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each unique journey

7/28/2016

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I've finished reading Carol Kent's new book: Waiting Together: Hope and Healing for Families of Prisoners. She is an eloquent voice speaking truth into the challenges of have a loved one run off the rails and into prison. But hers is far from the only or even a common experience and that struck me as I read her practical and valid observations.

Their only child son received a life sentence and they were able and willing to completely arrange their business and personal and family lives to accommodate their commitment to visit Jason regularly, now more than a decade into his sentence and with only slender hope of ever having him sit at their dining room table again.

​Here is what is more common: few "lifers" or folks with very long sentences have strong family support. Many things contribute to this: fractured families either before the criminal behavior or following with the financial and emotional devastation related to criminal acts, poverty, poor health, embarrassment, the reasonable claims of other immediate family members to have time with the free-world family member whose energies are consumed in supporting the incarcerated person, repudiation of the convicted person as well as their criminal acts. For long incarcerated folks who eventually are paroled or pardoned, recidivism is very low, possibly because they are often ill, old and broken. Finding work is more than difficult and often already financially strapped families find they are providing basic living support for folks they don't really know and have not had an opportunity to develop a relationship with.

Long-term incarceration represents a small percentage of incarcerated folks.

By far and away the majority of incarcerated folks will be released to return to their communities, families and lives. They will return with new challenges to their employability and strained family ties. Some states do not allow them any benefits like food stamps which makes things difficult in the house where they are trying to rebuild a life with their families while finding legal work with a living wage. Training programs in jails and prisons that can help mitigate some of this with job-skills and literacy programs are thin, underfunded and longing for mentors and tutors to stretch very limited resources. Mental health counselling and treatment for addictive behaviors are somewhere between underfunded/staffed and non-existent. 

For most folks, there is a painful watching of a loved one as many challenges over months and years lead to the long dreaded but unsurprising call that the matter has entered the legal system phase. They are often exhausted, frightened, embarrassed and financially damaged. They don't await the outcome of a single trail, but rather the outcomes of a series of hearings, evaluations, changes in charges, changes in representation, changes in prosecutors, changes in laws, searches for treatment programs and that can all run into decades of waiting and praying and wondering.

There is another class of grieving loved ones, those who are convicted that their loved one was either wrongfully convicted or that their loved one received a much harsher sentence than others convicted of similar or even more dangerous crimes. This has its own unique sorrows and challenges.

And then for so many the day long yearned for arrives: the loved one returns to sit at the table and be hugged and hug back, with hopes and expectations (both reasonable and unreasonable) all around. And the uneasy watch begins: for the formerly incarcerated who struggles to reclaim life in the free world and, if they have not found peace and hope, being weighed down with guilt and shame; and for anxious loved ones who worry and wonder if better days are to come, or if the entire thing will start all over again.  It is hardly surprising that the mix can be toxic to the best of intentions for all involved.

So I say a deep and abiding thanks to Carol Kent for her candor and the light she shines into a world with too much darkness and too little love and hope. And I ask that we all be respectful of the wide range of sorrows, challenges, and responses that encompass the universally sad and destructive experience of loving someone (or wanting to love someone) or being related to someone who has become involved in criminal behavior and/or is living or has lived away from the free world.
 
Let us all heed Hebrews 13:3:Remember prisoners as if you were in prison with them, and people who are mistreated as if you were in their place. (CEB) Let us pray for the incarcerated and their families with the same tenderness as we would practice praying for our own child or niece or nephew or parent or spouse or sibling if they were broken and ashamed, whether their sin was publicly announced or only eating at their life and soul in the normal way.
 
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where ability intersects longing

7/13/2016

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Is there a moment in time that you found so sweet, so delightful that you want to hold your breath each time you think of it?

I was visiting my son, a first time father of a delightful little girl and we had gone to a park to let Mom study. My granddaughter was not a good size for the "baby swing" anymore, but far too small to be on a big swing. I watched my son sit down under a big swing and help her grab the chains and, holding her with both hands around her waist, gently swung her back and forth. He was so gentle, so attentive, so kind to meet her were her abilities intersected with her longing, as he sat there on the damp ground with the bugs. She was filled with delight.

It was a tender picture for a mother to see, but I think it clings to my heart these years later because it was a lovely parable of how I have come to understand God's love for me.

God meets me where I am. God seeks to delight me and encourage me to be all I am ready to be today while encouraging me to continue growing so I will be ready for the days to come. God loves me exactly as I am, nurturing my deep trust as God bears with me, has my best interest at heart, loves me even when I'm fussy or resistant to learning skills that I will need, and God never breaks God's covenant of love and redemption.

As human parents we can never be perfect parents, but our longing to love and tend and guide matches the universal human desire of each child to be loved and protected and to experience home. We are not all parents, but we are all the child longing to be accepted, valued, loved and guided and in so being we get a glimpse of God's plan for us and God's amazing love for us.

It takes my breath away.
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Praying

7/11/2016

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The last few days are counting down to our annual retreat for women affected by the incarceration of a loved one and/or family member and we are asking folks to pray the blessings are poured out and received during these 48 hours away from the daily challenges these ladies face.

If I had any doubts about the power of prayer, this prison ministry thing has let me see many many examples of the power of prayer.

Firstly, it changes me. Like all of us, dealing with the incarcerated leads to lots of temptations to consider ourselves superior to "common criminals," but prayer is a powerful antidote. When I ask God to let me see God in each of them, God answers powerfully. God reminds me that I have done plenty of damage to myself and others by my own willfulness and ego, yet God accepts me just as I am and I have no right to act like judge and jury to others who are also God's beloved children.

Next, prayer poured out comfort and helps those prayed for to open their hearts to healing and new beginnings. This is the promise of Christ and it is working in prisons across the country.

Then there is the whole praying for each other thing which is one of God's most amazing gifts. If you want to banish conflict in broken churches and families get folks to pray for each other. (See item one: prayer changes the prayer and makes them more open to the Will of God and less worried about their own agendas.)

In prison ministry the simple fact is that anything that can go wrong will -- at least twice. People volunteer with hearts to serve and situations change and those people can't serve on a given date or make enough of the team building meetings. The team is asked to pray about who they might recruit, then someone new volunteers and along the way you learn why that exact person needed to be involved, maybe because of an ability they bring or a perspective they share or they have a tender and humble willingness to share their own story. Sometimes a guest has a car break down or a baby sitter drop out at the last minute and praying again either brings forward someone to help or comforts the person who must wait until the next time, only have them call the next week asking for prayers because something happened during the time of the retreat and they really needed to be home that weekend.

People that doubt they have the needed skills step out in faith because their prayerful consideration has stirred their hearts to help and they turn out to be the most amazingly well-suited person who attract new and effective volunteers, bringing joyous new ideas and enthusiasm and examples of service to our program.

In Florida prisons often look more like a concertina wire enclosed junior college campus with several one-story buildings that inmates move between throughout the day. However during storms and heavy rain activities are reduced to a minimum and things like KAIROS weekends get shunted to the "not important" column quickly. But in the midst of a storm breaks in the rain that allow events to continue have been noted. I've been told by correctional officers that they are happy when KAIROS is on the calendar because in the weeks leading up to the event (as prayer partners and team members begin praying for the guests, inmates, COs and staff of the facility) a calm seems to seep through the facilities.

Personally, my deeply held belief and experiences of prayer in prison ministry give me a passion for prayer that is still growing with each event. 

​Please pray for us 14-16 October 2017 as KAIROS Outside of Western Missouri serves Weekend #10.
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preocupo nunca más

7/6/2016

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I'm working to bush up and expand my tiny capacity to speak and understand Spanish and ran across an interesting thing.

Since many words in English are derived from Latin as is Spanish, and since in a world where English and Spanish are the two most commonly spoken languages (in various forms) many words are sufficiently similar to make a link between words: no, animal. menu, idea, solo, total and television all may have some pronunciation changes but they are just exactly what they look like they are. (There are false cognates also, so be careful!)

But today I was sorting words that were candidates to add to my vocabulary list and I ran across the Spanish verb for "to worry" which is preocuparse and I laughed out loud. What an utterly perfect word to describe "worrying" -- preoccupied! 

​Surely worry is nothing like considering, or evaluating or researching options or planning or making changes in actions or attitudes. Worry is being preoccupied with fretting and fussing and ignoring the blessings of the day in favor of being dissatisfied. It is discounting God as being true in God's revealing God's own nature to us: God cares about us, knows (and executes) what is best for us in the larger picture, loves us beyond measure and sends the Spirit of God to guide us, teach us and lead us to love more deeply.

So I'll forgo worrying in favor of learning, praying, trusting, growing, building and loving. I choose to be occupied in doing rather than preoccupied with worry that steals time better spent in trusting and engaging and doing and the relationship with God that gets all that in the effective order.


So the next time I am tempted to worry, I will say to God "Help me to be preoccupied by worry never more: Preocupo nunca más."
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i'm passionately in love

7/2/2016

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What is God all about? God is about relationship, a mutual relationship that respects the majesty and authority of God, but which demands not cruel tribute, nor obsequious obedience nor the sacrifice of human life because such things offer no benefit  to God. God's ego does not have to be fed by God's creations. God has no need to be venerated. God is unaffected by the indifference of God's creation except as God longs for a better life for them.

In the early days of creation our relationship with God included some pretty harsh lessons as God wiped out people who were so self-will run riot that eating their own children and demanding sexual submission from total strangers were the rule in some early peoples. And there was no internet or even lending libraries where people could go to intellectually study God. So it was a millennia long forming and informing process to teach mankind the nature of God. But the rules were always consistent then and now: do not harm one another except to stop harm to God's beloved children -- that is all of us, by the way.

What is God all about? God is all about love and truth and mutual relationship where we respond to God's love, not because we are afraid of God, but because we are in love with God. C. S. Lewis postulated in his The Screwtape Letters that there is nothing essentially evil on the Earth which God created, but rather all evil is a perversion of good things intended for our blessing. Dynamite can stabilize land suffering sinkholes or can destroy a building full of children. Love can kindly bind families or be twisted into serial killers too horrid for even writers of TV serial killer dramas to convey. Hard work can build good companies that fill needs and provide employment or it can transform into ego-driven excuses for ignoring ethical constructs all the way to human trafficking. Try as I may I have found nothing that has only evil capacity, nor have I found any good thing that cannot be twisted by obsession into unspeakable horrors. This is the basis of Free Will.

Oh, instead of creating in God's own image a new people, God could certainly have created a race of androids whose behavior was programmed and by definition lacking the capacity to truly interact, grow or struggle as we do in learning to deeply show kindness and demonstrate the value of our own intrinsic worth -- but what would be the point?

No, in a kind of cosmic truth there is always action and reaction, no choice without the option of error. 

So we stand each day, each moment really, choosing (or not) to turn our face to a God who loves us utterly, longs to heal us and teach us to be more; who stands ready to be strongest where we are weak. It is a forever journey I can embrace because God is consistent, trustworthy and persistent is seeking my highest good and never ever sees God's Creation (you and I and all of us) as junk.

I am passionately in love with the outwardly focused God whose very essence is love and truth and hope and peace.
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    Jann's son was incarcerated.  She longed for a community where she could connect with others dealing with similar issues.

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