John 8:31-32
So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, 'If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.'"
Had a great day 1 out of 2 inside with the men of Kairos.
Talking about objective truth vs. subjective truth. About believing that involves conducting yourself like a believer. Paying attention to what God's word says to do. Encouraging them to share that truth by telling others what the word says about the truth.
Know the truth by living the truth. And for those led by the Spirit they should walk in the Truth.
Deuteronomy 6:4-6
"Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart."
When the Scripture repeats something three times...probably better pay attention. Every step, every way you turn, go your way in The Lord. Give it your "all".
And then put it into action. Share unconditional love, grace and mercy.
John 15:12
"This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you."
We tend to instinctively hurt each other. Especially in a prison environment where craziness is the order of every day. And the prison culture only preaches hatred and division. And unfortunately you are intentionally forced into confrontation and violence. And every attempt to silence the pressure or gather together in prayer is suspect and targeted as an offense. Trying to live in Christian community is not encouraged and actively discouraged, to the point of prosecution.
So how does a man trying to walk in the Spirit maintain spiritual warming?
How can he stay connected with other believers?
The fact of the matter is, two dull knives cannot sharpen each other. They've got to leave some things behind. Shake off the pressure and be looking for something, someone, and be praying for The Lord to send his help.
In a prison setting, where hatred, division, forced confrontation, and suspicion of prayer gatherings are the norm, walking in the Spirit means resisting the culture’s pull toward violence or isolation. It’s counter-cultural to choose community in Christ. The prison environment can feel like a constant wind trying to blow out any flame of faith. But Scripture and the testimony experiences of many believers behind bars point to practical, Spirit-dependent ways to keep that fire burning.
Abide personally in the Word and prayer.
Seek small, intentional fellowships. We call it "prayer and share". Look for one or two other believers (or men open to the truth) for quiet prayer, sharing Scripture, or encouragement. When believers intentionally leave old ways behind, knowing the risks, and press into Christ together, growth happens.
And of course we want them to participate in available structured opportunities like Kairos reunions, chapel services, Bible studies, or other programs. Even if limited, showing up consistently builds momentum.
And as our inside speaker shared today, live as a witness in your daily actions. This keeps the spiritual warmth alive internally and draws and inspires others. Always be about planting seeds, even in that hostile soil. Remember God’s presence isn’t limited by bars. Walls can’t block the Holy Spirit.
It’s tough, sometimes it feels like shaking off pressure daily just to stay focused. But the promise still holds. You don’t operate like a saint; you operate like a sheep in wolf’s clothing. You learn to talk rough, to read the room, to stay alive…you don’t preach, you leak. A word here, a refusal to fight there. You’re not trying to convert your "celly", you’re trying not to hate him.
That’s enough. Because one day, he’ll notice. And when he does, you’re still there. Not as a chaplain. As a brother who didn’t swing. Loving him isn’t feeling warm fuzzies, it’s choosing not to ram his teeth in. It’s basically the difference between reacting like a man…and responding like the Son of God who said the greatest love is to give your life for a friend.
Choosing faith over feeling is basically choosing resurrection over round two. And in prison, that’s less a sermon and more a survival plan. Every time you want to lash out, every time you want to say "but I FEEL like…", just hit pause. That’s the pause where Christ lives. That pause where the nails are still hot in the cross. And when you learn to trade that feeling for faith…suddenly the pod isn’t as loud and chaotic. And once you unclench that fist…that’s when your hands are free to hold the next person.
Stop measuring distance by the scars. He doesn’t ask us to solve it all, it’s just ours to notice…and then let it go. He doesn’t wait for you to fix the cycle…He steps in and says "mine now," while you’re still mid-stumble.
That’s the miracle, a little something green in a place with no sun. The Kairos weekend plants the seed, but the concrete keeps trying to crack it. Hard to be vulnerable when a smile could get your teeth kicked in. Kinda makes the whole grace thing more real. No room for "oops". Every kind word feels like a gamble.
Solution:
Navigate smart, stay harmless, stay true. Innocent as doves, but living shrewdness like reading the tension before it boils over, knowing when to speak low and when to stay silent, all while refusing to bite back. That’s the refusal to hate, the choice not to swing, even when every instinct screams otherwise.
Not big preaching crusades, but through that steady leak of grace. Keep showing up for the weekly prayer-and-share group even when the pod’s screaming. Over time, the community grows, violence dips; wardens and studies have noted it repeatedly. Peace replaces some of the constant war, hope edges out despair, depression and suicide is reformed. Not because everyone’s suddenly a saint, but because enough guys start choosing response over reaction.
Grace doesn’t need perfect soil; it just needs one guy willing to take the pause, unclench, and let Christ live in that split-second hesitation.
Then another notices.
Then another.
And before you know it, you've got a fellowship community.
Pray for us.
Pray for tomorrow to bring more inspiration and growing faith.
In Christ, amen.