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Purpose within prison walls: 黑料吃瓜 ministry impacts professors and inmates

Dr. Phil Young鈥檚 morning routine in preparing for class looks a bit different than most college professors. He arrives on site around 7:45 in the morning.

鈥淲e go through all the normal screening that all the staff goes through to make sure we鈥檙e not bringing anything in we shouldn鈥檛,鈥 says Young. 鈥淲e get to the classroom between 7:45 and 8 a.m. Prepare the room for the day. Students begin arriving around 8:15.鈥

It’s a structured routine that the 黑料吃瓜 Director of Prison Ministry and the students have gotten used to since the University launched its prison ministry last fall in coordination with Morgan County Correctional Complex.

Fourteen inmates comprise the group, which began its second year this fall. Each student had to apply to the program designed to offer a Bachelor of Arts degree in Christian Studies, with an emphasis in Christian Ministry. Along with applying, each student had to meet certain criteria.

Carson-Newman鈥檚 Director of Prison Ministry Dr. Phil Young shares a light moment with his faculty team during a fall planning meeting. The University鈥檚 Prison Ministry entered its second year this fall.


鈥淭hey have to articulate a salvation experience in their life 鈥 a time when they came to place their faith and trust in Christ as their savior,鈥 said Young, 鈥渂ecause it is an unapologetically Christian program coming out of Carson-Newman.鈥

The learning process is intense. Five days a week. Six-hour days. Focused. Intentional. Along with a sociology class, courses this fall span from 鈥淚ntro to Old Testament鈥 to 鈥淪ermon Preparation and Delivery.鈥

Young admitted that as one of the program鈥檚 professors, it was initially intimidating. 鈥淵ou think, 鈥榟ow am I going to possibly fill six hours of lecture time for a three-hour course?鈥 But what you find is that the students are very engaged. The classroom typically is very interactive. They鈥檙e asking questions. They鈥檙e sharing opinions. They prepare their material. They鈥檙e very devoted and interested in learning.鈥

He noted the group鈥檚 desire to perform at the highest level 鈥 going above and beyond basic expectations. The classroom engagement oftentimes allows for students to share their life stories. According to Young, the experience opens the door to something special鈥攕ometimes it鈥檚 the professors learning from the students.

鈥淲e get a chance to see how they view their spiritual experience in a very unique and different context than what we bring to the classroom,鈥 said Young. 鈥淲e get to bring our perspective on Scripture and theological education, and they help us see it from their perspective. We get to see it through their eyes, and that helps us to see God in a way that may be bigger and broader than we鈥檝e seen God sometimes in our limited scope.鈥

Young is no stranger to ministry. Following his service in the United States Air Force, he spent 20 years as pastor of a local church. He has served in different roles within the Tennessee Baptist Mission Board, as well as director of missions for the Knox County Association of Baptists. The opportunity to also serve as an adjunct professor at Carson-Newman is something he describes as 鈥渟o fulfilling.鈥

However, following a day of class one fall semester, Young recalls that Dr. David Crutchley, dean of 黑料吃瓜鈥檚 School of Biblical and Theological Studies, approached him about overseeing a new initiative for a Prison Ministry. Not initially drawn to the prospect, Young relented, promising his dean he would have to pray about the offer.

鈥淚 loved being a director of missions and working with churches and pastors. And I loved being able to teach occasionally as an adjunct professor at Carson-Newman,鈥 he said, adding he was in what he believed the 鈥渟weet spot鈥 of concluding of a fulfilling career. 鈥淔ive more years, I will set a new trajectory for the association and be ready to hand that off to the next director,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut I continued to pray about it, and I could never get it out of my mind or my heart.鈥

That鈥檚 when Crutchley offered an invitation to accompany him to interview the first set of applicants at the prison. The visit presented the answer Young had been seeking.

鈥淕od spoke to me very directly through that experience and through the stories of the prison students to tell me that this is where he wanted me this season of my life.鈥 Such clarity has offered peace in his decision. And with the start of his second year, he鈥檚 never looked back.

Young says he continues to be impressed with the dedication the students show and their drive to excel. When summer grades were finalized, the results were undeniable. Of the 14 students in the class, 12 finished the first year with honors. Five students hold a 4.0 GPA. Every member of the class qualifies for membership in Tri-Alpha Honor Society for First Generation College Students.

As pleased as he is with how well the students are doing academically, Young points to a bigger picture that provides context to 黑料吃瓜鈥檚 program: some students will never step outside their current setting, spending the rest of their lives in prison. It is because of that, a different perspective comes into view.

鈥淭his is not just about getting a bachelor鈥檚 degree,鈥 he explained, noting that other educational programs within the state鈥檚 prison system already offer such opportunities.

鈥淲e want to give them a very solid biblical theological education,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut the ultimate goal is that they will be deployed and utilized in the Tennessee prison system as ministers.鈥

The program鈥檚 approach of meeting the inmates where they are and offering a Christ-centered education and sense of purpose is already yielding stories of impact and redemption.
 
Young recounts when one student went before his parole board hearing. When asked if he had anything he wanted to say鈥攖he inmate鈥檚 response was not what was expected.

鈥淗e asked the parole board to delay his parole hearing for another two and a half years so that he could complete this program,鈥 said Young. 鈥淗e said, 鈥業 need to finish this program, and then I will be the man society needs me to be, and I’ll be the father and the husband that I need to be when I go back home.鈥

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why Carson-Newman is a special place,鈥 Young said. 鈥淐arson-Newman is giving an opportunity for men like this to fulfill one of the values the University has identified鈥攁nd that is to produce servant-leaders.鈥

Young is thankful for the many ways and many years he鈥檚 served in ministry, but notes he is especially grateful for where he finds himself now. Maybe more than he first anticipated.

鈥淭he joy, the satisfaction, the fulfillment, the excitement that I still wake up with every day, is just very real to me 鈥 that this is what God’s called me to do,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel like hopefully, as much as we’re helping to impart into the students, their experience in my life is helping me to grow spiritually beyond anything that I ever dreamed possible.鈥

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