Easter---a special day for prisoners!
Criminals
and criminal activity make us angry!
Even those
of us with strong views against capital punishment entertain second thoughts on
the subject when we hear or read of heinous crimes. Just when you think you’ve heard it all,
mankind seems to devise new and more dreadful ways to torture, maim and kill
fellow human beings. Some days revenge
sounds pretty good to us, even those of us who claim to follow the risen
Christ.
Sometime
that anger even rears its ugly head against those of us who work with
criminals…again, even among those of the Christian faith. It is not uncommon for us to hear that
prisoners do not deserve humane treatment.
Those opinions will be expressed with the question, “How humanely did
the criminal treat his/her victims?” The
rationale seems to be that the person who commits an inhumane crime deserves
inhumane treatment while incarcerated.
I was
invited to discuss my book SWEET FREEDOM with members of a Christian book club
that included some distinguished members, including a seminary professor. For those who are unfamiliar with my story, I
joined hands with a wrongly convicted prisoner in a 9-year battle for his
freedom. Even though the system wouldn’t
budge, we knew---and we even proved---that Maurice Carter was innocent. He served 29 years for a crime he did not
commit, and was never exonerated. He was
granted a compassionate release due to a terminal illness. He enjoyed only three months of freedom. The book tells our story.
I felt like
I was in enemy territory among this group of fellow believers, who challenged
our belief in his innocence at every turn.
One woman was so angry about the book or me or the story that she
refused to speak, and stared straight ahead through the entire session! Crime, even when it’s wrongly perceived, can
make us very angry.
When
HUMANITY FOR PRISONERS lost its office space in downtown Muskegon many years
ago, my immediate thought was to try to persuade one of the major downtown
churches to give us a small room. We
didn’t need much space, and we considered our work to be a ministry. The work of the church and our work with
prisoners seemed like a good fit to me, as I made my presentation to the
church’s Board of Trustees. But that
wasn’t the feeling of one board member, who viewed our entire philosophy as
being soft on crime and supportive of people who were behind bars for a reason
and who deserved every bit of punishment they were getting. Our work, as he perceived it, made him
angry. I left with my tail between my
legs.
Contrast
these thoughts of some of Jesus’ followers with his final words and deeds on
the cross.
It boggles
the mind to think that this young man, in the throes of pain and anguish that
we cannot begin to imagine, took a moment to be kind to a thug… and not a
wrongly convicted criminal like our Lord.
This guy admitted to his crime, and admitted that he deserved
crucifixion. Dr. Luke tells us that the
man, one of two criminals flanking our savior on crosses, turned to Jesus and
in his final moments quietly asked him to remember him when he came into his
kingdom. And I can only imagine that
Jesus was grimacing in the physical pain of this most cruel type of execution,
the emotional pain of abandonment by family, friends and religious leaders, and
that his voice was weak from exhaustion.
Yet, he managed to issue these words of kindness, gentleness and
compassion: I tell you the truth, today you
will be with me in paradise.
What a
message to the people with whom I work and chat on a daily basis…people who one
corrections official referred to as “the worst of the worst.”
I like the
words to the old Gaither hymn, “The cross made the difference for me.”
It made the
difference for weeping and hurting parents and grandparents and spouses and
children and siblings of prisoners. It
made the difference to those who are angry, wounded, lonely and abandoned, yea, to ALL people behind
bars. It made the difference to the
mentally ill who landed in cells instead of proper institutions of care. It made the difference for those like Maurice
who became terminally ill in prison, including many who never got out.
The author
of Revelation promises that, because of today, God will wipe away every tear.
Christ is
risen!
He is risen
indeed!
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