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Prisons and Other Places the Kingdom Takes Root [Excerpt by Philip Yancey]

 

Excerpt from Grace Notes: Daily Readings with Philip Yancey (eBook).

 

Taking God’s assignment seriously means that I must learn to look at the world upside down, as Jesus did. Instead of seeking out people who stroke my ego, I find those whose egos need stroking; instead of important people with resources who can do me favors, I find people with few resources; instead of the strong, I look for the weak; instead of the healthy, the sick. Is not this how God reconciles the world to himself? Did Jesus not insist that he came for the sinners and not the righteous, for the sick and not the healthy?

 

People often look upon [Jean] as mad…

The founder of the L’Arche homes for the mentally disabled, Jean Vanier, says that people often look upon him as mad. The brilliantly educated son of a governor general of Canada, he recruits skilled workers (Henri Nouwen was one) to serve and live among damaged people.

Vanier shrugs off those who second-guess his choices by saying he would rather be crazy by following the foolishness of the gospel than the nonsense of the values of our world. Furthermore, Vanier insists that those who serve the deformed and damaged benefit as much as the ones whom they are helping. Even the most disabled individuals respond instinctively to love, and in so doing they awaken what is most important in a human being: compassion, generosity, humility, love. Paradoxically, they replenish life in the very helpers who serve them.

 

In India I have worshiped among leprosy patients. Most of the medical advances in the treatment of leprosy came about as a result of missionary doctors, who alone were willing to live among patients and risk exposure to study the dreaded disease. As a result, Christian churches thrive in most major leprosy centers.

 

In Myanmar, I have visited homes for AIDS orphans, where Christian volunteers try to replace parental affection the disease has stolen away. In Jean Vanier’s center in Toronto, I have watched a scholarly priest lavish daily care on a middle-aged man so mentally handicapped that he could not speak a word. The most rousing church services I have attended took place in Chile and Peru, in the bowels of a federal prison. Among the lowly, the wretched, the downtrodden, the rejects, God’s kingdom takes root.

 

God's kingdom is taking root

“The most rousing church services I have attended took place in Chile & Peru, in the bowels of a federal prison. Among the lowly … God’s kingdom takes root.”

 

 

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-Philip Yancey

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(Image & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of Grace Notes. Image attribution: By MicheleLovesArt (Van Gogh Museum – Tree-roots, 1890) [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer’s personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Beyond Crime and Punishment: Philip Yancey on Prison Fellowship International

 

In his latest blogpost Philip Yancey reflects on his experience at the recent conference of Prison Fellowship International (PFI). For those unfamiliar with PFI, they minister in over 120 countries to prisoners, ex-prisoners, victims and their families. Their vision is to bring restoration and reconciliation into the lives of those involved in and affected by crime. I imagine this wouldn’t be easy anywhere, and sometimes they’re active in prison conditions that, in Yancey’s words, “rival Nazi concentration camps.”

Ron Nikkel
Ron Nikkel, President of PFI, has visited more prisons than anyone else in history.

What drives PFI volunteers to do what they do? Most at the conference “insist they do it because Jesus commanded it,” says Yancey. “Announcing his mission, [Jesus] included the goal to ‘liberate the captives’ [Luke 4:14-20] and he said in Matthew 25 that God will judge the nations on how we cared for ‘the least of these,’ including prisoners.”

So how are our nations doing on caring for prisoners? Not so good, says PFI President Ron Nikkel, who has probably visited more prisons than anyone else in history. Nikkel has an interesting opinion about what it takes to bring down crime, and I encourage you to read his thoughts in Yancey’s post.

The passion of Nikkel and the volunteers crept under my skin. One commenter says aptly, “It’s the kind of stuff that gives you goosebumps – that someone has decided to not forget about prisoners, someone has decided to not write them off as either too far gone or not worth ministering to.” 

Yancey concludes his post with a provocative aside: we can’t tell the Christian story without including prisoners. There’s John the Baptist, Peter, Paul, the thieves crucified next to Jesus, and Jesus himself. If I noticed this before, then I forgot it. I also tend to forget  that every century since then has seen prisoners and martyrs of the faith; and too often I forget that some studies say as many as 1 in 31 American adults are on probation or incarcerated. So PFI got me thinking about some things. They take a hard road when they refuse to write people off as “too far gone” or “not worth ministering to,” and I’m thankful for their service.

You can learn how to get involved in PFI’s ministry at pfi.org.
(-Adam Forrest, Zondervan Internet Team) 

PS: Have you ever read a life-changing book from a Christian who has been to prison? I know a lot of people who love the prison writings of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. I recommend Alexandr Solzhenitsyn’s masterful history The Gulag Archipelago.

 

 

 

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Jesus, Faith, Grace: New Visual Books by Yancey, Strobel

"Feast for the eye" isn't a phrase I throw at books lightly, but right now I'll chuck it at three books:

Learn more about JesusJesus
by Philip Yancey
Adapted from The Jesus I Never Knew

Learn more about FaithFaith
by Lee Strobel
Adapted from The Case   for Faith and The Case     for Christ

Grace
by Philip Yancey
Adapted from What's So Amazing About Grace?

You can browse through these books below. Any of these would make excellent gift or coffee-table books.

Which book looks most interesting to you?

Jesus by Philip Yancey
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