Weekly meetings available to you are as follows:

Tuesday at 6:30 PM, Truitt Baptist Church - Pearl. Call Matt Flint at (601) 260-8518 or email him at matthewflint.makes@gmail.com.

Wednesday at 6:00 PM, First Baptist Church Jackson - Summit Counseling Suite - 431 North State St. Jackson. Call Don Waller at 601-946-1290 or email him at don@wallerbros.com.

Monday at 6:30 PM , Vertical Church - 521 Gluckstadt Road Madison, MS 39110. Mr. Roane Hunter, facilitator, LifeWorks Counseling.

Wednesday at 7:00 PM, Crossgates Baptist Church. Brandon Reach out to Matthew Lehman at (601)-214-4077 for further info.

Sunday night at 6:00 PM, Grace Crossing Baptist Church - 598 Yandell Rd. Canton. Call Joe McCalman at 601-201-5608 or email him at cookandnoonie@gmail.com.


Wednesday, May 31, 2023

"I Found Jesus In Prison..." Ethan #2

 

"For it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so, it's those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love them completely without completely understanding."

 

Norman Maclean ~ A River Runs Through It
 
 

Recommended Reading

 Clancy Martin Is Making Peace With His Suicidal Tendencies (fatherly.com)

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

"Control Or Freedom" - JR Everhart

I was listening to the Pirate Monk podcast today with special guest John Eldredge.  There were many things discussed that struck a nerve with me, but in lieu of writing about them all, one statement hit me hardest.  John said, ”You either choose control or freedom.  But you can’t have both…” 

Being a habitual control freak for most of my life, this statement really made me dive deep into the foundations of my control issues.  I’ve worked very hard to untangle my control issues and discovered that the first few layers of this compulsive behavior had been built on fear.  In my sick, addiction brain, I thought I could control the world around me.  Control the harm that effected my loved ones, and do damage control regarding Murphy’s Law of:  “if anything can go wrong it probably will…”.  

Fear of someone seeing me unable to be completely self-sufficient, fear of not being enough, and the biggest one that caused the most damage in my life… fear of abandonment.  Obsessing over control lies to us, telling us (mostly on a subconscious level) that we can save ourselves from the pain of this world if we can just control everything and everyone around us.  My hardest test within my day-to-day life was allowing my kids to make poor choices.  I always desired to step in and control the situation in order to save them from their own free will.  Whilst reflecting on that, I often wonder how hard this same hands-off approach must be on our loving Heavenly Father as he to sits back and watches us do the same.  But that’s a different discussion. 
At times, codependency is riding shot gun with control.  Control - who's driving the car at 130mph while both of them are screaming and yelling like mindless idiots, heading straight for a 10ft thick brick wall.  That brick wall is absolute destruction relative to any hope of peace and harmony within our lives.  From there, then chaos may very well creep into the control freak's life by whispering lies of impending doom.  For decades, I could never realize why I had no peace and harmony in my life. No matter how hard I tried, I always felt like total calamity was just around the corner.  I still fight this sense of eminent failure, particularly as it relates to my career.  I have layers of redundancy built into everything I do because of this.  I spend sleepless nights playing out the next day's events over and over in my head trying to find a crack in the wall or any minute detail that I may have overlooked.  It’s exhausting and brings about mountains of stress.  I’ve had to learn to do my due diligence and then let it go.  This whole process of control that I'm in bondage to is insanity that I can never find peace with, and it's all due to me acting out these control behaviors.  
But there are times when I’m able to draw boundaries and simply breathe.  This is when freedom arrives, and I’m able to have peace again.  I’ve had to learn to be okay with watching my loved ones fail.  This is very hard!  But what I’ve come to realize is that it’s only through those failures that they can truly grow and learn the lessons life has to teach.  So, I’m actually doing them a disservice by trying to control everything all the time.  Failure is a part of life, and the sooner we get comfortable with allowing others to discover God's purpose inside their problems, the sooner they will mature into the strong, adjusted people we had hoped for all along. 
For years, I couldn’t figure out why my loved ones weren't hearing my words of direction in an attempt to correct their trajectory.  Eventually I realized it’s because you can endlessly tell a person to not put their hand on a hot stove before seeing them choose to do it anyway.  As a result, the burn they receive on their hand teaches them far more deeply than my words ever could have.  Letting go of the desire to police everyone’s life is like mana from heaven.  It opens up our hearts to receive great wisdom.  Letting go and letting God, delivers the freedom and harmony that control promises but never seems to deliver on.  John Eldredge talked about praying this one simple prayer - “Lord, I give everything and everybody to you…”  He does this repeatedly, letting go of the stress and anxiety.  I think I’m going to start giving that one a test drive in my own prayer life today. 

Thursday, May 25, 2023

A Very Important Samson Announcement

 

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

"I Found Jesus In Prison..." Ethan #1

"For it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so, it's those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love them completely without completely understanding."

 

Norman Maclean ~ A River Runs Through It

 

As I begin to share Ethan's writing with you, I felt it appropriate to begin with an article he wrote some time into his incarceration. In this article, he was thinking about his eventual re-entry into society, and reflecting upon his time spent behind bars. It is a fitting way to begin this series.

~Stephen

 

 

Monday, May 22, 2023

"I Found Jesus in Prison..." Ethan Intro.

 

"For it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so, it's those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love them completely without completely understanding."

 

Norman Maclean ~ A River Runs Through It

 

 

I found Jesus in Prison…

 

Throughout my 30's and into my 40's, I have been in and out of our state prison system many times. But somehow, only by the grace of God, I have always managed to get out! It's like I tell my son all the time: "going into prison isn't necessarily a bad thing...just make sure that you can get out!" The old cliché would have you believe that a good number of men who enter into prison find "religion" and subsequently find Jesus. Many, however, do not. I suppose that is true to a certain extent, as I have seen a great many men who have experienced a heart change that made them desire something that only Jesus can give. I figure that there is something about hearing that big, metal door slam shut behind you that will make you realize that there is no way out, and no hope for the future except through kneeling at the cross of Jesus!

 

Back in February 2011, I was invited to join Kairos Prison Ministry International. While I was initially very apprehensive about going inside the walls of a prison, I prayed about it and quickly felt as it was indeed God's will for my life at that time. A year after beginning my involvement in Kairos, I was asked to help start a "re-entry" mentoring program that had been the brainchild of one of the executive directors at a local television station. Normally, the rules of Kairos state that you are not allowed to be a part of another prison ministry while concurrently serving in Kairos. This program was one of the few exceptions made, and my dear friend, "Buddy" and myself began mentoring men inside the walls of Central Mississippi Correctional Facility.

 

The program was designed to mentor men who were within one to two years of release, in order to prepare them for re-entry into society on the outside. Buddy and I had the opportunity to go through the mentoring process with two separate individuals, both of whom went on to be released.

 

I met Ethan in the fall of 2012 when I was around 32. He went through a Kairos weekend that I was serving on. He was only around 21 or 22 years of age, but was such an old soul. Indeed, what struck me was that he possessed a depth that very few early twenty somethings could lay claim to. Ethan was quiet, soft-spoken and very humble. He had found himself in prison due to series of tragic events that had taken place in his life. When he was in high school, Ethan's dad, a healthy, fit man in the prime of his life, suddenly dropped dead of a heart attack; I honestly believe that this had caused Ethan's life to derail for a period of time.

 

It wasn't too long after the Kairos weekend ended, that Buddy and I began to wrap up mentoring our second "mentee." I needed a break, and had planned on not mentoring for a period of time while I took a sabbatical. However, Ethan had mentioned during the Kairos weekend that he was looking for a mentor and had just been accepted into the re-entry mentoring program. He found out that I was involved with the program, and had approached me asking if I knew of anyone willing to mentor him.

 

After the weekend, I couldn't stop thinking about Ethan, and what it would be like to mentor him. After much prayer, I called Buddy and hold him what was on my heart. I asked Buddy if he would be willing to work with me for a third time so that we might mentor Ethan. Buddy said yes, he would, but he shared a very surprising revelation with me.

 

There was a longtime Kairos volunteer by the name of "Mickey" (yes, like the mouse) who had served on the last Kairos weekend where I had met Ethan. Mickey had never been a part of the mentoring program, and had never mentored before, but had been a part of many Kairos weekends both at CMCF and at Parchman penitentiary. On the weekend, Mickey had recognized Ethan, and had mentioned to Buddy in passing that Ethan's late father had been his best friend in high school as well as his roommate in college. Ethan knew of Mickey, but two had not really had a chance to connect over the Kairos weekend. Ethan was apparently the spitting image of his late father, so it had simultaneously been both a bit of a shock and a moment of dé·jà vu when Mickey had seen Ethan on the weekend.

 

"I really feel like you should call Mickey and ask him to mentor Ethan with you…" had been Buddy's response when I asked him to join me in a third round of mentoring. While Buddy was willing, he wanted to give Mickey the opportunity to connect with Ethan through mentoring. Normally, mentoring match ups were done on a random basis, but since there were currently no mentors available at the time and Ethan had been accepted into the program and was waiting on a mentor, the powers that be gladly honored my specific request to begin mentoring Ethan. And began the season of life that found Mickey, Ethan, and myself meeting twice a month for the next year and a half. Those were some really sweet moments as Mickey was able to connect with Ethan through the common ground they shared with his late father. Ethan taught me a lot, as we went through Rick Warren's Purpose Driven Life together and other studies over the course of the time that we had together.

 

It was through mentoring that I discovered that Ethan had a love of writing. As a college English instructor, I was able to connect with him in that way and offer him much encouragement to pursue his love for writing. Ethan's grandmother owned a small-town, local newspaper in Alabama. Ethan's late grandfather, Hollis, had been a newspaperman and editor until his death. While locked up, Ethan began writing a column titled "Penned Behind Bars." His columns were interesting, thought provoking, and in general, were well very written.

 

After his release, Ethan went to the University of Southern Mississippi, then later moved to Alabama where he took over as editor of the newspaper. The next year, I became a dad and super busy in my own way. I always kept up with Ethan, but time and distance slowly worked their way into our relationship. Ethan was very successful and became a leader in his community in Alabama. But Ethan had always carried a huge weight in his life. He had internal battles that he fought, and scars that he never truly healed from. In spite of having a huge support system and many friends, Ethan sadly ended his life in October of 2021. I remember the day I got the news and how this huge gaping wound opened in my heart. Time has helped a little, and now the wound is not as big. But it's still there and I still wish I could see Ethan one more time. I wish I could give him one more hug and spend one more hour with him. I loved Ethan like a brother, and told him that on more than one occasion. He knew it, and he also had SO many others who loved him. But it wasn't enough.

 

There is a quote from one of my favorite books, A River Runs Through It. In the book, the author states that "…it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so, it's those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love them completely without completely understanding."


 

We can love others, and we can try to reach them in the best way we know how. But sometimes, our best just isn't enough. Sometimes, the candle of the person we care about simply doesn't have enough strength to keep burning here in this old world that we live in. And so it dies out. But there's a place on Heaven's bright shore where candles burn bright with an eternal flame. A place where all the flames extinguished here on Earth have been re-lit. Ethan's candle burns once more. The arms of Jesus wrap around him, and Ethan's earthly scars are gone. One day I will see him again, along with everyone else that I dearly miss. Over the next few months, I will be sharing some of Ethan's writings with you each Wednesday. For me, it will be a somewhat difficult and bittersweet trip down memory lane, as I have not looked at these in years.

 

~S

 

The only scars in Heaven, they won't belong to me and you…

There'll be no such thing as broken, and all the old will be made new…

And the thought that makes me smile now, even as the tears fall down…

Is that the only scars in Heaven, yeah, are on the hands that hold you now.