š Reading: Jesus, the Imprisoned, and You
š Reading 1: Jesus, the Imprisoned, and You
Scripture Focus: Matthew 25:36ā40
Theme: Encountering Christ in Locked Places
Length: ~2,500 words
šŖ Introduction: Meeting Christ in a Prison Cell
For most people, prison is a place they hope to never see.
The idea of stepping behind locked gates, surrounded by concrete, surveillance, and despair, is unsettling.
But for the corrections chaplain, these locked places are sacred spaces.
They are thresholds of grace.
They are rooms of redemption.
Because Jesus has already gone ahead of us.
š Matthew 25:36ā40 ā The Words That Change Everything
āI was in prison, and you came to me.ā ⦠āTruly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these my brothers, you did for me.ā
ā Matthew 25:36, 40 (WEB)
This statement from Jesus is not metaphorical.
He doesnāt say āYou visited someone in prison like you were visiting Me.ā
He says you came to Me.
In this moment of divine judgment, Christ aligns Himself completely with the imprisoned.
He makes no distinction between His own body and the broken bodies behind bars.
This Scripture not only affirms prison ministryāit places it at the center of how we respond to the gospel.
āļø Who Are the āLeast of Theseā?
In ancient culture, prisoners were seen as cursed, shameful, unclean, and often disposable.
In modern society, that sentiment still lingers:
- Prisoners are dehumanized in media
- Families feel ashamed
- Communities push them to the edge
- And even churches sometimes forget them
But Jesus doesnāt.
He calls them His brothers.
He draws near to them.
He invites His followers to do the same.
The āleast of theseā are not the least in His kingdom. They are often first in receiving grace.
šļø A Theology of Incarnational Ministry
Jesus didnāt avoid suffering. He entered it.
He didnāt minister from a distance. He dwelt among us (John 1:14).
When we walk into correctional facilities, we do not bring Christ with usāHe is already there.
Chaplaincy is incarnational ministry:
- We bring a face of mercy to places shaped by shame.
- We walk among wounded image-bearers as fellow image-bearers.
- We carry the presence of Christ by being present.
š Ministry Sciences Insight:
Ministry that touches the soul happens not through status, but presence.
A chaplainās dignity, humility, and relational integrity are what open hearts.
š£ Testimony 1: āI Thought I Was There to HelpāUntil I Met Jesus in Themā
āI signed up to volunteer at the jail thinking Iād bring hope to broken people.
What I didnāt expect was how often Jesus would speak to me through them.
One day, a man shared his storyābetrayal, addiction, repentance. He quoted Scripture from memory and cried as he prayed for me.
That day, I left with this truth ringing in my heart:
I came to visit Jesus. I just didnāt realize it yet.ā
ā Chad, Volunteer Chaplain, County Jail Ministry
š§ Chaplains as Witnesses, Not Fixers
Itās easy to fall into the trap of trying to be the āanswer.ā
But chaplains are not saviorsāthey are servants.
They are not therapists, though they bring healing.
They are not judges, though they model truth.
They are not teachers onlyāthey are witnesses.
A witness listens.
A witness reflects Christās presence.
A witness knows the ministry is not about them.
āIf we listen carefully, we often hear the Holy Spirit before we ever speak the gospel.ā ā CLI Training Reflection
š” Jesusā Arrest and Trial: God Among the Condemned
It is no small thing that Jesus Himself was arrested.
He was bound.
Tried.
Beaten.
Mocked.
Condemned.
And executed like a criminal.
Luke 22ā23 paints a picture of the Savior identifying fully with the accused.
He did not shout His innocence.
He bore silence.
He bore injustice.
He died among the condemned.
āHe was numbered with the transgressors.ā ā Isaiah 53:12 (WEB)
What this means for chaplains is profound:
- We do not lower ourselves to enter a prison.
- We follow Jesus there.
𤲠Testimony 2: āA Sacred Silence in the Isolation Unitā
āThe isolation wing is the hardest. No eye contact. No words. Just locked cells.
I once asked an officer if I could walk through with my Bible and pray silently. He allowed it.
As I passed by each door, I paused. I whispered the names I knew.
Afterward, the officer said, āWhatever youāre doing, keep doing it. That pod hasnāt been this quiet in months.ā
I believe Christ walked with me that day. And the men inside sensed Himāeven if they couldnāt say it.ā
ā Maria, State Prison Chaplain
š The Judgment of Nations: Not a Future, but a Mirror
In Matthew 25, Jesus doesnāt give us a future prediction onlyāHe gives us a present mirror.
How we treat āthe least of theseāāthe hungry, the sick, the imprisonedāis how we are treating Him.
This is not about earning salvation.
It is about responding to the grace weāve already received.
When you visit the imprisoned, pray with them, remember their name, offer them a Bible, sing with them, listen to their storiesā¦
You are doing it unto Christ.
š Testimony 3: āThe Day I Was OrdainedāInside the Fenceā
āI had completed my training with CLI and was finally ready for ordination.
But I didnāt want a church sanctuary. I asked to be ordained inside the prison.
That day, we gathered in the chapel. Thirty inmates in the pews.
A volunteer mentor prayed over me.
I made my vows in the very place I felt most aliveāthe place where Jesus had called me to serve the forgotten.
I believe Jesus was in the room. Not watching, but smiling.ā
ā Tasha, Chaplain, Womenās Correctional Facility
š Biblical Justice vs. Human Judgment
Human systems often categorize people permanently:
- āFelonā
- āRepeat offenderā
- āHopelessā
But God speaks a different word:
āIf anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.ā ā 2 Corinthians 5:17 (WEB)
Jesus offers justice rooted in redemption, not just retribution.
A chaplain brings this hope to the heart of a system often governed by shame.
𧬠Ministry Sciences: Presence Is the First Sacrament
Ministry Sciences frames chaplaincy this way:
- The first gift you bring is not a sermon.
- Itās not correction.
- Itās not a program.
It is presence.
In prison chaplaincy, presence becomes sacramentalāa visible, physical reminder that God has not forgotten.
When you show up faithfully, the Holy Spirit often whispers through your silence.
š Final Reflection
Ask yourself:
- What would it mean for you to truly see Jesus in the imprisoned?
- What in your story has prepared you for this?
- Where might Christ be calling you to carry His presence next?
š Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus,
You were bound for our freedom.
You were falsely accused for our redemption.
You walked the path of injustice for our salvation.
Give us courage to follow You into the locked places.
Make us sensitive to Your Spirit.
Open our eyes to see You in the forgotten.
And teach us to serve not with pride, but with presence.
Amen.
š Academic Reference Page
Reading 1: Jesus, the Imprisoned, and You
š Biblical References (WEB ā World English Bible)
- Matthew 25:36ā40 ā āI was in prison, and you came to me.ā
- Isaiah 53:12 ā āHe was numbered with the transgressors.ā
- John 1:14 ā āThe Word became flesh and lived among usā¦ā
- Luke 22ā23 ā The arrest, trial, and execution of Jesus
- 2 Corinthians 5:17 ā āIf anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.ā
š Theological and Academic Sources
- Nouwen, Henri. The Wounded Healer. Image, 1979.
- Day, Katie. āChaplains as Liminal Workers.ā Journal of Pastoral Theology, 2012.
- Clouser, Roy A. The Myth of Religious Neutrality. University of Notre Dame Press, 2005.
- Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Letters and Papers from Prison. SCM Press, 1953.
- Christian Leaders Institute. Ministry Sciences Curriculum Research Notes, 2024.