Thoughts on faith and life from Sara Irwin, rector at Christ Episcopal Church in Waltham, Massachusetts (www.christchurchwaltham.org). Published weekly.
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Next Monday, I hope you'll join me in welcoming the Rev. George Walters-Sleyon, founder and director of the Center for Church and Prison. He is a mentee of our friend Norm Faramelli, and Sue Burkart became acquainted with him through her work with the organization Children of Incarcerated Parents. He will be speaking particularly on the "Three Strikes" law currently making its way through the legislature. It's in committee now, with members of the House and Senate ironing out differences between their versions before going to both for the final vote. The law came about in response to the murder of Woburn police officer John Maguire in 2010 in a shootout in the middle of a robbery. He was shot by Dominic Cinelli, paroled after serving 22 years of three concurrent life sentences. Cinelli had had a history of violent crime but was released on parole (though had the DA been notified as they should have been, his parole likely would not have gone through). Cinelli also died that day
So how does a Christian respond? It's hard to say on any issue that there is one Christian response. I oppose it, and Walters-Sleyon will speak about his opposition as well. But it's an issue in a wider context. This is not just a simple question of one law, or putting people in prison for longer. This issue is a knot of social issues; racism, poverty, and economics all come together in a particularly American stew. Prisons are big moneymakers, particularly those operated by private firms, a practice that is more and more common. The more we build the more prisoners are incarcerated, curiously despite the fact the crime is actually decreasing (no, it's not because all the criminals are in jail). The Corrections Corporation of America, a builder of private prisons, chillingly cautioned investors in their 2005 annual report that profits would go down if drug or immigration laws were changed. Naturally, their lobbyists are busy making sure that doesn't happen.
There are six million people under "correctional control," either in prison or on parole or probation, which would make it the second largest city in the country. Particularly in black communities, a conversation is taking place that we need to use the term "abolition." More than half of all black men without a high school diploma find themselves in prison at some point. Despite relatively equal rates of drug use, black people in the US are significantly more likely to be incarcerated for drug crimes. Blacks are now incarcerated seven times as often as whites. In her book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Era of Colorblindness, Michelle Alexander points out that there are more blacks in the US prison system than there were in slavery in 1850. Dominic Cinelli was white, but the bill that seeks to respond to his crime will disproportionately impact black people.
Sociologists and law enforcement are the experts; I don't know how best to allocate punishment to crime, though I intuit there is a lot wrong with how we do it now. As Christians, our job is to try to reconcile the state of our world with the judgment of Matthew 25:
Then they also will answer, "Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?" Then he will answer them, "Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me." And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.' (v.44-46)
To look at social issues with the eyes of Christ: that is, to look not at "social issues" at all. It is our job to look at human beings. The family that is left behind, the son or daughter whose mother is addicted, the felon who can't even get a job at McDonald's with a record. What does it do to a person to separate them from society and permanently disenfranchise him? However much prison time a convicted felon has served, s/he still loses the right to vote, permanently. What does it say about us as a society that our system deems certain persons beyond salvation? What does it say about our values that we spend $10,000 a year for a school aged child's education but allocate $47,000 for one inmate? How do we respond to those who have lost hope? Worse, when desperation is a logical response to an impossible situation?
As always, I end with more questions than answers. But I look forward to Monday evening to hear what I can do. RSVP and share the event on facebook.
Blessings,
Sara+
Friday, August 14, 2009
Back from Vacation
I had a wonderful time on vacation this summer with my family in Maine, but it is also nice to be back in the office catching up with each of you. We spent two weeks in Lubec, near the Canadian border on the Bay of Fundy, and it was beautiful. It feels odd to come back from vacation and already be getting ready for my maternity leave; the baby is due on September 28, so I plan to work up to and including Sunday the 27th (assuming he or she isn't early). I'm glad to have some time to begin the fall before handing over the reigns to the Rev. Cathy Venkatesh, who will be filling in for me until Christmas--I'll be back for our service on December 24.
On the topic of planning, I'd like your help for considering what to do for Advent. Our weeknight worship, supper, and education series will return for those 4 Tuesdays. Rev. Cathy will celebrate the Eucharist but has a toddler to put to bed, so she won't be staying for the second part of the evening. I would love to have a series where parishioners could offer their learning to each other-if you have something you might be willing to share, whether explicitly "spiritual" or not, please give me your ideas so we can put something together! We'll also need someone to coordinate the dinner part of the sessions (you won't have to cook every week; you'd just be the one to order the pizza when no one else signs up).
This Sunday, we welcome Bob Wojcik, founder of Children of Incarcerated Parents. His talk coincides with the last Sunday to bring in school supplies for CoIP's backpack program. Bob is a friend of Sue Burkart's. She wrote in her July Fieldstone Crier article, "Bob has been of great service to many of his fellow inmates and their families over the years and is living proof of how people can change with God's help." Bob was recently given parole after 15 years of incarceration. He will speak on his prison experience, the importance of prisoners maintaining family ties, and the anguish their children go through. I'll close here with our prayer book's prayer for Prisons and Correctional Institutions (BCP 826)
Lord Jesus, for our sake you were condemned as a criminal: Visit our jails and prisons with your pity and judgment. Remember all prisoners, and bring the guilty to repentanceand amendment of life according to your will, and give them hope for their future. When any are held unjustly, bring them release; forgive us, and teach us to improve our justice.Remember those who work in these institutions; keep them humane and compassionate; and save them from becoming brutal or callous. And since what we do for those in prison, O Lord, we do for you, constrain us to improve their lot. All this we ask for your mercy's sake. Amen.
Blessings,
Sara+