sporting wigs, early 2000s


Karen Zerby & Steven Kelly
Karen Zerby
Karen Zerby, circa 1970s
Zerby on the right of David Berg in Tenerife, 1977


The Maria Monologues

Karen Zerby (known as Maria to group members) is the spiritual leader of The Family International. On a typical workday, she spends hours attending to Family-related affairs. Because of her position of spiritual authority within the group, her staff records her comments on a variety of issues.

The Maria Monologues contain excerpts from the transcripts of these tapes. They provide valuable insight into the inner workings of The Family as well as Zerby's character and leadership.

DISCLAIMER: The Maria Monologues are archived here for educational purposes. We have listed them here to document their existence and wording but do not condone the points of view or activities discussed.

  • The Maria Monologues #1
    “. . . having sex. It's pure to us, there's nothing wrong with it, so we let our kids be in on it, we let them get in on it if they want, we even play it with them because it's nice, it makes them feel good & they enjoy it.” —Maria. 1990-12-12
  • The Maria Monologues #2
    “I have a feeling that a lot of our Family are getting the idea, maybe only subtly or covertly, that what we have printed & what we have preached is wrong.” —Maria. 1990-12-10
  • The Maria Monologues #3
    Mene is trying to make Dad's sexiness look like the most evil thing in the world, when it's very normal & natural and common amongst many others in similar situations. . .” —Maria. 1994-01-11
  • The Maria Monologues #4
    “I guess it pretty much shocks us to see that we talked so openly about a child of under 11 having had regular dates with the men in the Home where she had been.” —Maria talking about Merry Berg (Mene). 1992-08-01
  • The Maria Monologues #5
    “If the Law of Love is right, then it applies clear across the board no matter what age it is.” —Maria. 1992-08-15

Documents

Family publications for children

Multimedia

References

  • House, H. Wayne (2000). Charts of Cults, Sects, and Religious Movements. Zondervan Publishing Company. ISBN 0310385512.
  • Lewis, James R. (2004). Controversial New Religions Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195156838.