Growing Good Corn

There once was a farmer who grew award-winning corn. Each year he entered his corn in the state fair were it won a blue ribbon.

One year a newspaper reporter interviewed him and learned something interesting about how he grew it. The reporter discovered that the farmer shared his seed corn with his neighbors.

The reporter asked, “how can you afford to share your best seed corn with your corn-740x493neighbors when they  entering corn in the competition with yours each year?”

Why sir“, said the farmer, did you not know? The wind picks up pollen from the ripening corn and swirls it from field to field. If my neighbors grow inferior corn, cross-pollination will steadily degrade the quality of my corn. If I am to grow good corn, I must help my neighbors grow good corn.”

He is very much aware of the connectedness of life. His corn cannot improve unless his neighbor’s corn also improves.

So it is in our lives. Those who choose to live in peace must help their neighbors to live in peace. Those who choose to live well, must help others to live well, for the value of a life is measures by the lives it touches. And those who choose to be happy must help others to find happiness, for the welfare of each is bound up with the welfare of all.

“There is that scattereth, and yet increaseth: and this that withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth to property. The liberal soul shall be made fat: and he that watereth shall be watered also himself.” – Proverbs 11:24-25

TDJC Chaplain Receives Promotion

By Sarah Pegues

Messenger Reporter

HOUSTON COUNTY – Vance Drum, the chaplain for Region I of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ), recently received a promotion to Director of Chaplaincy Operations for the TDCJ.

“I was promoted this fall,” Drum explained. “I had been a unit chaplain – prison chaplain – at the Eastham Unit since 1985, so I was out there about 27 years.

“The last two years, I was a regional chaplain in the Huntsville area and then vance-drum-288x404became the director of chaplaincy in the fall this year,” he went on. “It was in September.”

According to Drum, there are 126 chaplains operating in 109 prisons throughout the state of Texas.

“They do great work redirecting people’s lives in a more pro-social and Godly direction,” he said of the individuals.

“A whole lot of offenders do not have good early guidance and get involved in anti-social and bad stuff,” he pointed out. “So, chaplains are there in every prison in Texas to help redirect their lives in a better way.

“It’s a real blessed ministry,” he continued. “In prison, many people know that they need help, and a chaplain is there to help guide them in a better way.

“They’re very open to listening, because a lot of times, people who are at the bottom of the barrel have an easier time looking up,” he went on. “So, there’s a lot of redemption in prison. It’s a blessing.”

In his new role as Director of Chaplains, Drum is responsible for assisting the TDCJ’s regional, parole and unit chaplains in the effort “to help offenders have a better walk and do their lives better.

“I’m real excited about it,” he said of the promotion. “It’s a blessing to be there.”

Drum also expressed appreciation of the leadership provided to chaplains in the TDCJ.

“Our leadership is very supportive of what we’re doing in chaplaincy,” he said. “In fact, the three big entities in Texas have all come together – that is the legislature, the TDCJ Board and our executive leadership – promoting rehabilitative and reentry programs to help offenders get their lives going in a good way.

“It hasn’t always been that way over my 30-year career with the TDCJ,” he noted, “but in these days and the past few years, all those groups have come together. So, there’s a lot of support for even faith-based programming through the chaplaincy department.

“Chaplains are doing great works and helping a lot of offenders,” he continued. “We have 155,000 offenders in the Texas prison system, and chaplains are on every unit, and they help a lot. They help inmates get going on a better path.”

In addition to being promoted to a new position, Drum was selected to continue his role in another.

“In November, I was reelected to be the president of the American Correctional Chaplains Association,” he reported.

“The ACCA is historically the first affiliate of the American Correctional Association from 1885,” he explained.

“The American Correctional Association is our main professional organization, and they work to raise the standards of prisons to make prisons a more humane place to live and a safer place to work.”

According to Drum, the ACA began in 1870.

“It’s a blessing to be president of the national chaplains group,” he said. “I’m working with a lot of chaplains around the country to emphasize faith-based rehabilitative and reentry programs to help a lot of offenders.

“I really enjoy it,” he said of the occupation. “It’s a blessing to do that.”

 

Prison Chaplains

Prison chaplains: The ups and downs of ministering to the incarcerated

By , Deseret News

There are errands to be run and a big stack of mail that needs his attention, but Lonn Buckley doesn’t hesitate when the woman, short and stout with earnest brown eyes, asks to chat for a minute. “I’ve been sitting on this for a while, but it’s been bugging me,” she says, taking a seat in his office, a small room with cinder block walls, bare except for few crookedly hung pictures of Christ. “I just had to tell someone.”

She fiddles with a ballpoint pen as she tells him about her problems. A Bible rests in her lap, partially covering the “i” in the word “inmate,” which is printed vertically down the leg of her maroon scrubs. Buckley leans forward in his seat, listening intently. This is one of his favorite parts of his job as a chaplain at the Utah State Prison.

Prison chaplains are more than just preachers. They provide spiritual guidance and support for prisoners, promote a peaceful environment and safeguard the religious rights of the incarcerated. It’s a demanding job that, in recent years, has gotten tougher. As budget cuts have forced many states to consolidate positions, prison chaplains have had to take on more and more duties.

“People think that chaplains are ministers who go into the prisons to save souls and whatnot,” said Gary Friedman, spokesman for the American Correctional Chaplains Association. “That’s not what chaplains do anymore. Chaplains are very frustrated about not having enough time to minister.”

Safeguarding rights

When an inmate asked to use his desk phone to call home on his first day at work a couple decades back, Utah State Prison Chaplain Bob Feland exuberantly agreed. Word spread and soon there was a line of scrub-clad ladies spilling out of the building onto the concrete track the inmates used for exercise.

“I was the most popular person on the grounds,” he recalled.

But security quickly squashed that idea. It was his first introduction to what he calls a “complex balance” of ministering to inmates’ spiritual needs while maintaining a safe environment. In order to attend any of the prison’s religious programs, which range from worship services to Bible study, inmates must first obtain a security clearance. Since a stabbing incident at the family history research center last year, an officer must oversee all religious gatherings. There is a “nothing in, nothing out” policy.

“If someone has a cough and I have a lozenge in my pocket, I can’t give it to them,” he said. “If an inmate missed mail call and his wife needs money for food, I can’t deliver it. It can be really tough on your heart.”

For Feland and Buckley, both gray-haired men with wise eyes and heavily etched smile lines, the first order of business most days is shuffling through letters from inmates requesting religious accommodations. They ask for easy-reader copies of the Koran. They need a rosary. They want a sweat lodge for a Native American spiritual ceremony. They’d like a kosher diet.

“Unless there is a safety concern, we almost always say yes,” Feland said. “The ability to express spirituality is a basic human need.”

At the same time, though, the chaplains acknowledge that prisoners can be manipulative and may not be genuine with their requests. After declaring he was Jewish and requesting a kosher diet, for example, one inmate followed with another letter asking, “What do Jews believe?”

“In prison, it becomes a control issue,” Buckley said. “When you don’t have your freedom, you latch on to any little thing that might demonstrate your individuality.”

Not all chaplains are as open-minded as Feland and Buckley. About 82 percent of chaplains across the country “usually approve” requests for religious books or texts, according to a recent nationwide survey conducted by The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. But just 53 percent usually approve requests for special religious diets and just 28 percent approve requests for special hairstyles or grooming.

If the chaplains don’t have what they need to accommodate a prisoner on hand, they have turn to the community for donations, writing letters and making calls until they get them the tools they need to worship, Feland said. At the Utah State Prison, they are always short on religious texts and, for some of the less common religions, it can be difficult to find volunteers.

About 55 percent of chaplains don’t have enough Muslim volunteers, Pew reported. Thirty-five percent could use some more help from those of Pagan faiths like Wicca and Odinism. Twenty-two percent need more Christian volunteers.

“It’s next to impossible to find a Satanism volunteer,” Buckley said.

But they always do their best. If they don’t, they may get sued. In recent years, religious freedom lawsuits coming out of American prisons have become commonplace. Fearing legal action, chaplains are spending increasing amounts of time playing detective and doing paperwork, according to Friedman.

“The definition of religious exercise is so overly broad that essentially anything an inmate claims to be a religious practice is legally considered a religious practice,” he said. “We get sued and it’s frustrating. We are supposed to be the good guys.”

Changing hearts

Regardless of the drama, though, chaplains are still passionate about the power religion has to change inmates’ lives. While chaplains spend a great deal of their time performing administrative duties and arranging religious services, 75 percent consider ministering to be the most important part of their job, according to Pew. Seventy-three percent of chaplains consider access to high-quality religious programs “absolutely critical” to rehabilitation. A majority — 57 percent — believe religious rehab programs have improved in quality within the past three years.

Eva Montanez, 45, who is doing time for theft, teared up when asked what Buckley’s spiritual guidance meant to her. She was baptized a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as a small child, but didn’t pay much mind to her religion until she was sentenced to two years in prison. A year and a half in, she said, “The gospel has strengthened me to move forward in my life. I am very happy to have healing.”

Buckley gave her a blessing when she was feeling lonely. He and Feland are often asked to bless inmates, expel evil spirits from cells or just listen as inmates try to figure out how their lives went wrong.

“He is there for us on a personal basis,” Montanez said. “I don’t feel like I’m alone in this.”

The key to successful rehabilitation, chaplains said, is maintaining spiritual support after release. Ninety-seven percent of chaplains said continued support from religious groups is either “absolutely critical” or “very important,” according to Pew.

But with heavy workloads and new inmates coming in daily, just 33 percent of chaplains said they follow up with former inmates after release, and there are few ministries that offer follow-up care to inmates. Inmates who try to enter the faith community on their own are often met with prejudice, chaplains said. It is easy to fall through the cracks.

Feland said he has met some of his “best friends” in prison. But any relationship forged behind bars is complex. Every once in a while, an inmate will call to say, “There’s nothing out here for me. What do I do?”

But if former inmates don’t reach out, he said, “I worry. Is it my place to bring up that part of their lives when they are trying to move on?”

That’s not to say chaplains don’t care.

There’s nothing more discouraging than seeing an inmate who has been released show up on the prison church rolls again, Feland and Buckley said.

“You love them while they are here,” Buckley said. “Then you send them out into the world and hope you never see them again. That’s the best thing for them.”

 

Ministering in Prison

Ministering in Prison by W. H. Bergherm

There are more than 160,­000 prisoners in the State and Federal prisons of America today. For the most part, these prisoners are young men between the ages of eighteen and thirty, and their number is constantly increasing. The average stay of prisoners in institutions of correction is less than three years. Most prisoners are either completely outside the pale of organized churches or are only superficially linked to their churches. In working among these men one wonders if these are not the fall-out from organized society, and if the church, in its urge toward respectability, is not grossly guilty of failing and altogether neglecting these disinherited souls. These men long for spiritual security as much as any other human being. I have had many men come to my office with tears in their eyes, pleading for spiritual power to overcome their weaknesses and besetting sins.

My experience with prisoners has been in connection with the Pastoral Clinical Training Course as provided by the Council for Clinical Training of New York City. Under the guid­ance of a supervising chaplain I have had the privilege of interviewing all prisoners as they come into the Federal Detention Headquar­ters of New York. This work of interviewing prisoners, both in the office and in their cells, has given me the opportunity of meeting scores and scores of prisoners of all classes, intelli­gence, and background. Some are recidivists who have a long criminal record, while oth­ers are young men of sixteen and seventeen years of age. A large percentage of the men are narcotics or are engaged in the sale of drugs. Others have been guilty of stealing cars, rob­bing banks, forging checks, et’Cetera. Inasmuch as I am the only resident chaplain at this in­stitution, I have been asked to interview men of all faiths. To many I have the privilege of passing on Christian literature, giving Christian guidance, and sometimes joining with them in prayer.

Among the most pitiful of the prisoners en­tering this institution are the narcotics. One man who had forged a U.S. check to get money to buy more heroin, wept as he told me of the miserable condition to which his family had been reduced since he had begun to use the vile killer. He has four children for whom he had always provided a good home until he began using “junk” a year and a half ago. He told me he didn’t own a decent suit of clothes today. He had lost all his friends and he couldn’t bor­row a nickel anywhere. His wife and children were on relief. He said his craving for the habit-forming drug had become so strong that he would pull the doors off their hinges if in doing so it would bring him relief, and that he would steal or commit any crime to get the stuff. When he was thrown into jail for the “with­drawal” he thought he would die, and then wished he could. He had fever, cold chills, hot chills, with all sorts of muscular cramps. But he felt he was not out of it all and he would do anything for a cure. Between his tears he asked me if I knew of any power that would help him overcome his great weakness. What a privilege it was to point this man to Christ.

A Bible study class meets from time to time in the library of this institution, usually with every seat filled. We take our Bibles and the men are learning how to find their texts. A number of men are studying various Bible cor­respondence courses. One young man who had been brought up a Seventh-day Adventist has made his decision to return. A prisoner who was a businessman in New York said that he had been considering our faith for some time and that he and his wife were eager to learn more about us. They are now reading our literature. For the most part, however, these men have had very little to do with religion of any kind. They have come from broken homes where the name of God is never taken upon human lips except in profanity. Yet even these sense their need of some power to come into their lives, above what the State can give them, if the work of rehabili­tating them is to be successful. They are sin­ners before God and man but many are not sinners by choice. Some have hardly had a chance.

I think of one young man, twenty-four years old. It was his fourth imprisonment, this time for a motor vehicle theft. His own father he had never seen. The man who was supposed to be his stepfather, came home only when under the influence of alcohol and would curse at him and kick him around. His mother had to be away from the home much of the time to earn the living for the family. As a boy of twelve the care of the younger children was largely left to him. Sin and immorality pressed hard upon him. He had been arrested several times for contributing to the delinquency of minors, and other immoral charges. His mother did not have time to tell him anything about religion. He had been to church only twice in his life and that was when he was in the Army. On one of these occasions he stood up with others who were giving their hearts to Jesus. “But,” he added, “I don’t know the meaning of Jesus. No one ever told me.”

The face of this young man, with lines of sin already drawn deeply upon it, still haunts me. Nobody had ever told him about Jesus. He wanted to know more about the Bible. He wanted to go straight, he told me, but it seemed as if a power from beneath was dragging him down. He feared he wouldn’t be able to make it without help, and this fear was well sub­stantiated by the experiences of the past. Like 80 per cent of the others he, too, would prob­ably be a recidivist. All the punishment of the penal systems of the world, though the best of their kind, would never of themselves re­habilitate this man for the stern realities of life. Only the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ can bring sanity to this troubled mind.

In the light of these tremendous needs for spiritual ministry in our prisons, it is easy to un­derstand why our Lord placed the visiting of those in prisons among the six forms of min­istry expected of the righteous who would in­herit the kingdom of heaven. The other five were the feeding of the hungry, giving water to the thirsty, receiving the stranger, clothing the naked, and caring for the sick. As Seventh-day Adventists we have placed great emphasis on a ministry to the sick and the needy. We have our world welfare and medical work. But what are we doing to fulfill our obligations to those in prison? Prison visitation, according to the lesson given by our Lord inMatthew 25:35, 36 is equally important as a form of min­istry as is serving the hungry, naked, and sick. Institutional chaplains are needed in this field of service as well as in the others.

The following words spoken many years ago by the wise man, Solomon, are certainly ap­plicable to God’s people today. “If thou forbear to deliver them that are drawn unto death, and those that are ready to be slain; if thou sayest, Behold, we knew it not; doth not he that pon­dereth the heart consider it? and he that keep­eth thy soul, doth not he know it? and shall not he render to every man according to his works?” (Prov. 24:11, 12). In harmony with the above, the servant of the Lord has told us: “His followers are not to feel themselves detached from the perishing world around them. They are a part of the great web of humanity; and heaven looks upon them as brothers to sinners as well as to saints. The fallen, the erring, and the sinful, Christ’s love embraces; and every deed of kindness done to uplift a fallen soul, every act of mercy, is accepted as done to Him.” —The Desire of Ages, p. 638.