TEAM MEMBER REGISTRATION
Approaching the Tombs
As you embark on the One Parish One Prisoner journey, you and other members of your congregation are now approaching the mass tombs of our society today: the prison system.
They are—and often describe feeling—“dead to the world.” Philosopher Lisa Geunther describes incarceration as “social death.” This is the underground, the realm of Hades, where 2.4 million men and women are cut off from the land of the living.
But Jesus loved his friend Lazarus in the tombs. Jesus not only wept at this state of things, he called a local community of his followers to help him undo it: he invited them to draw closer to the tombs and, together, roll away the stone.
That group Jesus called had some understandable reservations.
But Jesus said, “Did I not tell you that if you do as I say, you will see the glory of God?” (John 11:40)
That’s our hope. Not just to help someone out of prison—but much more: to join Jesus’ ongoing work of resurrection, so that we may have more close-up exposure to what the mystery of God is all about.
To prepare for your upcoming Kickoff Orientation, we have a few videos and reading to get you thinking.
QUICK NOTE: Washington State DOC volunteers / red badge holders are unable, according to their signed documents, to take the One Parish One Prisoner journey. Our invitation is for a long-term, authentic relationship of embrace and trust. Volunteers with DOC are specifically tasked to keep from individual contact with incarcerated men and women.
PRISON GATES OPEN EVERY DAY
Getting out of prison isn’t the hard part. Most incarcerated men and women have a release date. Dark as prisons are, the day they get out is just the start of a much more difficult story.
In the US, roughly 700,000 men and women are released from prison back in our communities every year. But without access to new relationships and opportunities, with many barriers to “reentry,” most remain in the “underground” street economy. They eventually get arrested and sucked back into the prison system, disenfranchised and dead to society.
In Washington State, there are roughly the same amount of churches as there are incarcerated men and women.
What if every church built a solid relationship with just one person releasing to their area, and walked with them as they emerged out from the underground of incarceration?
Your church is getting involved and, if you’re reading this, your pastoral leadership has invited you to be part of the team.
The New York Times made a startlingly intimate video portrait of incarcerated men during their first hour of release, at a bus station in Texas. There is no commentary:
What do you see these men feeling? Wanting?
Normally we think of prisoners as people to fear. What might these men be afraid of?
What’s missing from this first day out of the prison facility?
MASS INCARCERATION
If the last video was the up-close-shot of those leaving the tombs, this is big-picture-flyover of the social tomb system we’ve built in America.
You’ve probably heard the term “mass incarceration.” Here’s two quick videos—a clever 4-minute summary, and a more somber 3-minute visualization—of what that term is describing:
HERE’s Where you come in
You may have seen this video already at church or from a link sent out. Revisit if you like. This is what we’re trying for. CLICK THE VIDEO BELOW:
COVENANT
God-shaped relationships grow in covenant. It’s not a contract where you sign your name, but a shared commitment—because flakiness is a shared affliction!
To counteract that, we seek to build muscles of faithfulness together.
We have a Covenant in One Parish One Prisoner. It’s part of your orientation to read and agree to this:
GUT-CHECK
We’re not taking information here, but we want to you take a quick temperature before you start the journey. How well do you understand the connection between the experience of the incarcerated and the following areas:
POVERTY
RACE
ADDICTION
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
RELATIONSHIPS / COMMUNITY / SUPPORT NETWORKS
MUNICIPAL / LEGAL DEBT
OBTAINING A LEGAL DRIVER’S LICENSE
STABLE and AVAILABLE EMPLOYMENT
STABLE and AVAILABLE HEALTHCARE
STABLE and AVAILABLE EDUCATION
Take a second to assess and prepare for an amount of exploration.
What’s the COMMITMENT?
INITIALLY:
3 Hours / Month
Gather In Monthly Team Meetings: 1.5 hours
Read Monthly Learning Modules: .5 hour
Write Two Letters (or JPays or enjoy two phone calls): .5 hour
As the relationship grows, reentry planning ramps up, and you prepare for the return home, more people from the congregation will be looped in to help.
THE BIG PICTURE:
A 2-Year Journey with Your Parish Team
Letters, learning, and relationship-building - 12 months
Reentry and accompaniment - 9 months
Reflection and discernment forward - 3 months
After two years, you’ll have completed all the learning modules we have for you. Your friend might be out of prison, happy, healthy, and part of a loving community. It’s also possible that your friend fell out of contact, that your team stopped gathering, or that you yourself stepped away from the journey.
Whichever way it goes, the journey continues. We’re aiming to go on a long walk—together. We’ll be here to cheer you on, to learn from you, and to celebrate how you have been transformed.
REGISTRATION & SELF-ASSESSMENT
We want to get a solid roster for your team, as well as a quick, honest glimpse of our team members’ prior exposure to incarceration. We will return to some of these questions throughout your 24-month journey ahead. Right now is the first snapshot of who you are and where you’re at. Once your team is fully registered, we’ll be in touch about scheduling a Kickoff Orientation.
A BLESSING
God of the Resurrection,
Thank you for calling this community member reading this right now closer to your sons and daughters still inside the tombs we’ve built. We invite Your Spirit to lovingly begin a deeper conversation with our new friend, where Your Voice can be heard through this journey ahead.
Help us follow Your lead together. Help this team love and grow in vulnerability and trust together.
Help us, now and throughout, to let go of anxiety or control—and welcome your kindness into our own shadows.
Amen.