Let me stimulate letters to the editor by starting out with
something that sounds theoretical, but has enormous practical implications.
The concept is this: Christianity is both pessimistic and optimistic. Bible-based
churches teach that our natural tendency is to go astray and that once we go
wrong we are likely to keep going wrong unless God graciously puts us on the
right path. The good news, however, is that through Christ we can break out
of our traps and quickly reverse the downward course of our lives.
That realistic faith underlies what is shaping up as the next
big movement in prison reform. For years liberals have talked about rehabilitation
but ignored holes in souls. Conservatives, meanwhile, have emphasized punishment
and societal protection by advocating lock-'em-up-bury- the-key strategies.
But imagine something else: a Christian approach that stresses the way God changes
hearts, but does not underestimate the deceitfulness of those prisoners whose
wills may still be in bondage.
Only one place in the United States emphasizes that approach
now, and it is in Richmond, near Houston. The tell-tale indication while heading
south is when the roadside signs change from come-ons for model homes -- "Texana
plantation estate homesites" -- to "Do not pick up hitchhikers." Then comes
the Jester II unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, its prison walls
topped with razor wire -- and within one set of walls, the InnerChange Freedom
Initiative developed by Prison Fellowship, based on its successful experience
in Brazilian prisons.
The plan is easy to define: a Bible-based, 18-month, pre-release
program that promotes personal transformation of prisoners through the power
of the gospel.
When I went inside at Christmastime last year, the outward
changes were easy to perceive: One hundred prisoners in their white cotton shirts
and trousers live in cubicles rather than cell blocks, but only a little thievery
occurs. Inmates spent their non-work hours in classes and Bible studies rather
than in front of a television. Civil tones rather than profanity dominated conversations
in front of visitors but also, according to prison officials, just about all
the time.
Texas Gov. George Bush was willing to give the program a try
because his "compassionate conservatism" is committed to faith-based efforts
among the poor and the troubled. State officials kept the ACLU at bay by giving
all organizations, religious or atheistic, the opportunity to propose values-based
prerelease programs. Several non-Christian groups inquired, but only Prison
Fellowship went all the way. The state undergoes no expense, since PF supplies
the staff and picks up other costs as well. Prisoners from any religion are
allowed to join (and a couple of Muslims have) so there is no discrimination
for or against any religious group.
God's grace and man's mentoring is key. Some prisoners re-enter
"the free world" with good intentions but quickly fall into old ways. (Sometimes
a prisoner's dad brings him back into the family dope business.) But as Gov.
Bush puts it, InnerChange "encourages people to stay involved with prisoners,
changing one life at a time." A Christian volunteer assigned to each prisoner
meets with him one night each week at the prison for 2-3 hours, helps him find
a job and a church home following release and does six months of post-prison
mentoring.
The average InnerChange participant has had three prison terms.
One inmate I met with, Donnie Gilmore, had a typical background: late 20s, history
of breaking into houses, stealing cars, "doing anything I thought I could
get away with." Gilmore's interest in the program was piqued after his 4-year-old
daughter asked him about Jesus and he realized he had never opened a Bible.
Another participant, Donald Osage, had reflected on his former heroin addiction
and the crimes he committed to support his $300-a-day habit. He realized he
had to change his thinking or else he would be shooting up again as soon as
he left prison.
Currently, 60 percent of released inmates nationwide return
to prison. Both Gilmore and Osage, however, talked about their conversion to
Christ and how much they had learned through the 14 hours a day of work, Bible
study, classes, prayer, discussions and community service that make up the program.
Would that be enough to keep them and their peers from falling back into old
patterns once they were no longer regimented? Many liberals prefer psychological
approaches and many secular conservatives scoff at such hope, but my sense is
that InnerChange is a reasonable risk -- if we have faith in the possibility
of real change, through God's grace.
Olasky is a professor at the University of Texas and a senior
fellow of the Acton Institute. His e-mail address is molasky@mail.utexas.edu.
Acton Institute for
the Study of Religion and Liberty
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