Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Expanded Prayer


May our Prisons
to become places of healing and peace.


"Remember those in prison as if you were their fellow prisoners, and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering."
Hebrews 13:3 NIV


How many times have you heard of some terrible crime and prayed a prayer for the bad guy to get all the punishment he could, "Rot in hell," you cursed, or thinking of our current prison system, "You'll get what you deserve!"

When we cast someone into hell in our hearts, with our words, with our tax dollars, with our votes, when we pray to throw them into our current prison system forever, to lock them up and throw away the key, we pray a prayer of vengeance.

Consider a different approach. "May they never do harm again" is prayer that will lift you up when you pray it. Pray that they find a love-filled purpose to their lives. Pray that somehow, some way, a healing grace penetrates all obstacles and breaks open the old patterns and guides a new way forward, for them, for everyone.

Next time you hear of a tale of crime, be shocked, and despair over the broken lives that have broken more lives. Then pray. Invite love and hope, rather than fear or hatred, to flow through your heart.

Pray for ourselves: Begin with me. Unlock the prison gates of my heart and release my stereotypes and negativity. Let my compassion flow into the darkest places within the world and within me.

Pray for the victim: May their healing come quickly. May they grow even stronger through this ordeal. May they receive the support and love they need to not become bitter. May their anger be released in healthy ways as they rise above this turmoil to find peace again.

Pray for the witnesses and the families of the victims: May the horror of these days awaken a deep compassion in their hearts. May the support they provide for their suffering loved one open up a flow of love inside their families that bring healing for generations.
Pray for the officers, judges, jurors, and other professionals tending to the investigation, arresting and prosecuting: May they be open to possibilities and unbiased in perception. May they know peace in their hearts and firmness in their resolve to best serve all.

Pray for the perpetrators of the crime: May they awaken to the human consequences of their actions and take responsibility for their lives. May they know the character building consequences of remorse, and find their own way through despair into an opening of self understanding and honest rebuilding of their lives. May they receive the healing resources that match their needs and abilities to change and grow. May they find love and strength as a consequence of the discipline and hardship which they must bear as a result of their incarceration. May they serve their time in a manner that brings forth the best in themselves and their prison-mates. May they never intentionally harm another person again. May those who cannot or will not be healed be cared for with respect and protection from their own worst nature.

Pray for the families: May they have the strength to persevere in their support and visits despite so many hardships. May the families of those incarcerated get the support they need to find their way without their father or son, mother or daughter. May the "sins of the fathers" be healed so that their children might realize their own potential as healthy contributing citizens.

Pray for the parolees: May they find "welcome home" banners in their neighborhoods and churches. When they leave prison, may they receive the support they need to lead an honorable life.

Pray for the men and women who have the jobs to supervise and care for the incarcerated: May the officers who must remain vigilant watching for wrongdoing, also have the compassion to guide these men forward with a positive tough love. May the administration find its way through the bureaucracy of logistics and legal maneuvering to create policies to transform the lives of the incarcerated and the whole prison system. May our prison system become respected for its applications of the best in human potential wisdom. May we measure our success in the ever-diminishing need for prisons, and our the ever-increasing feelings of safety.

Pray for the parole officers: May they find an engaged society where businesses feel protected and comfortable taking a risk and hiring these newly trained and transformed individuals. May they find fulfillment through successful reentry with adequate resources.

Pray for the chaplains, teachers and mental health professionals: May they apply the best of their tradition's wisdom for healing and transformation. May they be capable of the personal challenges of helping people heal who have violated our sense of what's right. May they know they are not alone in their efforts and caring.

Pray for the prison environment: May the cell-blocks and yards be cleansed of the build-up of fear, hatred, revenge, violence and terror that has saturated their walls. May the atmosphere transcend fears and find forgiveness, release despair and discover hope, surrender shame and encounter creativity, find no place for revenge and abundant room for the practice of compassion.

Pray for the spiritual well being of all concerned: May all the guides, angels, ancestors and teachers of divine nature be aroused and activated. May we all learn how to ask for, and receive God's grace. May the will of God for each human to achieve their fullest potential be realized through our correctional system. Amen

To Pray for Our Prisons is to call upon the Light of God, already deep within each of the incarcerated, within each of the employees, and within every family that has been affected. To pray for our prisons is to call upon God to heal us all.

To Pray for Our Prisons is to call upon this Force that cares not just for the future of each of the individuals involved, but for the very fabric that binds us all together. We pray so that we may heal the notion that we can cast off any part of our community, or any member of our human family. We pray for our prisons so that we may live in communities that are safe, healthy and full of kindness.

To Pray for Our Prisons is to acknowledge that what we know (of causes and solutions) is only partial. The answers lie not in us, but in inviting the Power of Love to move through us.

Love is seeking a way forward. Prayer will open many pathways for our criminal justice system and our prison system to become institutions promoting healing and peace, safety and justice. Prayer begins in our hearts. Let us pray.

For the story behind this project:
www.prayingforourprisons.blogspot.com

Abbreviated from a longer essay by Judy Tretheway and Myrna Echols of Compassionate Action in Sacramento, CA. This 2 page prayer is available as a pdf booklet, and as a word document. The longer version is available as a pdf for your own reading, reprinting, or contact us for copies.

1 comment:

  1. This prayer brings tears to my eyes and opens my own heart. I understand so very well the work it takes to look at "evil" without revulsion, anger, withdrawal. Sometimes it helps me when I can truly envision that "evil" only means an absence of love. It does damage, but it is not a true will or intention, but an intention damaged by the lack of love and, usually, therefore the exaggerated presence of fear. Self-ness takes over when love is absent, and the self is threatened when love is absent. Sorry: I seem to be writing an investigation myself when I only wanted to thank you and appreciate your efforts and join with you in the intention to heal the "out there" as well as the within.
    Juanita Rice

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