When A Community Shapes You
In 1992, police officers were staking out Michael鈥檚 home.
Bill Corner, at the time a member of the local police department, was one of the officers waiting to apprehend Michael, who would be sentenced to life in prison for second-degree murder. The two鈥檚 paths would cross again almost 30 years later.
鈥淚 was heartbroken the night of my crime. I broke a lot of hearts, people were deeply impacted,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 believe I had ended a life. My humanity ended the moment I ceased esteeming another鈥檚.鈥
鈥淗ours after he committed the crime, he realized he threw his life away,鈥 said Todd Cioffi, director of the 17c起草社区 Prison Initiative.
鈥淢y only way to deal with taking another鈥檚 life was through God鈥檚 mercy and grace,鈥 said Michael.
Seeds scattered
Michael admits to growing up in a Christian home, with a mom who he describes as a bulwark of faith, as someone who carefully planted seeds in his life, seeds that were still there, but had not taken root.
鈥淲hen he went to prison, he hit the gate wondering 鈥榦kay what do I do? He was on a path of understanding I鈥檓 not this person, I鈥檝e got to get this right,鈥 said Cioffi.
Unfortunately for Michael, the soil inside the prison fences was hard, and any support system he had was seemingly gone. This was the environment where he would wrestle day-after-day with his destructive, life-altering decision.
鈥淚 wrestled with that over the years, through that lens of faith, the fact that God鈥檚 mercy and love is greater than my sin,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a truth I needed to grow into.
鈥淚n prison, you鈥檙e living in a fishbowl of people who have done deplorable things, myself included, and you can鈥檛 get away from them, some of them are unrepentant for what they did. One of the hardest things for me is knowing the light hasn鈥檛 turned on for these guys, and then seeing them go back into society and coming right back to prison.鈥
鈥淗ere鈥檚 a guy who wants to become rehabilitated, you don鈥檛 have to convince him of it,鈥 said Cioffi, 鈥渁nd yet, the prison setting has so little to offer, so he鈥檚 grabbing at anything they鈥檒l give him.鈥
Discovering his calling
So Michael got to work. He was committed to becoming the best version of himself. And he soon knew part of that calling was so he could help his fellow inmates to do the same.
鈥淚 was present to these people in their suffering, in their mess, amidst their hurt,鈥 said Michael of his fellow inmates. 鈥淭his was my calling.鈥
And Michael鈥檚 pursuit of this calling was met with opportunities. He learned several vocational trades, took every unaccredited class he could find, learned how to speak Spanish and how to interpret sign language鈥攂uilding up his understanding and helping to remove barriers so he could care well for those around him.
鈥淚 thought perhaps the reason some of my fellow inmates were unrepentant about what they鈥檇 done is they hadn鈥檛 figured out how to deal with it,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淢y only way to deal with it was through God鈥檚 mercy and grace. I was someone they could speak with. I listened to them, asked questions that helped me gain perspective, and I offered perspective that allowed them to understand God鈥檚 grace and mercy.鈥
An unexpected turn
The work Michael was doing prepared him for a life-changing opportunity that came his way 23 years into his sentence 鈥
鈥淚t was an awesome opportunity,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚 thought 鈥榯his is just amazing.鈥欌
Michael was admitted into the first cohort of the 17c起草社区 Prison Initiative at Handlon Correctional Facility in Ionia, Michigan. Even though he was serving a life sentence, through this program, he鈥檇 have the opportunity to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree behind bars.
鈥淚n our Developing a Christian Mind Class, Professor Cioffi talked about this upside-down worldview 鈥 how God does that 鈥 how the least shall be the greatest,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚 felt among the least. Though I had no meaningful chance of getting out as far as society was concerned, being given this opportunity fit with that narrative.鈥
Three years into the five-year program at Handlon Correctional Facility, Michael and the inaugural CPI cohort would earn associate degrees, with a ceremony being held to honor their achievement. While earning the degree served as a significant milestone, it was what Michael saw that day that meant the most.
鈥淚 was surrounded by every professor I had from that point,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淵ou want to talk about the power of community that comes through. We are communal beings, we find and form identity within community, and that was rich and robust in the CPI program. And then at any milestone moment, we鈥檇 have just an incredible number of staff show up in academic regalia, giving us a sense of dignity, value, and worth for who we are. We鈥檇 have donors and staff come and celebrate with us. There are layers to this community that formed and shaped me, helped me gain a richer understanding of who I was. I am a son of God, accepted son of God, this wild shoot grafted on to this living vine 鈥 to belong to this community of Christ-hearted, Christ-loving people.鈥
And Michael found out just weeks prior that he would be physically much closer to this community. Twenty-six years after he stepped inside prison walls, he would take his first steps out.
Heading home
鈥淚 was in a state of shock. I鈥檓 in a dream. The reality was too big for me to process as I was walking out the door,鈥 said Michael.
His family and close friends, including a family who had walked alongside him for decades while he was behind bars, were there to greet him and to take him out to breakfast. It was a prodigal son moment.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have had a softer landing, full wardrobe, a car, appliances that I鈥檇 need, bath towels, boots, winter coat, I even had a phone handed to me,鈥 said Michael.
His next stop? 17c起草社区鈥檚 main campus.
鈥淲hen I showed up to Spoelhof Center, the 17c起草社区 community was there to greet me,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚t was this continuity of identity.鈥
An unforeseen reunion
And one of the first people he鈥檇 see on the main campus was one of the last people he saw when he was a free man 26 years prior: Bill Corner, now the director of campus safety at 17c起草社区. The officer who had been pursuing Michael for his crime, was now pursuing him as a mentor.
鈥淭here鈥檚 always that fear that I鈥檓 going to be judged for the worst thing I鈥檝e done, and I have sympathy for those who can鈥檛 get past that, but when people can relate to who I am versus who I was, that is so affirming.鈥
Michael sees Corner as both a mentor and friend. He鈥檚 someone he鈥檚 shared family meals with, received guidance from in encountering people from his past, and talked to about everything from sports to recently listened to sermons.
鈥淗e鈥檚 been a constant presence in my life,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淚鈥檓 so grateful for all the Bill Corners of this world.鈥
Layers of support
And in his experience, there are a number of 鈥淏ill Corners鈥 on 17c起草社区鈥檚 Knollcrest campus in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he completed his bachelor鈥檚 degree in May 2020.
鈥淭hese people are on fire, they love God, they are not doing this for a paycheck, they really love what they are doing,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淲hat I saw at Handlon was supersized on the main campus. It didn鈥檛 matter when or where or how; you can catch a professor so easily to have encounters and conversations. Having a PhD professor relating to you as a fellow human being, to give that to a person, like myself, whose humanity has been suppressed throughout prison, you put me in this nutrient-rich environment, I can鈥檛 help but grow.鈥
Michael is grateful for the many layers of community that have walked alongside him on his journey, including 17c起草社区 and 17c起草社区 Theological Seminary faculty, staff, students, and donors, a church congregation, family and friends, and many others. With that continued support, he is passionately living out his calling.
Through his internship in the social work program at 17c起草社区, Michael was connected with a faith-based nonprofit that assists returning citizens with recovery and reentry. Today, he has his bachelor's degree in social work, and works there full-time as a reentry and recovery coach.
鈥淢y story is one of the power of community in shaping someone. Until you realize that need and how great that need is, you aren鈥檛 even aware of it,鈥 said Michael. 鈥淭hrough my journey, God showed me that he is bigger than my mess, bigger than my pain. Where I was once an agent of destruction who didn鈥檛 care about anyone but myself, now my education forms me as an agent of renewal.鈥