Saturday, September 21, 2013

Week Two



I’ve learned a few things this week.  The first is that interdepartmental meetings are exceedingly boring but vitally necessary.  I have been impressed with the way the prison staff works together to make decisions about the treatment plans for the inmates.  I have seen how inmates may show one side of their personality to the chapel staff and another to the officers.  Even shift to shift can make a significant difference.  I like the chaplains are included in the decision making and that our opinions are respected.

This week has also cemented within me the idea that love has nothing to do with religion.  All of the inmates I worked with were Christians and they have all assumed that I am as well.  Despite my lack of Christian credentials and experience, I was able to provide comfort and support to them all.   It has shown me that love and compassion go beyond religion and ideology.  It bothers me that so many people assume that you have to be Christian to provide this service.  The half a dozen Pagan chaplains working in hospital and correctional settings will hopefully change that.

I’ve also been thinking a lot about forgiveness.  I am working with people who have committed crimes that are really horrible.  Two of the inmates I have been counseling have been convicted of victimizing children.  I am able to find a way to look past that and work with them as they are today, but I feel like a hypocrite.  I was a child victim myself and I have banished the perpetrator from my life.  I have no desire to forgive him, and yet here I am working with offenders.

This leads me to wonder a lot.  I wonder if forgiveness is something that a chaplain or minister aught to model for others?  I wonder if it is healing for people to forgive the wrongs committed against them?  I wonder if some things that are just unforgivable and I wonder whose job is it to forgive?


Forgiveness is the needle that knows how to mend.
Jewel


Fall Blessings,

                       Chaplain Holly

1 comment:

  1. I have been thinking a lot lately about the concept of "the finger pointing at the moon", or as another quote put it, "Books only show you the way. Once you know the path, what good are books to your journey". I think you can be allowed to feel you are finger, or the book. You are working to guide people along their way to wards connection with the divine. It's probably true that someone could fault you for teaching forgiveness when you don't feel you have perfected the art, but I can't imagine that you've never practiced it, so I guess you know something about forgiveness.
    If anyone want's to fault you for not being a PhD in forgiveness, I think you could point out that for a teachers greatest pleasure can come from the ability of their students to surpass them.
    And as for the people you work with, there is not guarantee they will ever be offered forgiveness, and you may be the ideal person to point that out, and counsel them through it.

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