When prisoners pray
The prayers of oppressed
people are especially precious in God's sight. As you have advocated for them,
they will advocate for you. Rev.
Celia Hastings, Ellsworth, Michigan
Prayer makes a difference. No one can
shake my belief in that truism.
I look back at 2010, when a
deadly staph infection attacked this old body. Loss of the ability to swallow,
loss of 65 pounds, functioning on a feeding tube for 6 months, family gathering
in a prayer that Dad will survive. It was a dark scene.
I wasn’t buried in
discouragement, but I wondered if I would ever play the organ in church again,
or go to Fricano’s for pizza and beer again.
Prayers of family, friends, and church were abundant, and I'm certain they played a significant role in pulling me through. But I was amazed by the intensity and frequency of prayers from prisoners, some whom I had never met or even helped.
Fast forward to the year
2018. On the day before Thanksgiving another sinister attack on this
82-year-old body. Sore arms in the middle of the night, heavy chest. What the…?
Yep, heart attack. Open heart surgery to give me three bypasses.
I have survived again. Physicians
and medical attendants were not only pleased, but they were also amazed. I credit so much of this, once again, to prayer.
Yes, prayers of my family and friends and my loving church. But also those of friends we have made around the world in this prisoner advocacy business. And then factor in the prayers of prisoners, their families and their loved ones. When the word got out our office was swamped with caring messages and assurances of prayer.
I’ve been given a new lease
on life, and I intend to continue helping those behind bars. My friends.
Says Lori Hadacek Chaplin in the Catholic Digest:
We don’t usually think of a
prisoner’s prayers as being efficacious. Without thinking, we assume that God
doesn’t hear them because of their terrible deeds. We forget about God’s mercy
and the transformative power of sacraments of confession and the Eucharist. We
also forget that God listens intently to the prayers of the suffering, and
there’s no doubt that most prisoners suffer immensely. Their suffering is
valuable when it’s united to Christ’s suffering.
So, I’m praying for prisoners
today. It’s that mutuality, that reciprocity, that Sister Helen Prejean describes
so well.
I owe them that.
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