Elizabeth Smart finished her testimony Wednesday for the third day in the trial of Brian David Mitchell, saying he was calculated in his behavior and was a religious hypocrite.

"Nine months of living with him and seeing him proclaim here he was God's servant and he'd been called to do God's work and everything he did to me and my family is something I know God would never tell someone to do," said Smart.

The defense completed Wednesday morning the cross-examination of Smart in about 15 minutes.

The prosecution still has about 20 witnesses to call to the stand before the defense begins questioning. The defense has 24 witnesses on its list, including Mitchell's estranged wife Wanda Barzee.

Mitchell, 57, is facing charges of kidnapping and unlawful transportation of a minor across state lines. He could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted. The trial is scheduled to last until Dec. 10.

Smart, then 14, was kidnapped from her bedroom back in 2002. She was found nine months later, in the company of the homeless street preacher and Barzee in Sandy.

Watch here for a timeline of events from Fox 13's Ben Winslow on day 3 of the trial from the courtroom:

UPDATE at 9:20 a.m.: Elizabeth Smart resumed her testimony for a third day Wednesday, recounting more details about her kidnapping in 2002 and ultimate rescue nine months later.

After Elizabeth Smart finishes her testimony, there are 19 more witnesses on direct examination -- and another 25 witnesses for rebuttal. However, the government is not expected to call all of them.

As he has done every day of the trial, Brian David Mitchell was singing hymns as he was brought into the courtroom. Today, he sang "Behold, the Great Redeemer Die" as the jury was brought into the room.

He sang over the judge as he admonished him to be quiet or be removed from the courtroom.

"Okay, we'll remove him," U.S. District Judge Dale Kimball said.

Mitchell was led to a cell where he could hear the proceedings. Sources have told Fox 13 that he paces and does exercises in his cell.

Federal prosecutor Felice Viti began by asking her about Mitchell's manifesto, "The Book of Immanuel David Isaiah."

"It was written before I was kidnapped," Smart said. "But I remember him writing one last section when I was with him."

"Did you read the book?" Viti asked.

"Yes," she replied.

"Did the defendant tell you details about the night he took you from your home?"

"It was spoken about," she said.