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Behind the Bars

Friday, June 01, 2012

A few years ago, some members of Immanuel United Reformed Church (URC) in DeMotte, Ind., took part in a Reformed Bible conference hosted by in Danville, Ill. While they were there, Juan*, an inmate and conference attendee, stood up and said, 鈥淲e need a means to study systematic theology.鈥 鈥淲e were blown away,鈥 said Jon Hoek, a member of Immanuel URC. 鈥淚t made us rethink what we were doing and started us thinking in a new direction.鈥

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That new direction was toward biblical instruction at the prison that would offer inmates an orderly, rational and coherent account of Christian faith and beliefs. Three years later, is a reality.

For five hours a day, three days a week, 28 student inmates participate in classes taught by Nathan Brummel 鈥92, former pastor at Cornerstone Protestant Reformed Church in St. John, Ind. Class time is used for biblical exegesis, studying the scriptures and Reformed theology.

鈥淭hey all know their Bible,鈥 Brummel said of his students. 鈥淚n some respects they put us to shame. What鈥檚 missing is an understanding of the doctrine of the Covenant, how it provides the architectonic structure for all of God鈥檚 revelation in Christ, how it ties the biblical message together. At 17c起草社区, I learned to celebrate the life of the mind. I want Christian men in prison to love God with their mind.鈥

鈥楾he Doctrine of God鈥

So in the opening week, students began learning about the attributes of God in their first class, 鈥淭he Doctrine of God.鈥 

鈥淚 learned a new word this week: monotheism,鈥 explained Troy, one of Brummel鈥檚 students.

鈥淚 thought I knew the Bible before, but I鈥檝e already learned that I have to be careful what I say all the time because God is omnipresent,鈥 Renaldo added.

鈥淭he first week was very enlightening,鈥 said Juan. 鈥淕od has many attributes and many names, but He does not change. He is the same 鈥榝rom everlasting to everlasting.鈥欌

And this is just the beginning for the students, according to Brummel, who has plans to delve deeply into the application of doctrine. 鈥淢y students might be tempted to separate their church life from the rest of their activities. I learned at 17c起草社区 that Christ is not only Lord of the institute church, where the preaching and sacraments occur, but He is the Lord of every sphere. I pray that my students would have an 鈥榠ntelligent piety,鈥 so that they would apply their Christian worldview to all of life.鈥

Lessons from Angola

While prison may seem an unlikely place for such an educational endeavor, it is not unprecedented. In fact, the notorious in Louisiana served as the model for the Illinois venture. There, warden Burl Cain approved the establishment of a satellite campus of more than 15 years ago.

Formerly known as 鈥渢he bloodiest prison in the South鈥 due to the high number of inmate assaults, Angola has been transformed by the graduation of 192 inmate ministers, who serve both at Angola and in other prison populations around the state. At Angola violence has declined by 65 percent since the start of the seminary, and most of the previous prison gang leaders are now pastors.

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Board members of Divine Hope and Danville warden Keith Anglin visited Angola while considering the possibility of a seminary in the Illinois prison. 鈥淭he department of corrections embraced this,鈥 said Anglin. 鈥淲e want to be the Angola of Illinois. Our goal would be to have this duplicated in all of the prisons. We鈥檝e had vocational offerings and education opportunities before, but offering a divinity degree has never been done in the state of Illinois before.鈥

Terry Van Der Aa 鈥66, a 17c起草社区 board of trustees member, understands the positive benefits of such an undertaking. He first visited Angola in 2004 at the request of a friend who was involved in assisting recently released prisoners. His heart never left.

鈥淎 lot of people visit prisons because they find the idea intriguing, and then they never go back,鈥 said Van Der Aa. 鈥淚 kept coming back, and I became more attached to the whole process.鈥

So much so that Van Der Aa, a businessman in Hinsdale, Ill., is now chairman of the board of , the world鈥檚 largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families.

鈥淪tates are crying out for help because of poor recidivism rates,鈥 said Van Der Aa. 鈥淕overnors might not be interested in Christianity, but they are interested in lowering their costs by lowering the number of prisoners or in getting their prisons under control. It鈥檚 an amazing opportunity for the church right now.鈥

In fact, recidivism rates drop from over 65 percent to single digits when education and moral rehabilitation has occurred, according to a national study by the .

鈥淭he numbers speak for themselves,鈥 said Van Der Aa. 鈥淚鈥檓 delighted that they are starting this in Illinois.鈥

Longtime partnership

Danville is a medium/high-security prison with an adult male population of 1,833. It is about 150 miles south of Chicago, near the state line of Indiana. Prisoners鈥 sentences vary from several years to life.

Members from Faith URC in Beecher, Ill.; Oak Glen URC in Lansing, Ill.; Redeemer URC in Dyer, Ind.; and Immanuel had partnered with the prison for years, visiting on Sunday mornings and holding worship services. Immanuel had become further involved and had hoped to participate in Manny Mills鈥 , which encourages churches to enfold inmates being released from prison. Immanuel members were disappointed when they were unable to form this partnership with the Danville correctional facility because of restrictions keeping parolees from crossing state lines.

鈥淲e already had this connection with Danville, and we really wanted to do something,鈥 said Hoek.

The idea for the seminary took root and started to grow. A ribbon-cutting ceremony at the prison on March 10, 2012, officially inaugurated the new seminary.

鈥淲e have a King鈥擩esus鈥攚ho reaches down and uses weakness to do great things,鈥 Hoek said at the ceremony. 鈥淲e are a bunch of farmers and construction workers and weak laymen that God used to develop Divine Hope. Now God is using you to study to be theologians who go out and preach and proclaim the gospel in prison and to the world.鈥

A resounding 鈥淎men鈥 echoed across the room.

Guest speaker Nelson Kloosterman 鈥72, executive director of , then spoke on Reformed theological education and social justice, emphasizing that Reformed theological instruction is Bible-based, Christ-centered, a community endeavor and it is only 鈥渨orth its salt鈥 if it is life-changing.

The goal is that students 鈥渓earn to apply God鈥檚 Word and principles to real, concrete, specific life,鈥 he said.

Brummel then added his thoughts: 鈥淚 was paging through the dictionary and with my yellow highlighter highlighted the word rehabilitation. It means, 鈥榯o restore to a useful and constructive place in society through education.鈥

鈥淔rom the perspective of the state, theological education results in moral rehabilitation, which is good,鈥 he continued. 鈥淏ut we are planning on a far greater effect. What we need is a dramatic transformation. Reformed theological instruction weds together the life of the mind with godly character formation. To know God as He truly is must result in a transformed life of piety.鈥

The inmates closed the ceremony with a heartfelt singing of 鈥淲hat a Friend We Have in Jesus.鈥

A great need

Adria Vander Griend Libolt 鈥69, who worked for more than 20 years as a deputy warden in the and now works with ex-offenders, applauds the establishment of Divine Hope.

鈥淚t is not surprising that prisons are ripe for the gospel,鈥 she said. 鈥淧risoners are humbled in a way that is hard to imagine. They often lose everything鈥攆amily, friends, possessions鈥攁nd they are faced with who they are and their great need鈥攚hich is, of course, what we all need to recognize. The spirit is alive in places like this because Jesus Christ comes to places and times like this.鈥

And Juan has come to know Him in this place. 鈥淥nce in my life I just knew of God,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen I came to know Christ; I have come to know Him on a deeper level. I look forward to learning much more in a systematic way that will truly reveal who God is.鈥

Renaldo, too, has felt God already at work. 鈥淚 was a death row inmate. God saved me and redeemed me for this moment. First I got life,鈥 he said, referring to his commuted sentence, 鈥渁nd now I鈥檝e got hope.鈥

*To protect the privacy of inmates, their last names have been omitted.