Inmates and kids
A little over two years ago I spent a memorable night in lockdown at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, the largest maximum-security prison in the United States. In the cell to my right was Sam Brownback, the senator from Kansas who was there to kick off what became a short-lived run for the presidency. In the cell to my left was a serial rapist incarcerated for life. Just down the row was a Medellin drug cartel assassin. As in all real estate, the key was location, location, location.
But what really made the prison special was what Christ is doing in there. Under the leadership of Warden Burl Cain, the prison has been open to many ministries, and many prisoners have apparently been born again. It was joyful to get around the prison and hear them. Out of that spiritual change have arisen many programs, including the annual Returning Hearts Celebration. Last year 730 children of inmates came to the prison for a day of games, food, crafts, and pony rides that promote bonding and reconciliation between kids and dads, and within families. Over 1,000 children are scheduled for this year’s event on March 28, a joint effort between the penitentiary and Chicago-based Awana, an international youth and children’s ministry.
Such a program affects families and also makes waves outside them, because children of an incarcerated parent are seven times more likely than their peers to commit crimes and land in prison themselves. It’s vital to change that intergenerational pattern by showing kids what not to do but also by showing that even in prison people can change through Christ. Furthermore, the radical egalitarianism evident in Chapter 3 of Romans shows that all of us sin and are criminals in God’s eyes, apart from Christ, so children of prisoners should not feel that others are good and that they are marked as particularly bad by heredity. Awana now plans to expand the program to seven more prisons, including San Quentin in California.














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back to top5 Comments to “Inmates and kids”
California’s Pelican Bay State Prison needs it too!
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At my local jail, most users began taking drugs at about seventh grade. They retain that maturity level (which has already been retarded by schooling and popular education). I wonder whether the connection is a disposition or a determination.
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The bulk of our inmate population is young men who never knew their own fathers. By all means, lets let these men see their children as often as can be arranged. But could we not also track down the inmate’s dads and have them go visit their sons as well? It might not be pretty in some cases but I think letting the inmate look the failed/absentee dad straight in the eye to say “I forgive you and I love you” just might lead to healing and restoration. Perhaps the Christian inmate could forgive the failed father.
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My cousin is a modern day “woman at the well”. I dont know how many husbands she’s had to date but she was with them ea long enough to pop out a kid or two. One of the Daddies was a nice enough young man who as I’ve later learned had frequent high school football head injuries. Those combined with untreated/unrecognized bipolar disorder made him quite volatile.
I recently began writing her son “Bud” who sits now in a privately administered, faith-based prison in Henderson Tx. His letters could be an elaborate ruse or else he could be a truly transformed man. He speaks fondly of the child he sired by a girl-friend whom he hopes to one day marry. Please pray for Bud. His paternal grandfather is a minister, yet his mother and her parents did all they could to keep him cut off from the pastor and his other relatives.
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Awesome story. Praise the Lord for what He is doing through Christians who are making a difference.
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