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SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE Prison Ministry Chaplain Dr. Brenda S. Jackson, Ph.D. BSJ Christian Seminars, Inc. Revised March 4, 2012

SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

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SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE. Prison Ministry Chaplain Dr. Brenda S. Jackson, Ph.D. BSJ Christian Seminars, Inc. Revised March 4, 2012. RECOGNIZING THE CALL by Brenda Simuel Jackson. 525 Clinton Street, the place of the Old County jail, division II - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Prison Ministry

Chaplain Dr. Brenda S. Jackson, Ph.D.

BSJ Christian Seminars, Inc.

Revised March 4, 2012

Page 2: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

RECOGNIZING THE CALL by Brenda

Simuel Jackson

525 Clinton Street, the place of the Old County jail, division II

The place where I recognized God’s call, and was told, it is true.

The basement where service was held that Sunday afternoon,

Was only bright because of the souls that filled the room.

Page 3: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Recognizing The Call

The Out of tune piano, no one could play, but we sang with gusto anyway.

My sermon, Jesus Is The Light, was short and sweet, one soul said yes, and I did weep.

A road called to travel, I continue on to this day,

Jesus is the light who can be seen night or day.

Page 4: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

WHAT IS A PRISON/JAIL?

Page 5: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

A PRISON-HOUSE

A Place of physical bondage A Physical location to confine one A building in which persons are

confined while waiting trial A place of confinement for punishment

Page 6: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

The Prison Inside the Prison-House

A society within a society filled with social outcast and social rejects. (Elijah Ingram, “The Shape of Ministry in Prison, 1990)

Page 7: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

The Prison inside the Prison-House

A condition of Feeling rejected, helpless, powerless, inferior.

Page 8: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

The Prison Inside the Prison-House

A condition of being morally, emotionally, and spiritually dead.

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Prison Houses in Michigan

Michigan Scene - 2000– 42 Correctional Facilities– Wayne County Jails– Federal Facilities in Michigan

Several Facilities have been closed.

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Matthew 25:25:36d

I was in prison and you came to visit me.

Page 11: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Who are The Prisoners?

U.S. Bureau of Justice 2001-2002– Federal Inmates 2001

• 5.6 million– 64% racial or ethnic minority– 43% less than high school diploma– 57% under the age of 35– 6.6% women

Page 12: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Criminal Justice, 6th Ed. 2008

Population under Corrections 2005-2006– 747.529 – Jail Population– 1,446,265 – Prison population– Population under corrections

• 7.1 million– 4.9 mil. Parole, probation, community– 2.2 mil. incarcerated

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– Local Facilities - 2002• 2.3 million

– 36% White– 40% Black– 19% Hispanic– 1% American Indian– 1% Asian– 3% more than 1 ethnic heritage– 12% female– 38% 35 years of age or older

Page 14: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Geriatric Prisoner (Aging Prisoners, Aday)

– U.S. Statistics• 1.3 million inmates age 50 or older

– State and Federal Prisons– 8.2% of total 2002 inmate population

Page 15: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Character of The Prisoner

Sociopathic Tendencies (Campbell, 1986,p.21)

– Manipulators– Self-Centered– Poor Self-Image– Difficulty with Value-

Centered Goals– Feelings of Hurt

– Mistrust– Anger– Fear– Guilt– Denial– Depression

Page 16: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Family Background Dept. of Justice, 2002

31% of jail inmates grew up with parent or guardian who abused alcohol or drugs.

12% of inmates lived in foster homes or institutions.

46% had a family member incarcerated

Page 17: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Diversity of Crimes & Characters

Department of Justice 2002– 50% of inmates incarcerated for violent or

drug related offenses• Drug Offenders are the largest source of jail

population

Page 18: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

(Kelly, Jailhouse Religion, p. 3)

Child Molesters Psychiatrics Gays Prostitutes Murderers Rapists

Robbers Derelicts Gangsters Illiterates Juveniles

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Why Do Evangelism in the Prison

Why Are Prisons a Mission field?

Page 20: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

HEY CHAPLAIN by Brenda Simuel Jackson

Hey Chaplain didn’t get that visit requested. Hey Chaplain can’t read the print in the KJV

bequested. Hey chaplain, who appointed you for the Lord

and Master? Hey Chaplain, will you mail this letter faster? Hey Chaplain when will my cup run over? Hey Chaplain, guess what, my prayers are

getting louder and bolder!

Page 21: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Hey Chaplain

Hey Chaplain, I didn’t cry last night. I got a visit from Jesus, and not by my

might! Hey Chaplain, thanks again for helping

me to see, I have a friend in Jesus, He loves me! Hey Chaplain

Page 22: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Salvation

Group Claims Thousands of U.S. Prisoners Are converting to Islam ( The

Connection Newspapers)

Isaiah 42:7b.c. – “…to free captives from prison (1) and to

release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness (2)

Page 23: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Salvation

Isaiah 61: 1b-2– “…proclaim freedom for the captives and

release from darkness for the prisoners (3)

Philemon 11,16– “Formerly he was useless…now useful…

No longer a slave, but better than a slave, a dear brother.

Page 24: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Salvation

John 8:36– So if The Son sets you free, you will be

free indeed• Free from penalty of sin• Free from negative personhood• Free from hopelessness• Free from lack of skills (Johnson, p. 103)

• Family Aid can be provided freely (Ingram p. 84)

Page 25: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Reduce Recidivism

Kelly - 74% of prisoners once released, arrested within 4 years.

2002– 53% of jail inmates were on probation,

parole or pretrial release at time of arrest.– 40% of prison inmates had a current or

past sentence for a violent offense

Page 26: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Reduce Recidivism

1994 272,111 released in 15 US States– 67.5% Rearrested– 46.9% Reconvicted– 25.4% resentenced to prison for a new

crime

Page 27: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

The Innerchange Freedom Program– Christian Based Rehabilitation Program– Working with Inmates pre-release– Working with inmates after release

Use biblical-based teachings to instill life skills

Page 28: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Innerchange Program– Belief that crime is a moral issue– There must be a genuine change of heart

to change character

Page 29: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Restoration

2 Corinthians 2:5-11– If anyone has caused grief,…The punishment

inflicted on him by the majority is sufficient…you aught to forgive and comfort him…If you forgive anyone, I also forgive him. And what I have forgiven - If there was anything to forgive - I have forgiven in the sight of Christ for your sake, in order that Satan might not outwit us. For we are not unaware of his schemes.

Page 30: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Restoration

Jail/Prisons, Great mission fields

A place for regeneration not just rehabilitation. (Kelly, p. 4)

A place for Spiritual Development

Page 31: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Sycamore Tree Project– Victim and Offender healing process– Offenders become accountable– Victims expose their hurts– In-prison process

Page 32: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Doing Evangelism in the Prison

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BSJ Christian SeminarsMission Statement Vision

– Earning Interest for God on His Investment in Stewards who are Imprisoned

– How - Doing Evangelism Vision Theme

– Transforming Uselessness Into Usefulness to Glorify God

– How - Doing Evangelism (Teaching)

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Mission Provide Outreach Ministry with the goal

of salvation (Acts 2:24; Hebrew 13:3; Matthew 25:36)

Provide a method of Faith-Based (Christian) involvement in rehabilitation of the confined. (Philemon 11-16)

Provide spiritual, personal and academic development (2 Timothy 3:16)

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X-offender and Family Services

Community Services

Family Life Services

Prayer Services

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Hebrews 13:1-3

– Keep on loving each other as brothers…Remember those in prison, as if you were their fellow prisoners.

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Helping the Inmate to Wait in Freedom

Religious - looking beyond situations to possibilities (Kelly, p. 66)

Religious Programs help to overcome cellblock conditions.

Religious programs ward off giving up hope

Religious programs that stop suicidal thinking

Page 38: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

SAMPLE RENEWAL SEMINARS

Be Angry but Sin not The Leader in You Fruit spiritually Sweet and Emotionally

Mature Prayer Power Selecting The Easy Yoke Forgiving The Unforgivable Faith

Page 39: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

Organizational Structure of Ministries

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Structures– Collaboration of two or more churces– Collaboration between church and no-profit– Collaboration between church and

educational entity

Page 41: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

In-prison Services– Bible Study– Worship Services– Development Program– Educational Services– Counseling Services

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Qualifications and Training– Faith– Concern for Inmates– Biblical Study– Use of special gift and/or talent

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Steps for Being a Religious Volunteer– Application– Criminal History Check– Recommendations– Learning the Do’s and Don’ts

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Other Ministries– Care for the Aging– Care for dying prisoners– Mentors– Employment Assistance– Housing Assistance– Family Outreach– Transportation for visitation

Page 45: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

References

Michigan Department of Corrections Books

– Aday, Ronald H. Aging Prisoners, London: Praeger, 2003

– Campbell, Joan, S.P. The Ministry To The Imprisoned, Collegeville, Minnesota: The Liturgical Press, 1989.

– Kelly, Anthony, Jailhouse Religion, Townsend Press, 1996

Page 46: SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

References

Nolan, Pat. When Prisoners Return. Prison Fellowship, 2004.

Williams, Joseph. Sheep In Wolves’ Clothing, When The Actions of a Christian turn Criminal,Chicago: Moody Press, 2000.

Travis, Lawrence F. Introduction to Criminal Justice. 6th ed. Ohio: Mathew Bender & Co., 2008

Wilmore, Gayroud, ed. Black Men In Prison, Atlanta, Ga: ITC Press, 1990.