MOSAIC Fall 2014 | Page 29

aa Mary Prevost lives in Royal Oak, Michigan. She is a Eucharistic minister, assists with RCIA, and just started training to facilitate ChristLife in her parish of St. Lucy in St. Clair Shores. Her primary ministry is working with the incarcerated. Mary holds a Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies from Sacred Heart, 2013. She enjoys walking with her dog, Casey, as Casey with tail wagging evangelizes as they bring Communion to homebound neighbors. My Inmates, My Friends Mary Prevost W hen I graduated from “The Heart” last year with a Masters in Pastoral Studies, I thought “Now what, Lord?” Then, a path appeared. I’ve been in prison ministry for about eight years. What’s changed now, though, is that I have clearance with the Michigan Department of Corrections as an Outreach Volunteer. I am able to call out any inmate in any Michigan state prison for a pastoral visit. The hours are long, the commute is awful, the pay is terrible, and there’s no possibility for advancement. In addition, sometimes I’m made to sit and wait for hours to see an inmate. As if that’s not enough, I’m subjected to a demoralizing search. And yet, it’s the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done. Going into a prison isn’t for everyone. It’s not my inmates I fear but the system that ties their hands as well as mine. I look forward to our visits and for most it’s the only one they get. Prisoners are God’s anawim, his little ones, forgotten by everyone but him. Their loneliness is overwhelming. I feed them as well as I can from the offerings in the vending machines. The food in prison is unappetizing and the portions small. On visiting day, though, it’s as if I’ve taken them to a four star restaurant. I’m allowed to take in a Bible but I don’t. My inmates know Scripture better than I do. Jesus has called me to be his hands and his feet on this path and I choose to do that by the example of his life, as Jesus always fed his flock before instructing them. I’ve been invited to speak to a few church groups about my ministry. Public speaking is not one of my gifts; I take the path when it appears, though, because the laity needs to know about these men and women. The speaking stipend allows me to send a food box to my most indigent prisoners, things you and I take for granted: coffee, packaged food, and toiletries. It allows me to send books on birthdays and at Christmas. The questions I’m most often asked are “What do you talk about?” and “Aren’t you afraid of them?” These are my friends. I talk about my life and they talk about theirs, and at the end of the visit, we say a prayer. When I visit Fran, she asks that we pray for her victim’s families. Inmates have made mistakes, bad choices, usually while dealing with the nightmare of addiction or a dysfunctional family background. Oftentimes, their childhoods have been filled with neglect, abuse, and even mental illness. Sometimes our suffering is a gift from God in that he empties us of ourselves and fills us with him. The jour