This is the third in a
three-part series on mass incarceration and Christianity’s role in bringing transformation
to those affected by it. Previously, we examined the criminal justice and prison policies in the United
States that lead to high rates of incarceration, particularly among black and
brown men. In addition, we’ve looked at some of the work being done within prison walls to
transform lives and communities with the Light of Christ. Here, we will explore
life after prison and some creative ways for churches to take the next steps in
getting involved with their own communities.
After serving a prison sentence and being released back into
the world, one is faced with a wide array of seemingly insurmountable challenges
to overcome. Discrimination against the recently released is rampant, and is on
top of the racial and economic discrimination one may have faced even before
entering prison. Those released from prison often have a hard time finding a
job that will pay them a living wage, and they no longer qualify for student
loans to help improve their employability. They are often denied safe,
affordable housing, and are not allowed live in public housing (even if living
with family member that do qualify). They often lose access to food stamps and
other government support benefits, just at the very moment they need it most.
Friends and family may have turned away, and it can feel like there is nowhere
left to go. Could this be where God’s Church is needed most?
Over 75% of prisoners released are re-arrested
within five years. The first month after release is critical, but recently
released citizens often face the same challenges that led them to prison in the
first place. As
discussed previously, ministries like the Horizon
Prison Initiative work closely with men on the inside before they are
released, but they also acknowledge that “after paying their debt to society,
formerly incarcerated individuals go home. Home to the same circumstances that
fostered the environment that led them to prison.”
Horizon’s Chief Operating Officer Jeff Hunsaker suggests
that “not everybody’s called to do this work, but on the other hand churches are called to be part of healing
community. Churches get real comfortable and don’t see that bigger world we
live in.” He laments an attitude that says “I don’t care what happens to them,
just keep them away from me,” one that only sees the incarcerated as those
deserving of punishment. But Hunsaker notes that “90% come back to your
community. What kind of person do you want them to be when they return?”
A Role for the
Local Church
The Church can play a critical role in receiving recently released
citizens back into their communities. Indeed, we are called to “let mutual love
continue. Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that
some have entertained angels without knowing it. Remember those who are in
prison, as though you were in prison with them; those who are being tortured,
as though you yourselves were being tortured" (Hebrews 13:1-3).
This is the verse that inspired the West Ohio Conference (WOC) of the United
Methodist Church to think intentionally about how its communities in the region
could do a better job of receiving returning citizens into their churches.
“Transformation is not going to happen if we entrust it to a purely punitive
system,” says Deaconess Sue Wolf, “It’s about God’s love and God’s Kingdom. If
we can prove it’s true there, then it’s true for all of us, anywhere.”
“A lot of local churches and seminaries are involved in
their own individual prison ministries,” acknowledges Harris Tay, Director of
Diversity Initiatives at the WOC. But he wondered what a unified effort across
the region would look like. Noting the Church’s commitment to hospitality, he
says “reentry work should be part of the fabric of what we do.”
So the WOC set out to create the ‘All In Community’ Re-entry
Program to address multiple facets of prison ministry within the context of
church communities. This program was formed to be intentionally asset-based,
acknowledging that the prisoners themselves are assets to the ministry. Thus,
the content and curriculums began to form with guidance and partnership of
those currently incarcerated, relying on their suggestions rather than on the
varying perceptions of those on the outside.
Ultimately, the WOC plans to connect twenty-five churches
with re-entering citizens to form relationships and support well before those
individuals are released. The hope is to have churches ready to receive
wherever prisoners are going. They will create a safety net, a soft landing,
for those being released.
The program is designed to be about mutual relationships,
understanding that everyone can learn and grow no matter what role they play.
While inside prison, participants are required to complete cultural competency
training. Thus, participating churches are also required to undergo the same. Kenya
Cummings, an intern for Diversity Initiatives at the WOC, says that the
churches will need to “lean into some knowledge that the released men will be
imparting.”
Indeed, the goal of the partnership is to “transform
prisoners, transform prisons, and transform communities.” Thus, volunteers and
congregations have much to learn from the prisoners themselves, who have
dedicated years to prayer and spiritual discipleship with the time they had on
the inside. It’s not about a one-way relationship, but rather a partnership
that brings about mutual edification and spiritual growth. Cummings attests
that “the men know the Power of God and how it can be at work. They know about
transformation. They know if they can be transformed, so can the Church.”
The ‘All
In Community’ Re-entry Program will also serve as a hub for community
organizing, healing the neighborhoods that are most affected by mass
incarceration. They will employ five
Urban Encouragers to act as first-contacts for released citizens and will also
serve guides for congregations that are learning how to be good partners. They will organize within the local community
to help restore neighborhoods and to identify assets within the community that
can support those being released.
Cummings suggests that churches interested in engaging in
re-entry work become “incredibly aware of where their church congregation is
located and what they have to offer.” Every church and every community setting
is different, with unique needs and assets. “Reentry can never be a carbon copy
ministry,” she attests, “you have to look at your church’s assets and passions,
and let the ministry emerge from what is currently present.” If volunteers are
artists, start an art prison ministry, if they are engaged in legislative
issues, she suggests focusing around that. Customizing a church’s prison
ministry is key to both its effectiveness and its persistence.
Cummings also suggests churches investigate what programs
and resources are already in their local neighborhoods and to them come
alongside the ongoing work of the community. “We want to build, not duplicate,”
she says.
Overcoming
Apprehension with Art
Asked if local congregations have been receptive to the
program, Tay observes that “most churches don’t know where they really sit on
it,” but that the WOC is willing to invest in the training and development to help
with the adjustment. “We’re actually going to walk with you and do the trust
building and relationship building to help make it happen.” He notes that many
churches affirm a commitment to love and hospitality, but “any church can say
it. We have the opportunity to expand and enhance that pledge.”
Along these lines, the WOC has created a collaborative for
churches engaged in prison ministry to share resources, training, and
encouragement with one another. Cummings understands that work like this is
rewarding, but challenging: “Folks can get tired in doing the work. They enjoy
it, but it becomes tiresome.” Churches starting on the journey may also have
concerns. Cummings says they may feel “anxious about what it really looks
like…but after talking through fears there’s greater calm.”
To address these needs, Cummings is heading up opportunities
for participating churches and volunteers to become rejuvenated. “Art is
incredibly healing,” she notes, and she plans to use art to engage with those
participating in the ministry collaborative. With a mix of poetry, spoken word,
visual art, and storytelling, Cummings hopes to create an environment “for
collaborating, not just another burden.” She observes that “as we tell stories
and share resources, we experience renewal.”
Tay affirms that “A static meeting may not be the best way
to connect with the soul….Performance has always been the voice of movements,”
and that churches should be considering how to merge creativity with action.
“How do we build trust through the arts?” he asks. He goes on to praise
Cummings’s collaborative as “a huge opportunity for those who want to do church
differently.”
Cummings anticipates a wide variety of ministries will be
able to come together to share the stories and ideas. There will be teams
throughout the west Ohio region. “Each team might look really different and I’m
excited about that,” says Cummings.
Taking up the
Challenge
Hunsaker has a challenge for churches: “What are you here to
be and to do?” He says he’s brought Horizon graduates to some churches where
they’ve felt uncomfortable and unwelcome. He worries that the decline in
attendance that some churches have experienced is because they have “lost touch
with why they exist and what their purpose is.” It may be that they profess a
value of love and reconciliation, “but how many are actively involved in it?”
Jimmy Cheadle, a Horizon graduate and now an Urban
Encourager and Reentry Coordinator with UM
Church for All People in Columbus, OH, say the best thing churches can do
for the recently released is just welcome them in and create a loving, healthy
environment for them.“ But,” he says, “sometimes churches aren’t so good at
that.” He has had experiences where he didn’t feel welcome, “You pick up on
that, when they keep you at arm’s length. They were nice to us, but they were
glad we weren’t coming back next week.”
But Cummings observes that those being released show
remarkable bravery and surprising willingness to engage beyond any mutual fear.
True, there may be feelings of anxiety, but it is often outweighed by the
understanding of what reentry without strong community looks like. They may fear
rejection, but Cummings notes that rejection is a reality for them anyway. Part
of what the Horizon program offers to the men is the tools and spiritual
strength to deal with that rejection on the outside.
Jimmy Cheadle |
There are a lot of reasons that a warm, loving welcome
doesn’t always happen. Cheadle senses some churches respond out of fear rather
than faith. They react by saying things like “What do you mean you’re bringing
a criminal here? We have enough of that already.” He says building loving
relationships is sometimes three steps forward, two steps back, “and the two
steps back takes the wind out of everyone’s sails.” But he urges, “it’s really
not so much about what you want to do. It’s about what you’re supposed to do.”
Hunsaker encourages churches to become involved on a
relational level, to volunteer and to interact one-on-one with those on the
inside. He knows that what your heart will encounter is beyond description and
that once you’ve experience it, you’ll be hooked.
First Steps
Jesus himself was put on trial, found guilty, imprisoned, placed
on death row, and ultimately subject to capital punishment by the state. If we are to identify
with Christ, we are to identify with those who find themselves in similar
situations today.
Local churches can play a vital role in God’s plan for
transformation. Encourage your congregation to engage in authentic intentional
prayer for the incarcerated and for local prisons. Pray for those about to be
released and those who have recently reentered their communities. Pray for the renewal
of both the imprisoned as well as of the systems and structures that brought
them there.
Include these prayers in the regular liturgy of your church,
perhaps along with other ‘prayers of the people,’ if that is a tradition in
your setting. Do not let the incarcerated people of our society be
forgotten or left out of our daily prayers, but rather be diligent in lifting
them up to God. In doing so, watch as our prisons and neighborhoods are blessed
with God’s redemptive.
As prayers continue to be lifted, consider beginning a small
group or bible study around the issues of mass incarceration. In partnership
with willing correctional institutions, begin to send birthday and Christmas
cards to specific inmates. Have all the members of your church sign these cards
as part of their Sunday morning routines. Begin to ponder what it would look
like for your church to become a sanctuary for recently released citizens.
It is important to engage your congregation early and often
around these issues to help increase awareness and compassion. Similarly, it is
important that the entire worshiping community remain mindful and prayerful
together, not simply leaving it as a specialized interest of a few. Lift up the
prisons and those ministering with them as a community, knowing that you are
responding to God’s call to remember the incarcerated.
Be prepared for some challenges. The bureaucracy associated
with prison ministry can be daunting. So too can be the cultural differences we
may experience in prison ministry work. We learn many things about ourselves
and our own culture’s assumptions and values when we encounter those different
from ourselves. And it is in so doing that we see the face of God.
Isaiah 61:1 says "the Spirit of the Lord God is upon
Me, Because the Lord has anointed Me to preach good tidings to the poor; He has
sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the
opening of the prison to those who are bound." What does it mean to take
these words seriously? What witness would we bear by living out God’s challenge
to walk beside the imprisoned? Imagine how such a commitment might radically
transform not only the individuals we help, but also profoundly alter our own
lives, our local churches, and indeed entire communities for the glory of
Christ.
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