Neighbor News
A Lifeline Through Prison Walls
Jehovah's Witnesses continue their ministry inside prisons without sending in ministers.
“I had no idea that was going to be the last time I walked through those double gates,” said Bubba Cobb of Charleston, Mississippi. For years he had been making regular trips to the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman to help inmates build a relationship with God. He would meet with a group of usually 10 to 15 inmates in a regular bible study course. “I thought we would be back next week to have another study, just like we had been doing,” says Cobb.
Without warning, COVID-19 would shut down access to prisons across the US, including those in Mississippi. Inmates were soon cut off from a robust Bible education program that included weekly Bible-based discourses, audience discussions, individual Bible studies, and video presentations.
Rhonda Jones, a jailer at Newton County Correctional Facility in Newton, Mississippi could see the impact that the pandemic was having on the inmates there. “They were more irritable and angry. Not having visitors and not being able to have ministers come in and share something positive was affecting everyone,” says Jones. “I just know they needed something. They needed more.”
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“Our concern was for them,” said Dan Houghton, who helps coordinate the efforts of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ prison ministry in the U.S. “They needed us now more than ever. They were cut off from their lifeline of spiritual feeding.”
Jehovah’s Witnesses pivoted their in-person ministry and activities around the country to virtual meetings and preaching through letters, telephone calls, and videoconferencing to adapt to the changing circumstances. This change also included their focused prison ministry.
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“Nothing can stop God’s love from reaching people, no matter where they are,” says prison ministry volunteer Donny Ruffin, who has been visiting county jails in South Mississippi for the last 25 years. When the pandemic kept him from making in-person visits, he started focusing on letters and telephone calls to inmates. “Jehovah never gives up on anyone, even when others have.”
Jeff Zack from Batesville, Mississippi, has regular bible discussions by mail with a prison inmate at Parchman. “I will send him questions, scriptures, and get his personal thoughts on it. We will just go back and forth,” he says. “I don’t want to lose these guys. They deserve the bible’s hope as much as anybody.”
Throughout the country, these changes have reaped unexpected and amazing results. For example, in the state of California, to help the state fulfill its legal obligation to offer religious services to inmates, Jehovah’s Witnesses were asked to provide video content for the television network that broadcasts to all the state prisons. In July, a 28-minute program replete with ASL translation made its debut—broadcasting three times a day, seven days a week, to all 33 state prisons and potentially reaching more than 130,000 residents.
Manolo Rodriguez and his wife Fabiola have spent years volunteering at Sarasota County Jail in Florida, so they understood the struggles the inmates face, from emotional distress, mental illness, drug addiction, to feuds within the jail walls. The Rodriguez’ thought of the comfort the bible could bring to the prison population so they contacted local congregations of Jehovah’s Witnesses and collected all the Bibles that were in stock at their Kingdom Halls, which were shut down due to COVID-19. Within a week, they had donated some 50 Bibles in English, 20 in Spanish, and 30 Bible-based publications in a variety of languages to the county jail.
“I pray that these Bibles will help turn the lives of these people around so that they will not have to come back inside the jail walls,” said Manolo Rodriguez. “We have received word from the facility that some inmates have been enjoying the donated Bibles and literature already.”
Witnesses continue to build a spiritual lifeline into their local prisons in whatever way they can. In Charleston, South Carolina, a Witness prison chaplain keeps up with his six Bible students in the Sheriff Al Cannon Detention Center through video calls. He points his laptop camera to the recorded meetings playing on his iPad, turning his living room into a virtual prison chapel.
Perhaps the most positive pandemic-driven prison preaching initiative takes place on the inside. Inmates from across the country have been writing letters to the Witnesses requesting more Bible-based literature.
At the North Central Correctional Complex in Marion County, Ohio, four prisoners who became Jehovah’s Witnesses were able to report a significant increase in their preaching and ministerial work. Houghton said the inmates realized that they had to “ramp things up” when the Witnesses could no longer come in to help.
Jehovah’s Witnesses value life. It’s their compelling motivation to proactively produce videos, supply literature, write letters—whatever it takes to reach inmates with the Bible’s message.
“Life is sacred. Life is valuable,” said Houghton. “Everyone deserves the chance to learn Bible truths. Some people might say, ‘They’re just prisoners.’ But that’s not how God views them and that’s not how we view them. We love these people.”
