Prisoners & Lepers; Similar Outcasts
In Andrew Lloyd Webbers musical, The Phantom of the Opera, the title character is marred not only physically but emotionally as well. (Some prisoners suffer physical malfunction due to emotional stress.) This poor soul had suffered a lifetime of rejection and a lack of human intimacy. (Most prisoners have experienced a childhood of rejection by their peers or their parents mixed with child abuse as their human intimacy.) In the end, the heroine Christine's Kiss reaches through his murderous rage and brings him to his right mind.
When the leper in Mark 1:40:45 asks of Jesus, "Will you make me clean?" he is not asking only for an acceptable physical appearance; he is also asking to be loved and welcomed by other people again. (Prisoners who also accept Jesus' calling not only ask for a clean heart but also to be loved by their family and acceptable amongst society again.) How long has it been since leper had experienced the touch of another person? (It's been six years for me!) How long since he had felt the warmth of human companionship? (Prisoners feel the ice cold hatred of racial riots!) Yet Jesus' holiness overcame his isolation, just as it overcame the lepers horrible disease; with just one touch! (Mark 1:41)
We know that human touch is vital to our emotional and spiritual balance. Think of how well an infant thrives when he is held, caressed, and cradled by his mother. Think of how positively we all respond to a hand on the shoulder, a gentle kiss on the cheek, a warm embrace. Through simple touch, we can speak volumes about our love, acceptance, and companionship, what's more, we can also speak volumes about God's love.
So reach out and touch a prisoners life today. Don't rely only on the logic of your words. And don't leave everything to God, thinking that he will sweep in and magically transform that person's life. As St. Teresa of Avila said, "Christ has nobody now on earth but yours, no feet but yours, no hands but yours." You can minister God's touch to a prisoner today. You can show them through your own gestures that their heavenly Father loves them, treasures them, and welcomes them.
Prisoners experience the most hurtful emotion a human being can endure, out of sight - out of mind! An outcast, just as the lepers of the Bible.
Rechell Williams #169138 A3-17-7
PO Box 5248
Corcoran, CA 93212
2016 aug 5
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Replies (4)
Thank you so much for your blog post. Our society should treat all with compassion - and allow people who may have harmed another to set those harms right rather than lock them away and have them suffer. It doesn't make any sense!
I am far from CA but hope you can feel the warm energy vibes I am sending your way.
Best,
Susan
Your letter touched me - I cried as I read "realized what the emptiness is for us prisoners... Simple human compassion! Something we're neglected because of what we've done..."
Thinking of compassion as being able to sit with another's pain and perspective from a place of love and concern...
In or out of prison, we've all hurt somebody else. The times I can think of that I've hurt others, I've either forgotten to look out for them, or thought I was doing the best for them while being totally blind to their reality, or, in the moments I am ashamed of, wanted to hurt them. But, often because I felt like *they* weren't getting *me*! How ironic!
Why keep people in isolation and pain? Isn't it better to help people recommit to acting from places of love? (If someone in prison is even there because of something they did to hurt someone and not just racist/sexist/etc. bull**.) Your blessing has given me a piece of your spirit of love - thank you. And I send you back another piece of mine!
Susan