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David H Lukenbill Website

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Monthly Archives: May 2015

Capital Punishment, Abolition Doctrine May Be Developing

28 Thursday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Unpublished Work, Capital Punishment

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

________

For several years now many bishop’s conferences and the past three popes, (including Francis) have called for the abolition of capital punishment, which would be a change of doctrine according to the current Catechism of the Catholic Church, which expressively permits it.

The process of the development of doctrine is clearly spelled out in the Vatican II Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,  Lumen Gentium, (Paragraph 25) as solemnly promulgated by his Holiness Paul VI on November 21, 1964.

What it says, as I read it, is that when the bishops of the world teach consistently in unison with one another and with the pope, doctrine is being changed, infallibly.

So, in this sense, the continual call for abolition by most of the bishop’s conferences and by the Pope, apparently satisfies the criteria for a development of that doctrine.

Here is paragraph 25, with the relevant area in bold.

  1. Among the principal duties of bishops the preaching of the Gospel occupies an eminent place. For bishops are preachers of the faith, who lead new disciples to Christ, and they are authentic teachers, that is, teachers endowed with the authority of Christ, who preach to the people committed to them the faith they must believe and put into practice, and by the light of the Holy Spirit illustrate that faith. They bring forth from the treasury of Revelation new things and old, making it bear fruit and vigilantly warding off any errors that threaten their flock. Bishops, teaching in communion with the Roman Pontiff, are to be respected by all as witnesses to divine and Catholic truth. In matters of faith and morals, the bishops speak in the name of Christ and the faithful are to accept their teaching and adhere to it with a religious assent. This religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman Pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra; that is, it must be shown in such a way that his supreme magisterium is acknowledged with reverence, the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to, according to his manifest mind and will. His mind and will in the matter may be known either from the character of the documents, from his frequent repetition of the same doctrine, or from his manner of speaking.

Although the individual bishops do not enjoy the prerogative of infallibility, they nevertheless proclaim Christ’s doctrine infallibly whenever, even though dispersed through the world, but still maintaining the bond of communion among themselves and with the successor of Peter, and authentically teaching matters of faith and morals, they are in agreement on one position as definitively to be held. This is even more clearly verified when, gathered together in an ecumenical council, they are teachers and judges of faith and morals for the universal Church, whose definitions must be adhered to with the submission of faith.

And this infallibility with which the Divine Redeemer willed His Church to be endowed in defining doctrine of faith and morals, extends as far as the deposit of Revelation extends, which must be religiously guarded and faithfully expounded. And this is the infallibility which the Roman Pontiff, the head of the college of bishops, enjoys in virtue of his office, when, as the supreme shepherd and teacher of all the faithful, who confirms his brethren in their faith, by a definitive act he proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals. And therefore his definitions, of themselves, and not from the consent of the Church, are justly styled irreformable, since they are pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, promised to him in blessed Peter, and therefore they need no approval of others, nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment. For then the Roman Pontiff is not pronouncing judgment as a private person, but as the supreme teacher of the universal Church, in whom the charism of infallibility of the Church itself is individually present, he is expounding or defending a doctrine of Catholic faith. The infallibility promised to the Church resides also in the body of Bishops, when that body exercises the supreme magisterium with the successor of Peter. To these definitions the assent of the Church can never be wanting, on account of the activity of that same Holy Spirit, by which the whole flock of Christ is preserved and progresses in unity of faith.

But when either the Roman Pontiff or the Body of Bishops together with him defines a judgment, they pronounce it in accordance with Revelation itself, which all are obliged to abide by and be in conformity with, that is, the Revelation which as written or orally handed down is transmitted in its entirety through the legitimate succession of bishops and especially in care of the Roman Pontiff himself, and which under the guiding light of the Spirit of truth is religiously preserved and faithfully expounded in the Church. The Roman Pontiff and the bishops, in view of their office and the importance of the matter, by fitting means diligently strive to inquire properly into that revelation and to give apt expression to its contents; but a new public revelation they do not accept as pertaining to the divine deposit of faith.

Retrieved May 26, 2015 from http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html

Letter on Prison Published

27 Wednesday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications, Letters

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

Lampstand Letter 2015 Prison Reformed, Published in America Magazine, February 23, 2015, written in response to the America article Prison Addiction, http://americamagazine.org/issue/prison-addiction

Prison Reformed

DAVID LUKENBILL MR | 2/21/2015 – 8:00pm .

The term “mass incarceration” is reminiscent of the Marxist theoretician’s use of “class” in their analysis of social structure, and helps drive a picture that the only “class” inside prisons are the poor, especially the minority poor; an argument sadly and ironically more representative of Communist countries than America.

The reasons American prisons are full is twofold: on the one hand liberal legislators have stopped new prison construction, especially in California and New York, and on the other hand, the full prisons are a result of effective broken windows policing and three strikes sentencing; which have resulted in a decades long crime rate reduction; which is now in danger due to the effectiveness of the “mass incarceration” narrative.

I know better than most that prison is not a fun place to be, having spent 12 years of my 20 years as a professional criminal—my crimes were theft and robbery—within several maximum security federal and state prisons, as well as many local jails; but it is the only effective way we have, as a society, to isolate the criminal, the often dangerous aggressor, from the often innocent victims of crime.

This form of incapacitation, imprisonment, is extremely effective in this regard, though also expecting it to function as an effective rehabilitative venue has proven, so far, to be a failure.

I was a chronic offender and I know that each arrest and commitment to jail or juvenile hall, was, for me, just another step in the building of my criminal career, a path I had chosen by the time I was barely a teenager; a path of glamour and freedom that consumed my life for decades; and rather than being scared by the many jail or prison experiences, I was heartened by them as they put me in close contact with my real peers, other professional criminals.

This is where I also became acculturated to the criminal/carceral world, learning its mores, adapting its artifacts, living its ways, a way of life I only finally became completely free of after becoming Catholic and being baptized, when the final remnants of the predatory and self-centered criminality that had informed my life for so many years gushed out of me in the deep tears shed during baptism when my sins were forgiven me.

Yes, we need prisons, for they are the only civilized way to isolate the aggressor from the innocent; and they must be civilized, which the majority of prisons in the United States are.

Based on my experience and validated by my research, criminal justice policy and practice sways between the liberal rehabilitative program approach and the conservative policing, sentencing, and incarceration approach, and right now we do appear to be swinging back to the liberal, but it is my hope that we can, as a society, develop and keep only those programs that are rigorously evaluated and proven successful, while retaining policing, sentencing and incarcerative strategies that have already proven their success reducing crime.

The most important thing we have to do, in my opinion, is to remember what most of us already feel to be true; that becoming a professional criminal is largely a result of an individual decision, and becoming truly reformed will also come about as the result of an individual decision; and in the making of this individual decision, those reformed criminals who work with other criminals to help them get on the path they have already traveled, are a valuable asset, perhaps the very best asset, that is still too rarely utilized.

David H. Lukenbill, President

The Lampstand Foundation

It takes a reformed criminal to reform criminals.

Retrieved May 7, 2015 from http://americamagazine.org/issue/prison-addiction

 

 

Publications, Interviews and Comments by Others

27 Wednesday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications, Interviews & Articles by Others

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

(1) These excerpts are from the 2009 article, By the Secret Ladder: Christian Mysticism and Liberation of the Imprisoned, by Dr. Andrew Skotnicki in the journal Theology Today (66) 33-44

In a recent autobiographical account, David Lukenbill writes of the thin line separating the frequently distorted values of penal environments and those in which most of us live: “The cruelty and brutality of the prison is classically evil in the sense that the prisoners are being cruel and brutal consciously. That is the paradigm that works. It is not that there is that much in the prison that doesn’t happen on the outside, it’s just that in prison it is so much more concentrated.” (n. 13, David H. Lukenbill, The Criminal’s Search for God (Sacramento, CA: Chulu, 2006), p. 19) (p. 36)

David Lukenbill discovered Thomas Merton in one of his many institutional commitments and similarly writes that there is “much of the monastery in prison.” (n. 23, Lukenbill, Criminal’s Search for God, p. 18.) Furthermore, he narrates the powerful religious experience he has while on a hunger strike in solitary confinement. In words that recall the self-surrender type of conviction found in the work of William James, he calls it a “break down”: “I prayed to God to forgive and protect me and He came to me. I felt such peace and rapture. I felt I was lifted out and walked with Him in a beautiful mountain meadow.” (n. 24 Ibid., p. 20.) (pp. 38-39)

(2) The following article is from an interview by Scott Alessi for the In Focus Prison Ministry special in the May 23, 2010 Issue of Our Sunday Visitor News Weekly. (pp. 9-12)

Ex-prisoner uses Catholic teaching to break ‘criminal world culture’

There’s an old adage when dealing with criminals that it takes a thief to catch a thief. But David Lukenbill believes that saying can be taken one step further: It takes a reformed criminal to reform a criminal.

Lukenbill knows firsthand how difficult it can be for a professional criminal to turn his or her life around.

Many years ago, Lukenbill was drawn into a life of crime by the lure of monetary gains, which ultimately landed him inside a maximum security prison. And even though he started to experience some internal rehabilitation during a year in solitary confinement, it didn’t hold once he was back among the other inmates.

“Once I got back out into the prison population, I pretty much reverted,” Lukenbill said. “The criminal world culture is so dominant in there, and it is pretty hard to counteract that.”

But the seeds of spiritual renewal that were planted when Lukenbill was in prison eventually bore fruit later in his life. He turned his back on the criminal lifestyle and, having continued his education and converted to Catholicism, saw an opportunity to tackle the staggering rates of recidivism by helping other former prisoners change the course of their lives.

Based on his own experience of the prison lifestyle, Lukenbill told Our Sunday Visitor that the traditional programs offered to facilitate criminal rehabilitation and re-entry often fail because they don’t get to the heart of the issue, which is internal conversion.

“You can provide all the services that you want – and the research bears this out – but a service isn’t what changes a criminal,” he said. “Criminals are internally committed to being criminals, and rehabilitation is an internal process.”

Noting the lack of success in many efforts, Lukenbill felt called to offer an alternative model. Relying on his experience and the tenants of Catholic social teaching, he founded The Lampstand Foundation, an organization that provides resources for reformed criminals who wish to help others find redemption after being released from prison.

“The tools we are putting together are for other people like me who want to take what they’ve learned from their own conversion and help other people,” Lukenbill explained.

And the catalyst for that change can often be found in the Church’s social teaching, which can provide both the intellectual and spiritual foundation for a criminal’s transformation, he added.

“Once I really got into Catholic social teaching I saw how powerful it was to address the hold that the criminal world culture has on people who are criminals, including myself,” he said. “The potency of the social teaching was strong enough to trump that of the criminal world virtually at every point.” (p. 12)

(3) The following article is from the January 11, 2011 Catholic Culture website.

Reforming Criminals By Dr. Jeff Mirus, January 11, 2011

The only daily paper we get in our household is the local paper which covers our town and county in Northern Virginia, or about 375,000 souls. Despite this modest population, nearly every day there is a new local disaster on the front page, very often a crime—burglary, armed robbery, assault, child pornography, even murder. Some of the reports are perversely humorous, as in the recent robbery of a convenience store in which the perpetrator used a six-foot broken branch as a weapon; or the effort to steal a van while the owner was busy in the back. But we’ve had a string of over twenty burglaries in nearby neighborhoods in recent weeks, there have been some unprovoked gang attacks, and today we learned about the first murder of the new year.

Crimes of passion—and the violent use of an available knife or hand gun in a sudden quarrel—are to some degree understandable, as is the increased incidence of random violence in a crumbling society which is increasingly incapable of nurturing well-adjusted and fundamentally happy people. But consistent criminal activity is a trickier subject; one wonders about the causes that lead someone down that path. A great deal of ink has been spilled over the past fifty years on the sociology of crime, and in particular the degree to which the criminal is himself a victim who cannot be held completely responsible for his actions. Among various attempts to identify root problems, we have seen indictments of society as a whole, of capitalism in particular, and even of the criminal justice system itself.

One man who works directly in this area of assessing criminal responsibility believes that such analyses are fundamentally unproductive. David H. Lukenbill, himself a former 20-year criminal and founder of The Lampstand Foundation, puts the matter succinctly: “In the work of criminal reformation, it is vital to keep in mind that the criminal is the problem.” Lukenbill now devotes his life to criminal reformation, and to recruiting other former criminals who have gone on to convert or come back to their Catholic faith (as Lukenbill did) to work directly to touch and transform others.

Another point Lukenbill makes is that most current efforts at criminal rehabilitation exhibit little success, or perhaps even what we might euphemistically call negative success. Again and again he points to studies which show that criminals who participate in rehabilitation programs have a recidivation rate slightly higher than non-participant control groups. This is often true with not only secular but faith-based programs. This sobering fact, which Lukenbill attributes partly to what he calls the “hardening and deepening of the criminal/carceral [prison] world over the past several decades”, has led him to a conclusion which lies at the heart of his apostolic work: “It takes a reformed criminal to reform criminals.”

Lukenbill believes that a reformed criminal can both understand the criminal mindset and relate to the criminal in ways that maximize the chance of long-term success. The type of reformed criminal Lukenbill is looking for is not just one who has embraced the Catholic Faith—though that is central—but one who has gone on to seek an appropriate graduate degree or other professional training as well as a deeper understanding of Catholic social teaching. He wants people who are prepared by both personal experience and education to contribute to the reform effort, and he is convinced that Catholic social teaching is the only system of thought which, as he put it, can “trump” the criminal mindset at every turn.

This last point is extremely interesting, and it brings us back to questions about the larger social order. Lukenbill is saying, in effect, that the criminal mentality is based (more or less deliberately) on a skewed theory of how society works or ought to work. It is therefore hard to counter without a comprehensive and compelling theory of one’s own. For David Lukenbill, Catholic social teaching provided that alternative theory—a consistent narrative of how society ought to work which can get inside even a criminal’s head.

This is worth pursuing. Just as we can be surprised from time to time by encountering a new sort of job or profession—one that we hadn’t imagined existed before (a phenomenon which inspired several stories by G. K. Chesterton growing out of his club of queer trades)—we can be both surprised and blessed by the knowledge that there is no end to the number of Catholic apostolates needed to address the problems of a fallen world. The Lampstand Foundation may be justly added to an ever-growing and inspirational list. For those interested, David Lukenbill also writes  a blog covering news and developments in criminal rehabilitation at Catholic Eye. (Retrieved January 11, 2011 from http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/otc.cfm?id=757

(4) The following article from an interview by Brian Fraga is from the June 2012 US Catholic magazine.

Crime Fighter

David Lukenbill bears witness to the fact that living outside the law doesn’t have to be a life sentence.

A knock on the door introduced David Lukenbill to a life of crime. “My real dad got out of prison when I was 12,” recalls Lukenbill. “He showed up on our door one day and my mother said, “This is your real father’” His dad, a member of the infamous Pendergast gang in Kansas City, Missouri, had spent 10 years behind bars at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Father and son quickly bonded. “I admired my father,” says Lukenbill, admitting that he was drawn to his dad’s criminal past. Within a couple of years Lukenbill began following in his father’s footsteps, stealing and committing armed robberies. He spent 12 of the next 20 years in prison.

“When I was a criminal, I believed that I was acting according to what the truth of the world was,” he says. “Rather than working for somebody and enslaving myself for money, I was just taking it, which was what I believed the most powerful people in the world did.”

Lukenbill, now 69, was 15 when he was first imprisoned for theft. He was sent to a foster youth ranch in Nevada, from which he escaped. At 16  he was caught stealing cars and sent to the Nevada State Reformatory, but again he broke free and drove a stolen vehicle across the state line. He was arrested again and taken to a federal prison in Englewood, Colorado where he served a four-year sentence.

But Lukenbill says his prison time only served to make the criminal lifestyle more appealing. He spent another three years in a California state prison for an assault conviction. At Fort Leavenworth, serving a separate four-year sentence for stealing, he even met some inmates who remembered his father. “That situation is unfortunately all too common among families,” he says.

TURNING OVER A NEW LEAF: Three years after leaving Fort Leavenworth, a period in which he admits to committing more crimes for which he was never caught, Lukenbill enrolled at Sacramento City College on the advice of friends. While earning his associate’s degree, Lukenbill received a federal grant to create an on-campus educational program for inmates. Over three years, 50 inmates attended classes on campus each semester. It was about this time that Lukenbill, who was raised in a Mormon household that looked down on Catholicism, began exploring various religions.

“When I was in jail, I did a lot of reading and thinking about what was true. One of the biggest motivators in my life was wanting to know the truth,” he says. Lukenbill said he started seriously studying Judaism and considered converting until he encountered the “problem of Jesus.”

“With me, it began as an intellectual process,” he says. “As I encountered Catholicism, there was never a point I reached where questions couldn’t be answered.” Lukenbill also discovered Catholic social teaching and the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas and several Jesuit authors, including English Jesuit Father Rodger Charles, author of Christian Social Witness and Teaching (Gracewing).

“The more I looked into Catholic social teaching the more sense it made to me,” he says. “The deeper I got, the more the truths resonated with me.”

In 2004 Lukenbill and his wife entered the Catholic Church, which finally changed his outlook on life. “I still had no real sense of morality,” he says. “Once I became Catholic and internalized the values, especially when I adopted the daily practice of the rosary and Mass, it changed me considerably. I haven’t had any of the anger I lived with for most of my life.”

BREAKING THE CYCLE: Now a resident of Sacramento, California, Lukenbill applies the church’s social doctrine to reform what he calls “career criminals,” people who commit crimes for financial gain. In 2003 Lukenbill founded the Lampstand Foundation, a lay apostolate that provides written materials and resources to small non-profits and agencies involved in prisoner re-entry programs, including some church-affiliated organizations.

Lukenbill writes reports and develops programs to be used as a guide to help criminals who are eager to reform themselves. To counteract the ingrained anti-social mentality among lifelong criminals, Lukenbill introduces them to the works of Aquinas, the social encyclicals, and the papal magisterium. He believes those writings comprise the only body of thought potent enough to trump the allure of a criminal lifestyle. “The one thing about professional criminals is that they want to know the truth of the world,” he says.

Several of the non-profits that subscribe to Lampstand Foundation’s programs are also run by former criminals, which goes to the heart of a principle Lukenbill espouses: Only former criminals can reform criminals. “We have a bond of trust when we speak to one another about what we have learned,” Lukenbill says of those who have turned away from a life of crime. “If we talk for a bit, we find we know people in common and that we’ve been in some of the same prisons. We trust each other.”

As president of Lukenbill & Associates, he now earns an honest living providing consultant services for non-profits. He does not collect a paycheck from the Lampstand Foundation. “It’s about taking everything I’ve learned and sharing those ideas,” he says. “It’s an act of love.” USC

Publications, Articles

26 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications, Articles

≈ Leave a comment

This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

2008

Journal of Markets & Morality

Review: “Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church”

by David H. Lukenbill

LampStand Foundation, Sacramento, California

Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church Andrew Skotnicki Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007 165 pp.

Working in the criminal justice system and having read many of the writings of Andrew Skotnicki, I approached his new book with a certainty that I would be rewarded with well-researched and eloquent expressions of those things that I already agree to be true about an effective criminal justice system. They are (1) that punishment for crimes is important in both a spiritual and a temporal sense; (2) that prisons are an appropriate ground for punishment while protecting the public from the criminal in the process; and (3) that the essential impetus for reformation comes from the criminal, not from any external influence applied to him.

There are essentially two criminal justice narratives. One issues from the academy and many nonprofit advocacy organizations, is primarily sociological, and rests on the assumption that we need less of everything involved in criminal justice—crimes, arrests, convictions, and prisons. The other is promoted by the practitioners (police, district attorneys, judges, and prison guards) who make the case for strengthening the existing system—more of everything.

Dr. Skotnicki’s work, as expected from scholarship based on the universal faith of the Catholic Church and its social teaching principles, bridges those two narratives in a way no other perspective can.

The current environment of much of the professional advocacy class writing and thinking about criminal justice issues—many Catholic writers among them—focused as it is on banning the death penalty and closing prisons, has created a position incompatible with Catholic teaching. Given the difficulty of discovering the Church’s teaching concerning these issues, their ideas have stood relatively unchallenged. With the publication of this book and the further attention its influence will bring to the author’s other writings, that will no longer be the case.

Skotnicki addresses the controversial issues of punishment and prison from the tradition of the Church. Appropriate penal practices are necessary not only to protect the public from the aggressor but also to allow the criminal the opportunity to reform himself with the aid of his God.

Skotnicki notes, “the prison as we know it in the West originated in the penitential practice of the early church and in primitive monastic communities,” and therefore argues, “with some reservations,” that “it thus bears a meaning as valid and necessary as penance and monasticism themselves” (6). A significant accomplishment of this book is the explanation of that coherent historical development—infused with spiritual meaning and Catholic teaching—of the appropriate use of the prison.

In a manner that will speak most powerfully to the imprisoned, the book is informed by the criminal and prisoner status of Jesus Christ who allowed himself to become so for the singularly significant reason to affirm his suffering and his immutable bond with humankind.

While Skotnicki’s suggestion that “Christ himself is and must be treated as the malefactor” (73) is certainly Church tradition, it would appear more normative that in those horrific cases of offense that repulses even other criminals—thrill murderers, serial rapists, and child molesters—the malefactor we are dealing with is the Devil, with whom an evil partnership has been formed quite beyond that mundane pact with the criminal world made by the professional and habitual criminal largely motivated by economic gain.

The professional criminal who commits crimes for money, though doing everything in his power to avoid being caught and brought to justice, generally understands and accepts the sanctions imposed for crimes, particularly if he has committed many besides those for which he was apprehended.

Considering the importance Christ placed on criminals, the works of the early and medieval Church fathers, and Pope Pius XII’s statements on crime and punishment in the mid-twentieth century, the lack of substantial comment in recent years is striking, as it corresponds with the period of the most massive incarceration in human history.

The Jubilee Year report from the American bishops, Responsibility, Rehabilitation, and Restoration: A Catholic Perspective on Crime and Criminal Justice (2000), though welcome as an attempted resumption of the conversation, was more reflective of a certain political stance than a solid Catholic construction around criminal justice issues.

With the publication of Skotnicki’s deeply spiritual and intellectually satisfying book, this brief Catholic silence about criminal justice has ended, and we will hope to see much more thought being focused on this most Catholic of issues.

Retrieved July 23, 2008 from http://www.acton.org/publications/mandm/111review07.php#frm

2009

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AND THE CONSTANCY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL TEACHING

David H. Lukenbill

The experience of individuals in the world shares certain consistent realities, and among those shared realities is response to institutional constancy. We all share the experience of receiving promises that are not kept, from individuals representing institutions. When this becomes a continual experience, then our response to those promises will often be different than it otherwise would have been.   And while we may still embrace the institution, we will become more deeply exasperated by its lack of constancy. While an institution’s failure to deliver on promises may merely make some people cynical, it can have disastrous results upon individuals seeking the truth if the institution in question is the Church herself, the custodian of Truth.

When promises are kept and faith is congruent with practice, particularly over a long period of time, constancy is maintained and the level of trust and respect engendered rises proportionately. We have this wonderful gift in our well-informed knowledge of the history of the Church, her great constancy to the ancient truths that are congruent with what she still teaches. Many of these are embodied in the simple, visible movement of the priests and the faithful through the sacraments, but it is in the teaching—built on the stones of Sinai, the ministry, death and resurrection of Christ, and the rock of Peter—that there shines a light in the eternal cathedral of time and memory, embracing us all in the immortal truths.

This constancy is sometimes not easily perceived. The world has attempted to destroy the Church from her very beginning, often with the conscious or unconscious help of her members, and the smoke of Satan’s war against the Church has always swirled about the corners of the sanctuary, often as close to us as Cain was to Abel. But the record of the thousand battles of this war during the thousands of years it has been waged, and the great triumphs of Holy Mother Church, are resounding still; even within the darkest heart of a sinner they may resound—and when a penitent soul discovers the mark of this triumph written across the heavens and through the centuries, it can be efficacious in bringing that soul to redemption.

The mandate for the constancy of the Church comes from the truth that there will be no further revelation, as the Catechism teaches us:

In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son. Christ, the Son of God made man, is the Father’s one, perfect and unsurpassable Word. In him he has said everything; there will be no other word than this one . . . 1

The deposit of faith is sacred, interpreted by the Church:

The apostles entrusted the ‘Sacred deposit’ of the faith (the depositum fidei), contained in Sacred Scripture and Tradition, to the whole of the Church. ‘By adhering to [this heritage] the entire holy people, united to its pastors, remains always faithful to the teaching of the apostles, to the brotherhood, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. So, in maintaining, practising and professing the faith that has been handed on, there should be a remarkable harmony between the bishops and the faithful.’2

Working from this divine foundation, the conversion of sinners through the transcendence of the truth of the world by the truth of God is a process involving time, prayer, and grace; and in many cases today, the rôle of the social teaching of the Church is substantial.

While Catholic social teaching has always supported capital punishment, based on scripture, tradition, and teaching as expressed in the two universal catechisms (that of the Council of Trent and that post-Vatican II), the death penalty has been opposed by some in the Catholic hierarchy as unnecessary, with current criminal justice technology being judged adequate to the protection of the innocent against the aggressor, meeting the criteria established by the Holy See in 1997:

If, however, non-lethal means are sufficient to defend and protect people’s safety from the aggressor, authority will limit itself to such means. . . 3

Capital punishment as a way of protecting the innocent from the aggressor has become one of the central issues in the social teaching of the Church, and the ambiguity about it during the past several decades, after two millennia of seeming certainty, places the credibility of the Church’s teaching itself in doubt. This impairs the Church’s social teaching as an effective tool for conversion, and causes further risk to the immortal souls of those who are lost and whose being found largely depends on the constancy of that social teaching.

My personal thinking on capital punishment has gone through three phases. A former professional criminal, I served twelve years in maximum security federal and state prisons, where I gained an intimate knowledge of unrepentant evil. At that time I supported capital punishment, especially for those crimes against innocent women and children that professional criminals associate with its just use. When I became a Catholic, I moved in opposition to it, because I was taught during the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults that the Church opposed it, and it was very important to me to think with the Church in all things. Later, continuing my studies on Church teaching, I returned to a position of support when I discovered that the Church’s teaching opposed only the improper use of capital punishment. My position has become more certain with my growing realization of how deeply support for capital punishment is woven into Church doctrine as an important aspect of the protection of the innocent against the murderer, “for all time” as the Catechism notes:

The covenant between God and mankind is interwoven with reminders of God’s gift of human life and man’s murderous violence: ‘For your lifeblood I will surely require a reckoning. . . Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for God made man in his own image’ (Genesis 9:5-6). The Old Testament always considered blood a sacred sign of life (Leviticus 17:14). This teaching remains necessary for all time.4

One of the most important reasons for ensuring that capital punishment remains an option for protecting the innocent is that it is a clear response to evil, and it is important that our Church remain committed to confronting and fighting evil directly. In fact, ultimately, the Church’s constancy in fighting evil is informed and animated by the constancy of the social teaching of the Church, and is an eloquent indicator of the truth of that social teaching.

Part of the constancy of the social teaching on the efficacy of capital punishment as a function of the ancient and transcendent sword of justice, rests on its retributive purpose, as noted by J. Budziszewski:

The question to ask about the retributive purpose of capital punishment is this: is it possible for punishment to signify the gravity of crimes which deserve death if their perpetuators are never visited with execution? This seems unlikely. Consider the deviant who tortures small children to death for his pleasure, or the ideologue who meditates the demise of innocent thousands for the sake of greater terror. Genesis says murderers deserve death because life is precious; man is made in the image of God. How convincing is our reverence for life if its mockers are suffered to live? 5

It is this reverence for life, especially innocent life, which underlies the traditional support of the Catholic Church for the juridical use of capital punishment. The protection of innocent life is of central importance to the Church, and while support for capital punishment as part of that protection exists among the faithful of the Church (Gallup Poll data indicate that 61% of Catholics find capital punishment morally acceptable6), we still encounter damage done to the responsibility to protect the innocent, in the general confusion about the life issues that the abolition movement abets.

While the Catholic Church does not base its traditional support for capital punishment on the quality of the administration of justice in one nation or another, one of the arguments used by proponents of abolition in the United States is the possibility of an innocent person’s being executed, and while some researchers conclude that this has occurred, others deny it, and the debate continues, even within the U.S. Supreme Court:

Justice Scalia vigorously criticized Justice Souter’s dissent and the ‘growing literature’ he cited. First, he noted, there was no showing that an ‘actually innocent’ person had been executed under contemporary capital punishment laws. Second, he challenged the methodology of the studies cited by Justice Souter. Third, he agreed with Justice Thomas that the reasoning of Justice Souter’s dissent amounted to a quest for ‘100% perfection’ in capital proceedings that would lead to additional unjustified judicially-created encumbrances on the imposition of the death penalty.7

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has long called for the abolition of capital punishment in the United States. Its statement of 2005, The Culture of Life and the Penalty of Death, is based primarily on the belief that current criminal justice technology provides protection to the innocent from the criminal aggressor without resorting to capital punishment.

However, our legal system guarantees rights of visitation and communication in even the most secure confinement, and the aggressor still has the capacity to reach out and harm the innocent, whether through the possession of contraband cell phones, or the transmission of information through corrupted attorneys, guards and visitors, and it is in this context that criminal justice professionals require the continued option of capital punishment. And it is also from this perspective that the magisterium of the Catholic Church, expressed through the centuries, continues to allow for capital punishment:

The traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude, presupposing full ascertainment of the identity and responsibility of the offender, recourse to the death penalty, when this is the only practicable way to defend the lives of human beings effectively against the aggressor . . . 8

An important point was made by Avery Cardinal Dulles, in 2004, regarding the argument reversing the traditional support of the Church for capital punishment:

The reversal of a doctrine as well established as the legitimacy of capital punishment would raise serious problems regarding the credibility of the magisterium. Consistency with scripture and long-standing Catholic tradition is important for the grounding of many current teachings of the Catholic Church; for example, those regarding abortion, contraception, the permanence of marriage, and the ineligibility of women for priestly ordination. If the tradition on capital punishment had been reversed, serious questions would be raised regarding other doctrines. . . 9

Crime is a theological problem; it is only within theology that evil—the deepest dimension of crime—can be addressed. It is evil which must concern us in addressing crime and we must recognize that though evil rarely reforms, most criminals can and will do so, given a reason and shown the way. And the way is often the threat of imminent death, imposed judicially, for crimes committed, as St Thomas Aquinas taught:

When, however, they fall into very great wickedness, and become incurable, we ought no longer to show them friendliness. It is for this reason that both Divine and human laws command such like sinners to be put to death, because there is greater likelihood of their harming others than of their mending their ways. Nevertheless the judge puts this into effect, not out of hatred for the sinners, but out of the love of charity, by reason of which he prefers the public good to the life of the individual. Moreover the death inflicted by the judge profits the sinner, if he be converted, unto the expiation of his crime; and, if he be not converted, it profits so as to put an end to the sin, because the sinner is thus deprived of the power to sin any more.10

The most powerful example of this reflection on capital punishment by St. Thomas that “the death inflicted by the judge profits the sinner” is that of Dismas, the good thief crucified with Christ, who established the eternal model of the efficacy of capital punishment in calling forth deep and true penance, which Christ, in the open confessional of Golgotha, received, forgiving Dismas and elevating him to sainthood. Total abolition of capital punishment appears deeply incongruent with centuries of ecclesiastical support, and unduly dismissive of the possibility of the spur of temporal death leading to redemptive liberation from eternal torment. We cannot forget that we have eternal life, and it is the spur of eternity that often brings redemption to a sinful soul facing the certainty of temporal death. That is the good, the charity, that the magisterium of the Church speaks of in relation to its strong and ancient support of capital punishment.

The recent change, regarding capital punishment, from support to opposition by some of the leadership within the Catholic Church is examined by Romano Amerio:

An important change has occurred in the Church regarding the theology of punishment. We could cite the French bishops’ document that asserted in 1979 that the death penalty ought to be abolished in France as it was incompatible with the Gospel, the Canadian and American bishops’ statements on the matter, and the articles in the Osservatore Romano calling for the abolition of the death penalty, as injurious to human dignity and contrary to the Gospel.

[O]ne cannot cancel out the Old Testament’s decrees regarding the death penalty, by a mere stroke of the pen. Nor can canon law, still less the teaching of the New Testament, be cancelled out at a stroke. I am well aware that the famous passage in Romans (Rm 13:4) giving princes the ius gladii (the right use of the sword), and calling them the ministers of God to punish the wicked, has been emptied of meaning by the canons of the new hermeneutic, on the grounds that it is the product of a past set of historical circumstances. Pius XII however explicitly rejected that view, in a speech to Catholic jurists on 5 February 1955, and said that the passage of St. Paul was of permanent and universal value, because it refers to the essential foundation of penal authority and to its inherent purpose.11

The change in the wording on capital punishment in sections 2266-2267 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, from the first edition (1992) to the second edition (1997), moved from clear support by affirmation to muddy support by deprecation. What happened? We know that the new language concerning capital punishment in the second edition of the Catechism originated from the encyclical of John Paul II, Evangelium vitae (25 March, 1995), and as to the explanation of that language, we have the words of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI) who presided over the Interdicasterial Commission for the Catechism of the Catholic Church, responsible for overseeing the publication of the second edition, as reported in First Things:

Clearly, the Holy Father [John Paul II] has not altered the doctrinal principles which pertain to this issue as they are presented in the Catechism, but has simply deepened the application of such principles in the context of present-day historical circumstances. Thus, where other means for the self-defence of society are possible and adequate, the death penalty may be permitted to disappear.12

  1. A. Long, in The Thomist, commented on the change in the legitimacy of capital punishment after Evangelium vitae:

The Magisterial judgement of Evangelium vitae concerning the legitimacy of capital punishment constitutes—as emphasized anew by its insertion within The Catechism of the Catholic Church—the most important modern locus for understanding the Church’s teaching on this topic. The position presented in this encyclical has figured prominently in more recent papal and episcopal statements dealing with the death penalty. The question that has created some confusion is what kind of teaching is being presented. A common interpretation is that Evangelium vitae marks a doctrinal development: the encyclical is said to restrict use of the death penalty to cases where it is absolutely necessary for the physical protection of society in a sense comparable to the use of lethal force in self-defence. Yet such a reading neglects numerous and substantial contributions from the tradition that argue for a different understanding of the penalty’s legitimacy. It is the nearly unanimous opinion of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church that the death penalty is morally licit, and the teaching of past popes (and numerous catechisms) that this penalty is essentially just (and even that its validity is not subject to cultural variation).13

After an extensive refutation of the reductionist argument, he concludes:

From a Thomistic vantage point, the reductionist interpretation of Evangelium vitae is difficult to reconcile with Catholic tradition, because this tradition must consider the political state as providentially bound to acknowledge and implement a morally transcendent order of justice. So long as Catholics do not become contract theorists or Hobbesians, they must conceive the state as executing an order of justice that transcends it in origin, majesty, and truth. Only on such a ground does punishment as a righting of moral imbalance make sense.14

What was changed was perhaps a more sensitive appreciation of the seriousness of capital punishment, and the expression of a sincere hope that someday, in some way, and under some conditions, it may not be necessary to resort to it. But that time is not here yet.

The calls by the USCCB for an end to the use of capital punishment when other means can be used to protect the innocent from the aggressor, have been issued without much exploration of the Catholic historic record regarding capital punishment, and without reference to the current consensus among criminal justice professionals that even within the confines of a maximum security prison, criminals are still able to carry out aggression against innocent persons, even outside the prison.15 The incompleteness of the bishops’ analysis was noted by Andrew Skotnicki, O. Carm., in 2002, referring to the statement on crime and criminal justice by the Catholic Bishops:

The [USCCB] document [Responsibility, Rehabilitation, and Restoration: A Catholic Perspective on Crime and Criminal Justice] has notable flaws. It suffers not in its methodology but in the particular way that contemporary carceral experience and the foundational concepts of the Catholic social tradition are then invoked to support an incomplete and sometimes inaccurate analysis.16

One handicap in discussing capital punishment is the modern tendency to discount, or not properly understand, the hard reality of Satan’s deep involvement in the criminal world. Within the dark bowels of our nation’s maximum security prisons the animating visage is his, a reality well-known to those living and working inside the steel and stone. I wrote about prison life in my first book, The Criminal’s Search for God, and some of what I wrote seems relevant here:

In a world of predators, each revelation was significant. If in defending yourself, it appeared you were close to giving up or appeared to be less than total in your commitment to protecting yourself, you might have to fight again. If the other convicts thought you would kill over a pack of cigarettes, they would be less likely to take your cigarettes. . . The cruelty and brutality of the prison is classically evil in the sense that the prisoners are being cruel and brutal consciously. That is the paradigm that works. It is not that there is that much that happens in prison that doesn’t happen on the outside; it’s just that in prison it is so much more concentrated and undiluted by goodness. Being an evil person is considered good in prison. Being able to hurt others without inner doubt or hesitation is considered high praise. . . Honour, as it is expressed in prison, is controlled brutality.17

The Church’s traditional support for capital punishment is based on the assumption of the reality of evil, which the relativist secular world has to struggle to accept. Some offences are so terrible that the only just and charitable response is to deprive the evildoer of life, and hope that before the sentence is carried out he will be spurred to seek forgiveness.

Cardinal Dulles gives us an historical overview:

In modern times Doctors of the Church such as Robert Bellarmine and Alphonsus Liguori held that certain criminals should be punished by death. Venerable authorities such as Francisco de Vitoria, Thomas More, and Francisco Suárez agreed. John Henry Newman, in a letter to a friend, maintained that the magistrate had the right to bear the sword, and that the Church should sanction its use, in the sense that Moses, Joshua, and Samuel used it against abominable crimes.

Throughout the first half of the twentieth century the consensus of Catholic theologians in favour of capital punishment in extreme cases remained solid, as may be seen from approved textbooks and encyclopedia articles of the day. The Vatican City State from 1929 until 1969 had a penal code that included the death penalty for anyone who might attempt to assassinate the pope. Pope Pius XII, in an important allocution to medical experts, declared that it was reserved to the public power to deprive the condemned of the benefit of life in expiation of their crimes.

Summarizing the verdict of Scripture and tradition, we can glean some settled points of doctrine. It is agreed that crime deserves punishment in this life and not only in the next. In addition, it is agreed that the State has authority to administer appropriate punishment to those judged guilty of crimes and that this punishment may, in serious cases, include the sentence of death.18

The proper response to unrepentant evil is God’s punishment, and capital punishment speeds that consequence, whereas human mercy delays God’s judgement. The historic Catholic support for capital punishment—as part of a long tradition of protecting the innocent—is vital to the social teaching of the Church, as that teaching needs to remain true to itself if it is to retain its potency in the conversion of sinners. To overturn a principle of the social teaching as ancient as the judicial use of capital punishment could bring all of its enduring principles into question. The Church’s social teaching still seeks to protect the innocent from the aggressor, and its teaching must be steadfast and true, for it is a light unto the world whose flame must burn constant and bright.

Notes

  1. Catechism of the Catholic Church, §65
  2. Ibid., §84.
  3. Ibid., §2267.
  4. Ibid., §2260.
  5. J. Budziszewski, “Categorical Pardon: On the argument for abolishing capital Punishment”, in E. C. Owens, J. D. Carlson & E. P. Elshtain, Eds., Religion and the Death Penalty (Cambridge, England: Eerdmans Publ., 2004), p. 116.
  6. F. Newport, “Catholics similar to mainstream on abortion, stem cells” (30 March, 2009). http://www.gallup.com/poll/117154/Catholics-Similar-Mainstream-Abortion-Stem-Cells.aspx.
  7. W. A. Campbell, “Exoneration Inflation: Justice Scalia’s Concurrence in Kansas vs.Marsh”, in The Journal for the Advancement of Criminal Justice (Summer, 2008), p. 52.
  8. Catechism, §2267.
  9. Avery Cardinal Dulles, “Catholic Teaching on the Death Penalty”, in Owens, Carlson & Elshtain, op. cit., p. 26.
  10. Summa Theologica (II-II, Ques. 25, Art. 6, reply to objection 2).
  11. Romano Amerio, Iota Unum: A Study of Changes in the Catholic Church in the XXth Century (Kansas City, Mo.: Sarto House, 1996), p. 432.
  12. Richard John Neuhaus, “The Public Square”, in First Things (October, 1995).
  13. S. A. Long, “Evangelium vitae, St. Thomas Aquinas, and the Death Penalty”, in The Thomist 63: 511-52 (1999), p. 511.
  14. Ibid., p. 548.
  15. For accounts of convicts conducting criminal activities while behind bars, vide inter alia J. Bykowicz, “Reigning from behind bars”, Baltimore Sun (9 March, 2008); J. Fenton, “Indictments reveal prison crime world”, Baltimore Sun (17 April, 2009); D. Kane, “Cell phones plague prisons: A smuggled phone can fetch $500”, The News and Observer (5 December, 2008); D. Thompson, “Prisons press fight against smuggled cell phones”, San Diego Union-Tribune (14 April, 2009); and M. Ward, “Prison officials ask for $66 million to help stop cell phone smuggling”, Austin American-Statesman (4 Dec., 2008).
  16. A. Skotnicki, “The U. S. Catholic Bishops on Crime and Criminal Justice”, i Josephinum Journal of Theology (Winter-Spring, 2002), p. 147.
  17. D. H. Lukenbill, The Criminal’s Search for God: Criminal Transformation, Catholic Social Teaching, Deep Knowledge Leadership, and Communal Reentry (Sacramento: Lampstand Foundation, 2006), pp. 18-21.
  18. Avery Cardinal Dulles, “Catholicism and Capital Punishment”, in First Things  (April, 2001).                                                                                                                    Mr. Lukenbill, of Sacramento, Calif., is president of the Lampstand Foundation, an apostolate built on Catholic social teaching, providing leadership tools for reformed criminals who work in criminal-transformative organizations. He is the author of the book, Capital Punishment and Catholic Social Teaching: A Tradition of Support.

 This paper was presented at the Thirteenth Annual Conference of the Scholars for Social Justice and published in the Social Justice Review, Vol. 100, No. 11-12 November-December, 2009, (pp.150-154)

 

2010

The Prison Ministry

by David H. Lukenbill

The prison ministry is one of the most dangerous of ministries but also one of the most valuable. This article will examine the issues involved in developing and sustaining a prison ministry, while making sure that the ministers themselves become proficient and remain protected.

The prison first enters Western consciousness through Genesis and the story of Joseph, sold by his brothers into slavery and became, for a while, a prisoner in Egypt.

Joseph’s prison was the “Great Prison,” the hnrt wr at Thebes, present-day Luxor, whose existence is unrecorded before the period of the Middle Kingdom. [2050-1786 B.C.] 1

In the New Testament, Christ Himself teaches us to regard visiting those in prison as a work of corporal mercy: “…I was in prison and you came to me.” (Matthew 25: 36)

Our prisons have roots deriving from Catholic Church history, says Andrew Skotnicki:

My own conclusion is that the prison as we know it in the West originated in the penitential practice of the early church and in primitive monastic communities. With some reservations, I argue that it thus bears a meaning as valid and necessary as penance and monasticism themselves.  Perhaps a more restrained way of phrasing it would be that since the contemporary prison is in many ways a Catholic innovation, whatever hope it may have as a locus and vehicle of criminal justice lies within the history we are about to survey. 2

The Catechism of the Catholic Church has more to say about the works of mercy:

The works of mercy are charitable actions by which we come to the aid of our neighbor in his spiritual and bodily necessities. Instructing, advising, consoling, comforting are spiritual works of mercy, as are forgiving and bearing wrongs patiently. The corporal works of mercy consist especially in feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned, and burying the dead. 3

Let us keep in mind the four elements I have just mentioned: the prison as an ancient institution; prison visits as a work of mercy; the prison in the modern West as Catholic- inspired; and works of mercy being how we aid one another.  The prison ministry that I present in this article is a spiritual work of mercy directed to prisoners in maximum security prisons, for the purpose of evangelization and the development of transformative criminal/carceral leadership to help other prisoners.

At the end of 2009 there were 1,613,656 prisoners in American federal and state prisons. 4 The population in maximum security prisons hovers around 40% of the total—including the 1-2% in super-maximum security prisons.

In 1974, about 44% of the inmates in state confinement facilities were housed in maximum security prisons; by 2000, this percentage declined to about 38%. 5

The reason for focusing on maximum security prisoners is because they are “the point of the spear”, able, if converted, to lead others to conversion. Christ calls us to extend our evangelical reach to the greatest sinners, whose conversion creates the greatest joy in Heaven, revealed in the parable of the prodigal son and in the compassion Christ felt for the two criminal saints, Dismas and Mary of Magdala. Maximum security prisoners are mostly professional criminals—those who commit crimes for money and as a profession—with a strong commitment to the carceral/criminal world, but in the roots of that commitment lies the possibility of a commitment to conversion.

Professional criminals have the highest rearrest rates:

Released prisoners with the highest rearrest rates were robbers (70.2%), burglars (74.0%), larcenists (74.6%), motor vehicle thieves (78.8%), those in prison for possessing or selling stolen property (77.4%), and those in prison for possessing, using, or selling illegal weapons (70.2%). 6

Maximum security prisoners in the general population are not informants or pedophiles; these will not survive for long except in protective custody. The evil of the acts of the pedophile and the informant (who, after being apprehended, betrays his accomplices) is described in Christ’s own words:

Matthew 18:6 – “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.”

Matthew 26:24 – “The Son of Man indeed goes, as it is written of him, but woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed. It would be better for that man if he had never been born.”

Pope Benedict XVI comments on Judas:

Judas is neither a master of evil nor the figure of a demonical power of darkness but rather a sycophant who bows down before the anonymous power of changing moods and current fashion. But it is precisely this anonymous power that crucified Jesus, for it was anonymous voices that cried, ‘Away with him! Crucify him!’ 7

Professional criminals’ immersion in the carceral/criminal world is spurred by their search for freedom, money, and power; which, from their perspective, is an honorable path, as defined by the way of the world. Professional criminals occupy the upper echelon within carceral/criminal culture and are the most apt to respond to an intellectual approach based on the social teaching of the Church. They will also share it with others—who will listen to them.

The ministry’s objective is to present the truths of the faith in the catechetical way, in order to increase their being received, at the same time deflecting the potential for abuse in a personal relationship. In the Gehenna, “the place where the rebels against the Lord will be strewn” 8, it is Catholic truth which will free, and some relationship that is always being tested. The only relationship which will break the hardness of the evil there is the personal one with Christ, and the intellectual one with the words of Peter and the saints. (The ideal prison ministry, metaphorically, is like the Extraordinary Form of the Mass, in that the ministers and the prisoners will both be facing Christ, not each other.)

The traditional prison ministry as a corporal work of mercy dates from an older time, when many prisoners were first-time felons and often eagerly penitential. As the carceral/criminal world has deepened over the past several decades in America, only the most hardened go to prison.  Within the maximum security prison the culture is mandated—there are no bystanders—and penance is weakness and weakness is surrender or death.

Some preparative and logistical elements of prison ministry could include:

  • Two reference books which would be very important for the ministry group to read and discuss before beginning outreach: Inside the Criminal Mind: Revised and Updated Edition. Stanton E. Samenow. Ph.D. (2004). New York: Crown Publishers, and Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church. Fr. Andrew Skotnicki, O. Carm. (2008). Lanham, MD; Rowman & Littlefield;
  • A Post Office Box, set up for privacy;
  • A minimum of four people to start a ministry;
  • Retired law enforcement personnel, sought out to become part of ministry;
  • Group reading and response of all letters within te ministry;
  • Work to be done with a maximum of four prisoners at a time, with each weekly meeting focused on one of them, or with each monthly meeting focused on each of them sequentially, and one letter a month to each, with money (for stamps, paper, books, commitment).
  • At the prison you choose to work with, interviews with the Catholic Chaplain and with the appropriate correctional officers (to determine the details about what type of prisoners you are dealing with, and as a resource when and if necessary).

The greatest danger in prison ministry as a spiritual work of mercy—especially if you attempt it as an individual—is that you will be used for the prisoner’s purpose rather than your purpose of helping bring him to conversion. Working in a group somewhat reduces the chance of this occurring. A primal description of the prince of the criminal world—“the father of lies”—refers to an eternal method, not an occasional tool; for he lies always and eternally—it is a way of being. The imprisoned professional criminal is often an adept weaver of word magic, schooled in the charm and glamour of the dark criminal/carceral world, and can easily induce the traditional evangelist to accept his claim of salvation. In the acceptance of a false salvation, the evangelist can become victim rather than savior. In these dangerous fields, the evangelist who is at one remove and armed with a deep understanding of the social teaching of the Church, will be engaging the prisoner intellectually, and will reap a bounty rooted that much deeper.

A concept dilutive to effective prison ministry in maximum security prisons—currently enjoying some favor among many in the Church—is restorative justice. The emphasis on restorative justice grew out of the pacifistic perspective of some non-Catholic faith traditions, where no defense is mounted against evil—an attitude alien to a Catholic economy, which confronts evil at every turn. While we can appreciate the enhanced discussion the concept of restorative justice has brought to the criminal justice dialogue, its utility is much too limited in dealing with professional criminals who have served time in maximum security prisons, and are the dominant group defining and shaping the culture of the criminal/carceral world. With these criminals, the salvific tool with the most potency is the classical Catholic teaching of punishment, penance, and redemption.

In a seminal article Fr. Andrew Skotnicki examines justice from a Catholic perspective:

While by no means the first to do so in the Christian tradition, Anselm is a representative figure in a long line of arguments that maintain that punishment and reconciliation, like justice and mercy, find their most creative expression when held in tension with one another. Punishment is not absolute, as the theory of penal retribution claims, because justice is improperly served solely by looking backward at the offence. However, neither is justice fulfilled in theories such as rehabilitation or deterrence whose sole concern is future-oriented, that offenders amend their behaviour whether through treatment or out of calculated self-interest.

The answer is that justice demands both punishment and re-integration. The offence against God’s commandments, against the harmony of the universe and the sanctity of creation must be addressed. To put it in legal terminology, transgressions of the law itself must be punished independent of the specific harm caused to humans. However, paralleling the theology of the atonement, although punishment can be just, punishment in itself does not produce justice. Justice also must embrace equity, mercy and reconciliation. 9

In the same article he states:

Restoration is a principal component of justice; but it is not the only component. Justice also requires punishment. The schema for restoration suggested by contemporary philosophers and criminologists would require a thicker description of the nature and meaning of criminal offences, as well as a more substantial role for the state as representative of the body politic. 10

As do liberation theology and the so-called “consistent ethic of life”, restorative justice tends to relativize Catholic social teaching away from the Church’s essence as a sign-of-contradiction to one of being popular and influential, or as Jeff Mirus notes:

The inroads of Modernism, the treason of the intellectuals in colleges and universities, the seduction of many traditional religious orders, and the desire of bishops to avoid conflict (and be perceived as players) have all led to a public image for the Church as something of a fiddler—fiddling, so to speak, while Rome burns. 11

The professional criminal will realize this as he studies the social teaching, and it will be the clear and consistent linkage with the roots of the social teaching that will call him to embrace the constancy of it.

Understanding the power of interior reflection provided by the prison is a compelling factor in effective prison ministry, as remarked by Joseph Pearce in his biography of Solzhenitsyn. Although the strengthening of the American carceral/criminal interiority is usually in the opposite direction, that power is evident nonetheless.

Solzhenitsyn was clearly concerned never to lose sight of the truths he had learned in the camps, never to allow the comforts of life to corrupt him from the purity of the vision he believed he had acquired there. It was precisely ‘the highest, noblest impulses of the soul’ that he felt he had discovered in prison and precisely those impulses that he was determined the material pleasures of life should not obscure. 12

Unless the practitioners of the prison ministry come to some understanding of the forging power of the prison experience and the refining of the culture of the criminal world through the carceral experience, it will be impossible to appreciate the level of resistance to eternal truth by the “worldly truth” that animates the carceral/criminal world.

While true conversion is rare in prison—especially on the mainline of a maximum security prison—the introduction of the intellectual concepts and history of the social teaching of the Church is a presentation of truth capable of trumping the criminal/carceral world truth the criminal relies on, and it may remain with him long enough to develop enough traction to become in some way directive upon his release.

The social teaching should be presented in conjunction with a balanced Church history. I recommend the two volume work of Fr. Rodger Charles, SJ, Christian Social Witness and Teaching: The Catholic Tradition from Genesis to Centesimus Annus, and Triumph: The Power and the Glory of the Catholic Church, A 2,000 Year History, by H. W. Crocker III. They are excellent works to place in the hands of prisoners in ministry.

The 2,000 year history of the Church on the earth, connected with the constancy of its social teaching through the worldly battles threatening it, is a true story of triumph, courage, honor, and truths held hard, that can resonate with the professional criminal, whose life is lived by those same qualities, to a degree that may not be immediately obvious.

Some cogent advice from a former prison minister:

For many years I was involved in prison ministry…

Ultimately, these environments, full of criminals, are also seedbeds for the works of the Evil One and therefore are in dire need of Christian ministry. The idea that a person goes to prison to become “reformed” is an absurdity. Oftentimes they become confirmed in their criminal ways. I would ask … anyone in prison ministry, to be of good cheer, fully confident that your work is blessed by God because it is a work that Christ explicitly asked His Church to carry out. If the “official” Church does not pay proper attention to this work of the Gospel, then those in authority will be held accountable before the Judgment Seat of God. Ours, however, is not to agonize over what others are not doing, but to do what we are supposed to do with greater fervor, asking God to sanctify us in the process. 13

Finally, it is crucial to remember that the criminal—not society, capitalism, or the criminal justice system—is the problem. Some Catholics who are attracted to prison ministry believe, due to the myths of Hollywood or Marxism, that the criminals are the good guys, and the police, district attorneys, prison guards, and legislators who support stringent criminal sanctions, are the bad guys. This stance does everyone a disservice—in particular the penitential criminal—who may find little reason for proper expiation within a culture defining criminality as somehow admirable. Professional criminals understand that their criminality is only admirable in the context of the culture of the criminal/carceral world, and if the ministry does not understand this, it will have little real resonance.

Remember also that regardless of the moral evil done by many clerical and lay Catholics—which will often be thrown back at you during your ministry—the work of the Church on earth is magnificently good, strong, and true. It will be your deep understanding of this history and the underlying social teaching, strengthened by your personal relationship with God that will eventually prove most valuable in your spiritual work of mercy with prisoners.

Notes

  1. Edward M. Peters, “Prison before the prison: The ancient and medieval worlds”,In Morris, N. & Rothman, D. J. Eds., The Oxford History of the Prison: The Practice of Punishment in Western Society (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 9.
  2. Andrew Skotnicki, Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church (New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008), p. 6.
  3. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, #2447, Retrieved April 24, 2010 from http://www.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p3s2c2a7.htm
  4. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prisoners at Year End 2009-Advance Counts, Retrieved June 24, 2010 from http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2272
  5. Bert Useem & Anne Morrison Piehl, Prison State: The Challenge of Mass Incarceration. (New York: Cambridge University Press 2008) (p. 105)
  6. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Recidivism, Summary Findings, Retrieved June 24, 2010 from http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/index.cfm?ty=tp&tid=17
  7. Pope Benedict XVI. (Holy Week, 2010). (Magnificat. 12(1). p. 73.
  8. Scott Hahn, Ed., Catholic Bible Dictionary. (New York: Doubleday, 2009.) p. 305.
  9. Andrew Skotnicki, How is Justice Restored?, Studies in Christian Ethics, (Vol. 19, No. 2, 2006), (pp. 192-193)
  10. ibid. p. 192.
  11. Dr. Jeff Mirus, The Catholic Publicity Paradise. Catholic Culture, July 23, 2010, Retrieved July 26, 2010 from http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/otc.cfm?id=676
  12. Joseph Pearce, J., Solzhenitsyn: A soul in exile. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1999), p. 140.
  13. Rev. Thomas J. Euteneuer, Euteneuer Replies in Letters to Editor, New Oxford Review, May 2010, Retrieved June 10, 2010 from http://www.newoxfordreview.org/letters.jsp?did=0510-letters

Mr. Lukenbill, of Sacramento, Calif., is president of the Lampstand Foundation, an apostolate built on Catholic social teaching, providing leadership tools for reformed criminals who work in criminal-transformative organizations. He is the author of the book, The Criminal’s Search for God: Criminal Transformation, Catholic Social Teaching, Deep Knowledge Leadership and Communal Reentry.

This article was published in the Social Justice Review, Volume 101, NO. 11-12 November-December 2010 (pp. 192-175)

2011

THE HIERARCHY OF EVIL IN THE CRIMINAL/CARCERAL WORLD

David H. Lukenbill

Within the criminal/carceral world there exists a hierarchy of evil. Professional criminals occupy the upper echelons; informants, rapists and paedophiles occupy the lower. The hierarchy is inverted, as those at the lower end are considered the most evil and those at the top the least evil. This hierarchy plays a crucial rôle for pastoral work related to the rehabilitation or conversion of criminals; the present article examines the hierarchy and its implications for work in the prison ministry.

The work of my apostolate to help reform professional criminals through exposure to the history and social teaching of the Catholic Church can only be as effective as my love for the professional criminal—those who commit crimes for money, and are not informants, paedophiles, or rapists. That love is built on the knowledge of the criminal world that I absorbed during twenty years as a criminal, including twelve years spent in maximum-security state and federal prisons.

Though it has been decades since I was in prison or lived as a criminal among criminals, my love for them continues today, and it manifests itself in the pleasure and joyful anticipation I still feel when I have the opportunity to venture into a maximum-security prison to speak with prisoners.  The love I came to know in the criminal/carceral world for professional criminals of both sexes is built upon shared experience and many shared perspectives on the world.  It has grown as a result of my deep immersion in Catholicism, which began during the months leading up to my entering the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults, and has deepened in many ways since my baptism and the founding of the apostolate.

I am no longer a criminal, yet I retain a deep respect and quiet love for some of the cultural artefacts of the criminal/carceral world and the moral principles that have marked criminals since before the criminal saint Dismas hung at Christ’s side on Golgotha.  This love informs the work of my apostolate—as love of neighbour should always inform the criminal-ministry work undertaken by other Catholics acting in the spirit of the charitable love which Pope Benedict XVI reminds us is at the heart of the Church:

The Church’s deepest nature is expressed in her three-fold responsibility: of proclaiming the word of God (kerygma-martyria), celebrating the sacraments (leitourgia), and exercising the ministry of charity (diakonia).  These duties presuppose each other and are inseparable.  For the Church, charity is not a kind of welfare activity which could equally well be left to others, but is a part of her nature, an indispensible expression of her very being.1

The moral judgements implicit within the hierarchy of evil have reached the current criminal/carceral world through popular absorption of teachings emanating directly from Christ—His actions as much as His words, particularly in relation to two prototypical criminal saints, Mary Magdalene and Dismas.  The historic popular devotion to St. Dismas contributed to developments in the criminal/carceral world ethos that are still largely prevalent, through reflection upon Dismas’ actions on Golgotha and on the Road to Egypt, where legend has it that he protected the Holy Family from robbery and violence at the hands of his band of thieves.

The Catholic hierarchy of evil—venial sins, sins of moral gravity, and sins that cry out to heaven—is set forth in the Catechism:

Sins are rightly evaluated according to their gravity. The distinction between mortal and venial sin, already evident in Scripture, became part of the tradition of the Church. It is corroborated by human experience…. (§1854)

The catechetical tradition also recalls that there are “sins that cry to heaven”: the blood of Abel, the sin of the Sodomites, the cry of the people oppressed in Egypt, the cry of the foreigner, the widow, and the orphan, injustice to the wage earner.  (§1867)

Sin is a personal act. Moreover, we have a responsibility for the sins committed by others when we cooperate in them:

– by participating directly and voluntarily in them;

– by ordering, advising, praising, or approving them;

– by not disclosing or not hindering them when we have an obligation to do so;

– by protecting evil-doers. (§1868) 2

Within the criminal/carceral world, only some sins are considered evil, but nevertheless the hierarchy of evil within the criminal/carceral world is an adaptation of that which has been sanctioned in the Judaeo-Christian world through the Old Law and deepened and clarified by the New.  Beyond the validation of the Old Law by Christ, the root of this criminal-world adaptation appears in His other words and actions, especially in His relationship with the betrayer Judas and the Good Thief Dismas.  Down through the centuries the adaptation has reconstituted itself into the hard reality that governs the internal narrative of the world of thieves and—as the criminal perceives it—much of the internal narrative of the wider world upon which that of thieves is structured.

The sanctions against criminal/carceral world evils that exist inside maximum-security prisons—which for the past several decades have also determined those of the outside criminal world—are an element that is congruent with the nature of the prison, as described by a former prisoner:

County jail experiences and associations helped prepare me for my eventual journey into the California prison world of the 1970s.  Still, the differences were dramatic.  Jails are community facilities, close to family, where inmates serve short sentences.  In comparison, prisons are places where people spend many years.  The men, both prisoners and guards, are bigger and tougher, many with tattoos.  Penitentiaries, maximum security “big house” institutions are huge complexes, filled with thousands of men, and known for high levels of violence, blatant racism, and hatred….

The way I saw the world and myself continued to change during my early prison years.  I became a lot like those I saw around me who seemed to be doing the easiest time.  These were the guys who were respected; the ones with tattoos all over their bodies, lifting weights, drinking coffee with cream and sugar, smoking tailor-made cigarettes, getting high, and laughing all the time.  My developing convict identity was learned from those men I associated with, the meanings we shared, the things we did, our use of language and prison humour, and how we were seen and treated by others.3                                                                    

The criminal/convict identity, built upon the necessity of survival in a brutal world where one mistake can mean death or exploitation, is an identity that sticks, as former convict John Irwin notes:

The convict identity is very important to the future career of the felon.  In the first instance, the acquiring of the taken-for-granted perspective will at least obstruct the releasee’s attempts to reorient himself on the outside.  More important, the other levels of the identity, if they have been acquired, will continue to influence choices for years afterward.  The convict perspective, though it may become submerged after extended outside experiences, will remain operative in its latency state and will often obtrude into civilian life contexts.4

Each act of Christ in His ministry is vital in its continuance as a deep influence on human behaviour, consciously or unconsciously.  “Our Lord, throughout His life, and especially in the smallest details of His Sacred Passion, fulfilled every type and every prophecy.  Whence in very truth He was able to say, when expiring upon the cross, ‘It is finished.’” 5

He set one archetype by His condemnation of the betrayal by Judas, that “it would have been better for that man if he had he not been born” (Matt 26: 24).  Though the great condemnation was directed specifically at Judas, its use against any betrayal has become normative within the world of the professional criminal (and even within much of the noncriminal world).  Another condemnation touched those who harm children:  “…but whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened round his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matt 18: 6).  That condemnation remains in force today against paedophiles, who are subject to being killed if placed within the general population of a maximum-security prison.

Professional criminals define those who inform on their crime partners (a relationship within the criminal/carceral world of great trust, honour, and respect) or prey on innocent women and children, as decidedly evil, beyond the pale and unworthy of respect, in prison or out.  The sanctions against the evil of rapists and paedophiles stem partially from criminals who do not accord recognition to those acts as any kind of “crime” worthy of the name.  “Rape [and] paedophilia…are not perceived by prisoners as real crime.” 6 Consequently, those acts are considered to be outside the morality of criminals, and their perpetrators are unable to command protection under the normal bounds of respect within the criminal world.  (Such incidents as “statutory” rape, between individuals of similar age, are not considered evil, as the violent serial rape of innocents most certainly is.)

“[R]atting, snitching, telling, informing . . . [are] hated by other inmates inside prison”, 7 and can lead to death:

‘Don’t snitch’ is a code among inmates. The price of squealing on another con may be a beating or even death.  Even so, the inmate realizes that every man is out for himself and that even his best buddy may turn informant to save his own skin or to acquire privileges. Although convicts share an understanding of “no snitching”, the dominant ethos in prison is, as it was outside, ‘[Screw] everybody else but me.’ 8

One kind of informant situation in the outside criminal world, in which a member of one criminal organization cooperates with law enforcement by informing on a rival organization, in order to compete more effectively, is not generally considered “informing” in the classic sense, but rather as corruption of law enforcement to satisfy criminal organizational goals.

Within the criminal/carceral world, the sanctions visited upon sexual offenders and informers are marked by violence, and go much further than the sanctions of the noncriminal community, which usually restricts its non-legal response simply to disgust and fear.  Professional criminals remember what the noncriminal world—including many rehabilitation practitioners—has forgotten:  that betrayers and sexual predators choose to do what they do; do not act because of corrosive familial or social influences; and, given the opportunity, will choose to repeat those acts.

Professional criminals understand the difference between the murder of a gang member by a member of another gang during a dispute over territory or profits (which they see as an act of war that soldiers are legitimately authorized to perform), and the murder of a child victim by a paedophile rapist (an act of the most predatory evil, more severely sanctioned by professional criminals than by most American criminal justice systems).  Capital punishment is the sentence that professional criminals pronounce and execute upon child rapists.  This is where the effort by many Catholics to abolish capital punishment—a sanction which the historical tradition of the Church teaches to be appropriate—conflicts with the conversion of criminals, who ask why a Church that does not understand the proper use of capital punishment is a Church for the ages.

The criminal/carceral world takes the Machiavellian view that a murder committed under the well-known rubric “It’s just business” is legitimate, while one committed on account of lust, thrill-seeking or craziness is not:  “Those cruelties we may say are well employed, if it be permitted to speak well of things evil, which are done once for all under the necessity of self-preservation and are not afterwards persisted in…” 9

Any organized rehabilitation work that mingles those who, by criminal/carceral world standards, should be executed, with those who could perform or support the execution, is almost certainly guaranteed to fail, for it has already exhibited a lack of understanding of a fundamental aspect of the culture of the criminal/carceral world.

Criminals differentiate between informing on a crime partner and a regular citizen’s reporting to the police a violent crime committed against innocents.  The former is always evil; the latter is always good.

I should be remiss not to mention the radical theory of criminology built on Marxism, which has set up a different hierarchy of evil, and one that many prisoners have adopted as their way of perceiving their crimes, as noted in the recent text Criminology:

Steven Spitzer devised probably the most intriguing Marxist theory of deviance.  Assuming that capitalist societies are based on class conflict and that harmony is achieved through the dominance of a specific class, Spitzer reasoned that deviants are drawn from groups who create problems for those who rule.  Although these groups largely victimize and burden people in their own classes, “their problematic quality ultimately resides in their challenge to the basis and form of class rule”.  In other words, populations become problematic for those who rule when they disturb, hinder, or call into question any of the following:

1) capitalist modes of appropriating the product of human labour (called into question when the poor “steal” from the rich);

2) social conditions under which capitalist production takes place (questioned by those who refuse or are unable to perform wage labour);

3) patterns of distribution and consumption in capitalist society (questioned by those who use drugs for escape and transcendence rather than sociability and adjustment);

4) the process of socialization for productivity and nonproductive rôles (questioned by youth who refuse to be schooled or those who deny the validity of family life);

5) ideology that supports the functioning of capitalist society (questioned by proponents of alternative forms of social organization).10

The sociologist Richard Quinney developed another Marxist perspective on crime, furthering the work already done by Richard Spitzer:

Quinney identified four types of crimes of domination that result from the reproduction of the capitalist system itself. ‘Crimes of control’ include crimes by the police and the FBI…’Crimes of government’ involve political crime…’Crimes of economic domination’ consist primarily of corporate crimes…

‘Crimes of accommodation’ are acts of adaptation by the lower and working classes in response to the oppressive conditions of capitalism and the domination of the capitalist class…

Thus for Quinney, the crimes of domination seem to be the real societal harms, but they are not criminalized because they benefit the ruling class.  Crimes of accommodation, on the other hand, range from simple adaptation to conscious political resistance.  In fact, for Quinney, some crimes and, therefore, criminals, are admirable elements in the overall class struggle. 11

This Marxist/sociological perspective informs many in the academy, and has exerted great influence upon many criminals who have earned college and postgraduate degrees and secured academic positions.  It often renders rehabilitative pastoral ministry somewhat difficult, because these theories often have some depth, and resonate among some criminals who cherish the idea that their crimes have made them heroes.

It is, however, in the actions of the criminal hero, St. Dismas, that the honour of the professional criminal was founded.  Dismas, the Good Thief, is usually portrayed as experiencing repentance, hanging beside Christ on Calvary, but nothing in the scriptural record of that central moment in human history indicates that it was actual repentance he was expressing, but that he saw the truth.  Dismas recognized that the man hanging next to him was God.  We do not know how he came to see this while so many others who witnessed the Crucifixion did not.  Perhaps it began on the road to Egypt, where Dismas really saw love and innocence in the prototypical family that he had perhaps dreamt of but not known.

In the act of saving the Holy Family from the robbery and violence of his band of thieves, he acted benevolently for the same reason professional criminals today will not harm children, and will punish with death those who do.  Perhaps it was on the road to Calvary, as the two thieves carried their crosses with Christ, that Dismas saw how others responded to Christ, and He to them.  On the day of crucifixion Dismas saw the truth and remembered the episode on the road to Egypt, and his words to Christ were: “Jesus, remember me, when you come in your kingly power” (Luke 23: 42).

Dismas might be saying: remember that I have responded to You honourably, I have not pleaded for my life like Gestas, but have accepted my punishment honourably, for it is just.  I have realized Your innocence and know that while justice is being done with us, it is not being done with You, so please, “remember me”.

This is not an unusual response for a professional criminal, even today; among themselves, in the cells and on the streets, they will openly, proudly acknowledge who they are, without remorse, asking for no mercy, and though trying anything and everything to escape punishment, once sentenced by judge and jury they will accept it stoically.

One of the elements in the hierarchy of evil—something that if a professional criminal does it will cost him the trust and respect of other criminals—is claiming a desire to live a law-abiding life.  A criminal reacts to this as non-criminals would react if a peer expressed the desire for a life of crime.  (Although in some circles that would merely be greeted with scepticism, if the contemplated criminal life seemed to have little chance of profit or success—so much has the public been influenced by the spell of Hollywood and the mythology of Marxism, in which criminals are more often seen as romantic figures than as evil predators.)

Dismas saw, in the Man hanging beside him, a Man/God who was truly “walking the talk” and living the truth under the most horrific of circumstances, the Roman crucifixion of criminals.  Christ’s decision to take Dismas with Him—through Hell and into Paradise—is, from the human perspective He still possessed, a good idea—to take a reformed criminal into the depths, much as a priest today might ask a reformed criminal to accompany him on a prison ministry visit, both for reassurance and credibility.  Perhaps it is incongruous to think of Our Lord’s feeling the need for a guide, but on the other hand, it is congruent with His trepidation expressed in Gethsemane, and even on Golgotha, for He was still a man, however great the Glory to which He was going.

There are mysteries here that I do not understand, but I know each act and each word of the earthly ministry of Christ has eternal meaning.  All the books that could be written are being written, and they do fill the world, but we are still mystified.  Part of the mystery is why Dismas becomes Christ’s companion on the road from Calvary to Paradise, and in the process becomes the first canonized saint of the Catholic Church.  In response to this question, Archbishop Fulton Sheen writes:

One would have thought a saint would have been the first soul purchased over the counter of Calvary by the red coins of redemption, but in the Divine plan it was a thief who was the escort of the King of kings into Paradise.  If Our Lord had come merely as a teacher, the thief would never have asked for forgiveness.  But since the thief’s request touched the reason of His coming to earth, namely, to save souls, the thief heard the immediate answer: “I promise thee, this day thou shalt be with Me in Paradise” (Luke 23: 43). 12

In converting criminals, we should seek to understand this history and the related tradition of the Church regarding the protection of the innocent, which may involve the necessary use of capital punishment and just war, so as not to fall into the avoidance technique of saying that these are “issues men of good will can disagree about”.  It is through sharing one’s understanding of the history and the tradition of protecting the innocent (as Dismas did on the road to Egypt) that criminals will be able to see beyond the superficial uncertainties often expressed about these traditional doctrines.

While the Church’s institutional approach to criminal justice may seem a somewhat depleted vessel—at least since the papacy of Pius XII—the anchoring of the Church’s social teaching within the dogma of good and evil still forms the axis around which the charitable and pastoral work of criminal rehabilitative ministry revolves.

The robustness with which the work of charitable apostolates must be done is noted by C.S. Lewis in a sermon he gave on June 8, 1941, entitled “The Weight of Glory”:

There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal.  Nations, cultures, arts, civilization—these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat.  But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit—immortal horrors or everlasting splendours.  This does not mean that we are to be perpetually solemn.  We must play.  But our merriment must be of that kind (and it is, in fact, the merriest kind) which exists between people who have, from the outset, taken each other seriously—no flippancy, no superiority, no presumption.   And our charity must be a real and costly love, with deep feeling for the sins in spite of which we love the sinner—no mere tolerance, or indulgence which parodies love as flippancy parodies merriment.  Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, your neighbour is the holiest object presented to your senses. 13

The foremost author on criminal justice issues from a Catholic perspective at the present time is Dr. Andrew Skotnicki, associate professor of Christian ethics at Manhattan College, who wrote, in his “Acknowledgements” in his seminal book Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church:

Finally, I must say something about the countless men and women I have known in the jails, detention centres, and prisons of the United States.  I beheld the face of God for over thirty-five years either as a volunteer, or as a part-or full-time chaplain.  Caregivers have said so often that they receive far more than they give that it has become a well-worn cliché, but it is a cliché precisely because over and over again, experience proves it to be true, and I feel deeply the joy and burden of gratitude to them all. 14

In many ways, my life as a criminal and convict were some of the most important years of my life, for, as hard, lonely and brutal as they so often were, surviving and thriving during those years gave me the experience that led to my apostolate work, and it is in that work that I also beheld the face of God in the men and women whose lives I’ve been part of during these many past years and those of the still-unfolding future.

 

                                                                             Notes

 

  1. Benedict XVI, Pope, God Is Love:  Deus Caritas Est (San Francisco:  Ignatius Press, 2006), p. 60 (§25a).
  2. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. (1997).
  3. Charles M. Terry, “From C-Block to Academia:  You Can’t Get There from Here”, in Convict Criminology, ed. Jeffrey Ian Ross and Stephen C. Richards (Belmont, Calif. Thomson Wadsworth, 2003), p. 99.
  4. John Irwin, The Felon (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.:  Prentice-Hall, 1970), p. 84.
  5. Jean Joseph Gaume, Msgr., Life of the Good Thief (Fitzwilliam, N. H.:  Loreto Publications, 2003), p. 71.  
  6. K. C. Carceral, Behind a Convict’s Eyes:  Doing Time in a Modern Prison (Belmont, Calif.:  Thomson Wadsworth, 2004), p. 214.
  7. Ibid.
  8. Stanton E. Samenow, Inside the Criminal Mind (New York:  Times Books, 1984)145-6.
  9. Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince (East Bridgewater, Mass.:  Signature Press, 2008)64.
  10. Piers Beirne and James Messeschmidt, Criminology (Boulder, Colo.:  Westview Press, 2000), pp. 198-9.
  11. Ibid., p. 200.
  12. Fulton J. Sheen, Life of Christ (New York: Image Books/Doubleday, 1958), p. 545.
  13. C. S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory and Other Addresses, ed. Walter Hooper (New York: Macmillan Paperbacks, 1980), p. 19.
  14. Andrew Skotnicki, Criminal Justice and the Catholic Church (Lanham, Md.:  Sheed & Ward, 2008), pp. vii-viii.

Published in the Social Justice Review, Volume 102, NO. 11-12 November-December 2011, (pp. 167-171)

 

Books Published

26 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications, Books

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

Chulu Press Books

Chulu Press is an imprint of Lampstand.

All of these books are free to Lampstand members and are also available for purchase at Amazon. For new Lampstand members who sign up at the supporter level ($75 a year) all of the books that have been published will be mailed to them in one shipment. See the Lampstand Organizational Information category, Membership Information post (may 25, 2015) for additional membership information.

The Criminal’s Search for God: Criminal Transformation, Catholic Social Teaching, Deep Knowledge Leadership, and Communal Reentry: by David H. Lukenbill (2006) About a criminal life, personal transformation through education and deep spiritual work, the principles of Catholic social teaching, and the type of leadership needed to develop and manage effective criminal transformation programs. Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/The-Criminals-Search-For-Transformation/dp/0979167027/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-3&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

Carceral World, Communal City: by David H. Lukenbill (2007) “The criminal world in the United States, with the carceral shaping of it, has become a coherent entity and within that entity it is the criminal world leadership to whom we must look for transformative leadership who have already transformed the pain of their suffering into the power of teaching others.” (p. 8). Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/Carceral-World-Communal-David-Lukenbill/dp/0979167051/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-4&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

The Criminal, The Cross & The Church: The Interior Journey: by David H. Lukenbill (2008) “The penitential criminal working to reform other criminals, wisely spends the rest of his life atoning for the harm he has done during his criminal life; not because the world requires it, but because the eternal balance requires it, his immortal soul requires it, and God wishes it.” (Frontpiece) Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/The-Criminal-Cross-Church-Interior/dp/097916706X/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-6&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

Capital Punishment & Catholic Social Teaching: A Tradition of Support, by David H. Lukenbill (2009) “This book is a defense of the scriptural and traditional Catholic position of support for capital punishment as expressed in the two universal catechisms, the Catechism of the Council of Trent, published by Pope Pius V in 1566, and the Catechism of the Catholic Church, published by Pope John Paul II in 1992 & 1997 (First and Second Edition), in response to calls for its abolition.” (p. 9) Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/Capital-Punishment-Catholic-Social-Teaching/dp/0979167078/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-5&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

The Lampstand Prison Ministry: Constructed On Catholic Social Teaching & the History of the Catholic Church, by David H. Lukenbill (2010) “The foundational ideas animating the  Lampstand prison ministry—that it takes a reformed criminal to reform criminals and that the conversion approach must be intellectual—are ideas I have been working with since the beginning of my reformation from criminality at age thirty five, as I began seeing the world from the perspective of a college education (leading to a successful criminal rehabilitative college-based educational program I developed and managed) and continuing to the final washing from my spirit the last remnants of a lifetime of criminal thinking twenty years later, in the waters of baptism.” Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/The-Lampstand-Prison-Ministry-Constructed/dp/0979167086/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-2&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

Invictus: The Way of the Apostolate, by David H. Lukenbill (2011) “This book is for penitential professional criminals whose involvement in the criminal/carceral world is of long duration and commitment…It is for those professional criminals who do get caught and serve time in prison, comprising approximately 70 – 80% of the prison population; and who, at some point, may enter a penitential state.” Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/Invictus-The-Apostolate-David-Lukenbill/dp/0979167035/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-7&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

The Criminal’s Search for God: Sources, by David H. Lukenbill (2012) “This book is a reflection on the collection of ideas within a group of books—sources—that played such a large role in the development of my thinking; initially to deepen my criminality, but eventually becoming the soil from which my transformation and conversion to Catholicism grew.” Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/The-Criminals-Search-God-Sources/dp/0979167094/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1361892185&sr=8-1&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

Catholicism, Communism, & Criminal Reformation, by David H. Lukenbill (2013) Excerpt from the Introduction:  “What is important—in the context of our apostolate work through The Lampstand Foundation—is not the theory of Communism, “to each according to need”, which many may support; but the influence on criminals from the system of government and its practice under Lenin and Stalin in Russia, Mao in China, and the lessor monsters of our world; practice continuing largely unchanged today except as modified within the constrictions created by the ability of global communications about governmental atrocities making it much more difficult to keep such atrocities hidden now than during the last century; and a governing practice diametrically opposed to the sacred doctrine of the Catholic Church, who Communism sees as its most dangerous enemy….” Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/Catholicism-Communism-Criminal-Reformation-Lukenbill/dp/0989242900/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1383345269&sr=8-1&keywords=catholicism%2C+communism+%26+criminal+reformation

 Women in the Church: St. Catherine of Siena, Fr. Teilhard de Chardin & Criminal Reformation, by David H. Lukenbill (2014) For this book, a quote from Groppe (2009) frames the over-arching theme:“In a culture that systematically denigrates, commodifies, and violates women’s bodies in advertising, film, and pornography, it is imperative that the church bear public and symbolic witness to the mystery that women and men alike can serve as an icon of Wisdom made flesh.” (p. 171)  Groppe, E. (2009). Women and the persona of Christ: Ordination in the Roman Catholic Church. In Abraham, S. & Procario-Foley, E. (Eds.) Frontiers in Catholic feminist theology: Shoulder to shoulder. (pp. 153-171), Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  http://www.amazon.com/Women-Church-Catherine-Teilhard-Reformation/dp/0989242919/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1404152262&sr=8-1&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

The Criminal’s Search for God: Catholic Reformation of Criminals, by David H. Lukenbill (2016) An excerpt from Chapter I:”This book is a reworking of the ten books I have written on criminal reformation, stripping out the voluminous references included in the original books which were meant for my primary readers—criminals in prison—to introduce them to the Catholic sources validating my ideas; leaving only my words and their expansion directed to a broader audience.The Lampstand Foundation, an apostolate of criminal reformation through Catholic conversion, has grown from what I have learned from my criminal/carceral life, college experience, family life, and transformation within the Catholic Church; proposing that criminal reformation should be conducted by reformed criminals using the supernatural truth of the Catholic Church to trump the secular lies upon which the criminal/carceral world is built. Speaking of my criminal life is difficult, but what I have learned might be of value to a criminal justice system that has been failing in its public charge of criminal transformation and rehabilitation. The criminals I speak of are those whose world I was a part; those who commit crimes for money, for whom crime is a way of life—professional criminals—to whom the criminal/carceral world is marked by a subtly defined code of behavior, an ancient tradition, and strong cultural connection.” Paperback & E-Book, Free to members, or the paperback can be ordered through Amazon.  https://www.amazon.com/Criminals-Search-God-Catholic-Reformation/dp/0989242935/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1466452315&sr=8-1&keywords=david+h+lukenbill

Membership Information

25 Monday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Membership Info, Organzation Overview

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The Lampstand Foundation is a 501 c (3) Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation founded by David H. Lukenbill in September 2003 in Sacramento, California: Federal ID# 20-0352634.

Contact info:

David H. Lukenbill, Founder/President
The Lampstand Foundation
P.O. Box 254794
Sacramento, California 95865-4794
dlukenbill@msn.com                                                                           http://www.davidhlukenbill.@wordpress.com

ANNUAL & LIFETIME MEMBERSHIP RATES:

Student: $10.00
Individual: $25.00
Family: $40.00
Apostolate: $50.00
Supporter: $75.00
Nonprofit Organization: $100.00
Business: $200.00
Corporate Patron: $500.00
Lifetime: $1,000.00
Foundation: $1,500.00

Select membership level and mail with check for that amount enclosed to the address listed above.

MEMBERSHIP BENEFITS

Annual Policy Primer Research Report, Quarterly Newsletter, Monthly E-Letter, Periodic Monographs, and annual books from Chulu Press (New members who join at the Supporter level or above will receive all of our previously published paperback books in one shipment).

My Conversion Story

25 Monday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in A Conversion Story

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I have been asked about my conversion story and realized that, other than being in my first book, The Criminal’s Search for God, it was not posted anywhere so I have remedied that here, this is from pages 9-41 of my book.

For links to my books at Amazon go to http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=david+h+lukenbill

A Life Far From God

But God, as he is the supremely good Creator of good natures, so is He of evil wills the most just Ruler; so that, while they make an ill use of good natures, He makes a good use of evil wills.  (St. Augustine)

Few human beings are farther from God than criminals, yet the first canonized saint of the Church Christ established on the rock of Peter was the criminal Dismas, the Good Thief, who Christ took with Him from Calvary to heaven, thereby revealing the eternal path to criminal transformation.

This book is in four parts. The first is about the criminal world through the prism of my criminal life—as a thief and robber—lasting for almost twenty years with twelve of them in maximum security prisons, and about my transformation, education, and conversion to Catholicism.

Parts two and three focus on the spiritual and public policy aspects of using transformed criminals to help other criminals transform their lives, and part four is a model program design to accomplish that work in the community.

Transformed criminals with advanced degrees and Catholic social teaching knowledge—I describe as deep knowledge leaders—working through grassroots community organizations, can help reverse the long-term failure of criminal rehabilitation programs as they possess the elemental experiential knowledge of the criminal world allowing them, and them only, the authentic access to criminals long denied the social work professional.

The larger issue of how we treat those who have committed crimes against us, who have asked for forgiveness and validated it through their redemptive actions, are thus addressed by an acceptance of their transformation and their help, and an eventual welcome into full communion.

This book is written from a Catholic perspective, seeing crime as sin in the sense described classically through Church teaching, as by the Pontifical Council on Justice and Peace (2004):

The mystery of sin is composed of a twofold wound, which the sinner opens in his own side and in the relationship with his neighbor. That is why we can speak of personal and social sin. Every sin is personal under a certain aspect; under another, every sin is social, insofar as and because it also has social consequences. In its true sense, sin is always an act of the person, because it is the free act of an individual person…

Certain sins, moreover, constitute by their very object a direct assault on one’s neighbor. Such sins in particular are known as social sins. Social sin is every sin committed against the justice due in relations between individuals, between the individual and the community, and also between the community and the individual.

(pp. 66-67, italics in original)

The prodigal son’s return can address the four central criminal justice issues our society struggles with: 1) our nation’s youth who are at risk of becoming criminals, 2) the failure of prisons to rehabilitate, 3) the failure of reentry, and 4) the increasing criminalization of culture.

The number of criminals in America’s federal and state prisons is 2,193,798 (12/31/05) currently increasing inexorably—491 prisoners per 100,000 population on 12/31/05 versus 411 in 1995—and 60-70% of them will return to crime once released.

It is hoped this book will be of help to criminals who are called to transform their lives, restore their connection to the community and help other criminals find the path home to Rome.

It is also hoped it will stimulate a deeper and more Catholic informed criminal justice work around the issue of criminal transformation.

Part One

A Criminal Life

One’s own life has meaning not only because it is earthly but also because in it we decide to be near or far from God, we decide for sin or redemption. Hannah Arendt (p. 25)

I was born into the criminal world, far from God, and though well before memory it clearly marked the path I was to walk for many years.

My father was a member of a criminal organization and by the time I was two years old we were on the run from the FBI.

They caught up with us and my father was sentenced to twenty years in Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Years later when I was sentenced to Leavenworth, I met people who were still serving time from when my father was there, a situation that is unfortunately all too common among many families.

My first criminal act was the theft of a pair of fur-lined leather gloves of another boy in sixth grade. He reported the theft and the teacher had us all stand and face her as she demanded that the thief return the gloves and nothing further would be said. I had put the gloves under my hat where they lay perched on the top of my head, surely sticking up at a strange angle I thought at the time.

Though trembling with barely suppressed fear, and the excitement of dealing with that fear, I never said a word and walking home, hands warm in the gloves; I felt the first joy of gaining something for nothing and the brilliant glow of a risk taken and my fear conquered.

This fear and excitement was always to be present in all of the future crimes I committed.

When I was twelve, my father was released from prison.

I had been raised without any knowledge of him and was completely taken by surprise the day he showed up. He knocked on the door and I answered, immediately sensing in his warm “Hello David” someone other than a mere friend of the family.

My father was charming and brought an excitement and worldliness to my life that I had never known. He took me to places I had never been, gave me more money than I had ever had, and let me drive his Cadillac convertible. I deeply love Cadillac’s to this very day and drive a pale yellow one that almost perfectly matches the brilliant pale yellow of the Cadillac convertible he was driving the first day he showed up at our door.

I began telling my eighth grade friends about my father, breathlessly describing what I had been told of his criminal exploits to my wide-eyed friends. I started smoking and drinking as he did, and soon began getting in trouble and became more rebellious at school and home.

My first contact with police came when I stole a pair of diving goggles from a store when I was thirteen. I was caught by the store manager and held for the police. They took me down to the city jail and showed me the juvenile cell where I was told I would wind up if I didn’t straighten out. They were trying to scare me straight but it had the opposite effect. I was thrilled. I thought the jail cell and the guys in it were the coolest thing going and could not wait to join them and the world that my father had belonged to.

I began by running away from home on several occasions.

One time a friend and I got all the way to Mexico and back—in his chopped and channeled Ford—without getting caught.

After that, another friend and I stole a car—a big red Dodge convertible—and got to Los Angeles before we were caught. Since it was his first offence and his family convinced the judge he was redeemable, he was returned to his family. Since it was not my first offence and my family was not sure if I was redeemable, I was sentenced to a foster youth ranch.

While I was in jail—in the same jail cell I had been shown a year or so earlier—awaiting transfer to the foster youth ranch; I and two others escaped from the jail by jimmying the cell door open. This involved stuffing black paper down the slot the hook dropped into during dinner when the door was open and the guard was distracted, and then lifting the hook off later, (since it wasn’t securely down in the slot) with a bent and filed down fork. One of us crept out into the office next to the cell and we called the one guard on duty back to the cell complaining of being sick, and our partner rifled through the office until he found the guard’s gun, leading him back into the cell once he had left us. Once he came back we tied him up, and the first time we tied him he was tied too close to the cell door, which was still closed so we couldn’t open it, so we had to retie him.

It was three in the morning and we decided to go down the stairs to the basement garage to get out of the city jail building. One of us was in front and slipped out the door and made for the river, but I was hobbling due to a sprained ankle I suffered during a jail fight and my other partner was helping me hop down the stairs. He also had the gun. As we opened the stairwell door into the garage a police officer came through. He recognized my partner and asked what he was doing out of jail. My partner pulled the gun, pointed it at the officer and pulled the trigger. The safety was still on and it did not fire, and how the future of one’s life hangs on events that happen so quickly and so decisively.

I was not charged for the escape—though it made the front page of the local paper as the first time anyone had ever escaped from the city jail and the fact that we were juveniles gave it even more news value— and was sent to the youth ranch as planned.

I was warned that if I did not change my behavior the escape would be charged and I would be sent to the state reformatory.

I liked the ranch. We played basketball, did chores, and I might have stayed for my allotted time had I not run into one of my former jail-escape partners, the one who made it to the river and was caught trying to swim across when police on both sides, fired a couple warning shots which brought him out of the frigid water.

One of the duties we had at the ranch was to raise money. We did this by going door-to-door selling stationary, donations for the work of the youth ranch. The counselors would drive us around to the towns in Nevada and we would sell our stationary for three or four hours a day. One day we were selling in my hometown and to my surprise, I knocked on the door of my escape partner.

That effectively ended my ranch stay as we took up where we had left off, stealing cars and anything else not bolted down, drinking too much and driving all over creation convinced we were big time outlaws.

I was picked up three weeks later for car theft and promptly sent to the state reformatory in Elko. This was a barren, dusty, and cold place where one of my first chores was fighting the toughest guy there to determine my place in the pecking order.

The reformatory guards refereed the fight which all the other wards watched, circled around me and my protagonist as we slugged it out with boxing gloves in the gym.

We spent our days baling hay, feeding cows, and doing pretty much all of the ranch work we were directed to do. The days were much regimented, the weather was extremely cold and I started thinking about escape.

A few months later I rounded up another escape partner and in the late night hours we climbed out the window, over the fence and ran several miles to Elko in our nightshirts and bare feet.

That is how they made us spend the night, away from our clothes and shoes for the express purpose of discouraging escape, but we were determined.

We broke into a church and found money and clothes. We then walked the early dawn streets until we located a car with the keys in it—not hard in the 1950’s—and headed east for Salt Lake City. Once there we stole another car from a used car lot, clothes and a shotgun from a sporting goods store, and food from a grocery.

We were brought to earth some hours later after a tire-screaming chase through downtown Salt Lake after I went the wrong way on a one-way street. I drove onto the sidewalk in an attempt to get away but it was not to be.

I came barreling out of the car with the shotgun in my hands, dropping it when I saw several guns pointed at me.

They locked us up in the city jail and our cell mates were the leaders of a riot that had just occurred at the Utah State Prison, Point of the Mountain. They told stories about the riot that had made the news world-wide, and in our criminal pride we basked in the knowledge that we were in the big time.

I had been searching for this ever since I had reached puberty and began to appreciate the world of adventure, excitement, and forbidden things that was represented by my father and I was determined to join that world. Though I lived in a good home and had a good life, there were restrictions, and I was against the imposition of any restriction.

Much of my youthful world, through the music of Elvis Presley, the movies of James Dean, and the fashions from both, provided me with reinforcement that rebellion was cool; rebellion was how you became an adult.

This was a clear counter-choice to the message of living an ordered life that was coming from my mother and step-father.

It was also clear to me from the way people treated my father that he was admired and respected. That respect flew in the face of the directives to not be like him. He and his world had more potency and vitality than the good and orderly world of my upbringing.

The nature of the ordered life is subtle and quiet, the pleasures serene and soft, and their eternal power was not then visible to me.

The criminal world pulsated with passion, fear conquered, and deep excitement. I chose to live in the criminal world because I saw it as the world that presented the most value for me, which at that time was to have a good time and live an exciting life; or in the immortal words of Danny Fisher, “To live hard, die young, and leave a good looking corpse.”

Prison

Taking the car across the state line during the escape was a federal offense. I pled guilty—setting a pattern of always pleading guilty and accepting responsibility for the crimes I did and was caught for—and was sentenced to the Federal Correctional Institution at Englewood, Colorado, also known as “Little Alcatraz.” It was called that for good reason. There were few escapes from Englewood. It was surrounded by a double steel fence topped with rolled barbed wire and several manned gun towers.

Surviving in prison was the most difficult thing I ever did in my life and the most exciting. Prison is a war environment. The threat of death is daily and imminent. It is so intense, the edges are so hard, and the consequences of stupidity are so final and brutal, that the only way to master it is to learn to love it. Mastering war is learning to love war, becoming the ultimate warrior. It is the same in prison, you become the ultimate prisoner.

At that point prison becomes home, with all of its cold warmth and deadly charm, and even though violence and death still stalked daily through the yard and tiers, I felt right at home.

I learned how to project myself beyond myself, how to create a protective space around myself as I walked the halls and yard. In prison the ideal is to be unreachable physically and emotionally. You should not be touched by whatever happens. You should become the strong silent type to the nth degree, and moving beyond that to actually thrive on the chaos and anarchy of prison, to be cold and indifferent when all around you is falling apart, and yet—this is the hardest—to be enjoying the process.

What I saw and felt in prison are what people have been writing about for generations concerning isolation and imprisonment. Reading Viktor Frankl’s account from the death camp meant much to me, how he found meaning in the suffering. Frankl writes about how he survived the horror of Auschwitz and Dachau. He writes about how after being stripped of all possessions and being isolated with so many values being destroyed, he was still able to find value and meaning in life.

I learned about the value of material things in prison and how little power they have over the internal truths we live by. The suffering of punishment rightly delivered—the pain of daily experience—is one of the most comprehensive teachers of all. I learned that in prison. I learned about what I could survive and what I would choose when all choices were closed off.

There is much of the monastery in prison, and the monk Thomas Merton was another author I enjoyed. I used my time in prison to read things I would never have encountered on the outside. During one period, when I spent a year in solitary confinement, I went through the entire dictionary and copied out every mythological proper name and definition into a notebook which became as thick as Grave’s “The Greek Myths”. I also went through many of Freud’s and Jung’s works during this time.

In prison the greatest honor is in protecting yourself, physically and ethically. Any hint of disrespect or violation of criminal world ethics demands satisfaction.

In a world of predators each revelation was significant. If in defending yourself, it appeared you were close to giving up or appeared to be less than total in your commitment to protecting yourself, you might have to fight again. If the other convicts thought you would kill over a pack of cigarettes, they would be less likely to take your cigarettes.

The cruelty and brutality of the prison is classically evil in the sense that the prisoners are being cruel and brutal consciously. That is the paradigm that works. It is not that there is that much that happens in prison that doesn’t happen on the outside, its just that in prison it is so much more concentrated and undiluted by goodness. Being an evil person is considered good in prison. Being able to hurt others without inner doubt or hesitation is considered high praise.

Honor as it is expressed in prison, is controlled brutality.

As the days spilled into months and years I began to accept the level of terror and alarm that surrounded me as normal. When a few days would go by without a stabbing, fight, or other disturbance, I would find myself getting bored.

The longer you are in prison the more power you acquire. Time builds clout. That first time in prison I did a lot of time in isolation. I was always resisting the guards, stealing, gambling, fighting, getting caught and getting thrown into the hole.

I came to feel a pride in being able to do solitary time. The longest time was the year previously mentioned, getting out of my cell once a week to walk down the tier to the shower.

It was during that period, at the beginning of it when I went on a hunger strike while locked in the stone cell without clothes, or bedding, only receiving a blanket and thin mattress at night, and after 25 days, reading the Bible I broke down.

I prayed to God to forgive and protect me and He came to me. I felt such peace and rapture. I felt I was lifted out and walked with Him in a beautiful mountain meadow.

That moment stayed with me for a long time, but could not outweigh what I had to deal with daily, and it was not until almost 30 years later that the power of that moment and that vision became completely evident to me.

I served a little over four years that first time. By the time I got out I had learned to survive in prison, but did not have a clue what to do on the outside.

A few weeks after getting out, while in a bar, someone jostled me, a common occurrence in a bar and yet I found myself snarling a rebuke to the very shocked patron, before I remembered where I was, that I was no longer in prison, and he meant me no harm.

I was out for a very short period. I attempted an armed robbery and within weeks I was back in prison, the attempted robbery plea bargained down to assault with a deadly weapon.

What a relief I thought, and I smiled when I walked back on the prison yard, even though this was a state prison I had never been in, but I felt right at home and was known by reputation. People knew me and I knew how to live here. I was back home.

This return was in the early sixties in California and the process was to have every prisoner in the California Youth Authority go through a five week battery of tests designed to discover what made us act as we did and if there were behavioral characteristics peculiar to us as a group.

State prison in California was much more violent than the federal system and the place I was in, Deuel Vocational Institution, or fondly called DVI, in Tracy, California was one of the worst. The racial tension and the gang structure were much more intense. The drug traffic was free-wheeling.

Countering this prison sub-culture was a strong emphasis on rehabilitation, probably the last period until recently that the California penal system focused on it. We had group counseling sessions and needed to complete some type of educational or vocational program prior to being paroled.

I chose to get involved in the dry cleaning vocational training as that put me working in the prison laundry, which was one of the best ways to make extra money while doing time. The regular issue of prison clothing comes out of the laundry all rumpled and wrinkled, but the prisoners who could afford it, paid to have us do their clothing nicely, pressed, cleaned, and delivered.

This was when the prison gangs were really becoming well organized. The emerging political direction of the various ethnic communities increased the general level of political awareness in the prison at large. There was also more value placed on strategic thinking and building coalitions which helped the first generation of prison gang leaders consolidate their power. As the ethnic groups strategically linked up, broke apart, and remerged, the turf wars increased.

A Criminal Life

I got out of Tracy after about three years and took a job at a dry cleaner. Things began to look okay after awhile. I worked hard, up at 5:00 AM, walked to work, put in ten hours or so and was starting to feel pretty good about being a regular citizen.

About this time a new department store opened and advertised for employees. I put in an application, but on the question about ever having been arrested, I lied and said no.

I got the job and for the next six months really started doing something productive. I was working in the men’s suits department, wearing nice clothes to work and selling like crazy. I was a natural salesman and led the department in sales for many months.

Then one day the lie caught up with me and two police officers came in, right in front of everybody, and arrested me. There was a local law that made it a misdemeanor to lie on a job application about your criminal record. I was released in just a few days, but the damage was done. My job was lost. I was depressed, angry and hostile and vowed not to go that route again.

I spent the next several months riding around the country on a motorcycle I bought with money I stole, supporting myself by stealing from the department store chain that fired me and returning the merchandise, because I knew they would refund the money even without a receipt, and I felt a bit of justice was being accomplished.

After several months I lost my bike, after being held in custody trying to cross the Mexican border with shaky papers. As I was being held, a charge of grand theft came up from the stolen money I used to buy the motorcycle. I managed to talk my way out of the charge and was released but with no transportation.

After a couple of days sleeping on the streets, I ran into a friend from jail walking down the street in front of the state capital in Sacramento, and he loaned me ‘his’ car—which was stolen but had a redone ID number and a phony pink slip—so I could resume my wandering and stealing, agreeing to send him money regularly.

After a few months the car broke down and I stole another in Wyoming and took it across the state line into Colorado. Soon after I was caught outside a department store after stealing some clothes and the stolen car charge came up.

This charge was good for another five years. I was considered incorrigible and sent to Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. I was 23 years old.

Leavenworth is one of the older federal prisons and was where my father had been sent some 18 years previously and as mentioned, I met some people there who had been in with him and were still doing time, never having been released. It was strange talking to them, but made the time in Leavenworth easier as I was part of the family of the old-time convicts, criminals from the 1930’s and 40’s.

I was eventually transferred to McNeil Island Federal Penitentiary—in the Puget Sound area of Washington State—to finish my sentence since I was from the West Coast. This was the hardest and final prison time of my life as I had been out long enough to have discovered a little about living a normal life while working at the dry cleaner and the department store.

Even though the relations I had established during this period were short term, there was still enough emotion involved that I began to see and missed the possibilities.

I also began to really think about and study what had happened to me internally that caused me to like being a criminal and not fearing prison, for make no mistake, prison was home to me and though the time was harder this time around, I still felt quite comfortable.

I became deeply involved with the existential writers, especially Sartre and Colin Wilson, and began redefining myself. I began to believe that being an outlaw and rebel—an outsider—was an honest intellectual position to hold. Many of the Vietnam War protesters who were sentenced to prison came to McNeil and the discussions with them seemed to validate my emerging position.

I began to feel that I was of that select group of people who have been blessed to see the world as it really is, and can live with it, even though it is the way it is.

Existentialism is the most incredibly selfish, navel-watching way of thinking devised by cynical man, but in its peculiar and depressing way, it was the beginning of the way out for me.

I was released from prison once again and the Aquarian Age was in full flower. Within a couple of weeks I started doing LSD which was just becoming the drug virtually every one of a certain age and sensibility was doing. Since the heaviest drug I had taken up to that point had been alcohol and marijuana, the LSD had a profound effect on me.

For the next two years I was stoned on it or mescaline and lived in a blue haze of travel, camping out, rock concerts, generally inane living and bubble headed ideas, all surrounded by worn-out levis and a green Chevrolet station wagon that transported me and the entourage I had picked up around the United States and Canada.

I supported myself by writing term papers for college students, advertising in local college newspapers and meeting clients at the college libraries.

It was partly because of my openness in running the business that it came to the attention of college administrators—to the point of one dean meeting me as a prospective client and quizzing me on how I wrote the papers, what I charged, and so forth, before he told me who he was—that it became illegal in California (my favorite client base) shortly thereafter

However, it was a very good living at the time and as I built up a library of papers I resold them around the country.

Then I was arrested for parole violation, deservedly so, and sent back to prison for the final three months of my sentence, which turned out to be a very good thing as it allowed me to begin thinking somewhat clearly again.

I got out for the final time having served a total of twelve years.

College

It took awhile to clear my head from the psychedelics, but once I got all the drug influenced nonsense out of my system, I began to think about what I had gone through and what it had made of me. I was 32 years old, had no vocation or profession, and the future did not look too bright.

My previous business writing term papers for college students helped me realize I could go to college, though I thought it impossible with my record until I heard about a program that was helping ex-criminals get into college.

I took advantage of that program and wound up enrolled in college. I majored in criminal justice and psychology and began, for the first time in my life, to learn things that really had value.

I learned how the love and admiration for my father and my adolescent nature to rebel led me, a willing participant, into criminal behavior. Being in prison as a result of this behavior, I had to adapt to the prison world to survive in it. I became able to live in that world, but lost, for a time, the ability to live in others.

In college, I learned about the nature of prisons from the perspective of people who build and manage them. I learned about the law and its enforcement by sitting next to cops in the classroom. It was a mind opener beyond anything I had experienced before. I was accepted at college, even in spite of my past, and it allowed me to bloom as people of decency and good will treated me with decency and good will. I began to reach back into my childhood and recover the values that I had been taught by my step-father. I began to see the possibility of becoming something other than a criminal.

College Rehabilitation Program

I got more deeply involved in college, was appointed as a legislative intern with a state senate criminal justice sub-committee, and was hired as a research assistant at the California Department of Corrections on a project that was developing an evaluation model for community-based corrections.

While working on this project, learning about the skill involved in writing grants and managing programs—and having a nice profile written about me in the local newspaper—I developed and had funded, as an action research project, a huge expansion of the self-help program that had helped me.

My successful involvement in college had helped me realize that other criminals could also benefit from college.

As I had studied criminal justice and psychology, I began learning how I had become socialized to be a criminal, and others could also. Once I began to see how things had happened to me, I took the first step towards changing them and I realized that another important step I could take, to help me retain and grow from my new found knowledge, was to show others the way I had found and help them escape the prison and criminal world within which their souls were locked.

In Project Alpha—after screening out the sex offenders—we enrolled the students we accepted into a highly structured program of counseling and educational support which was designed to insure that their educational experience was a successful one.

One of the classes we developed was a social survival skills class which all of our students were required to take. This class taught them many of the basics of getting along in society as an adult which most people learn from their family and by simple osmosis. But for these students, whose family lives were shattered and blown apart by drug use, abuse, violence, and the constant presence of death, their souls had become wary, predatory, defensive, and dangerous.

After many years in prisons this was amplified, and there were important lessons about living life as a gentle and productive person in a society which they needed to learn if they were ever to reclaim their souls from the stone, steel, and blood of their past.

We taught them things like how to have a normal relationship, open a checking account, how to redirect anger and fear, how to rent an apartment, find a job and be interviewed, and all kinds of things about the basic etiquette of modern living. Other things were folded into the class as students asked questions about various aspects of adult life that confused them and there were many.

I had two full-time staff and ten part-time counselors, who were also students. The staff was 50% former criminals who had been to college and 50% non-criminals who had been to college. Having seen how programs staffed exclusively by either could become unbalanced, I determined to balance the insight, passion, and spiritual insight of the reformed criminals with the academic perspective, moral values, and training of non-criminals.

It worked very well. The program was a tremendous success. During the three years I managed it, the 300 students (at 50 per semester) had an average GPA only one tenth of one percentage point lower than the average GPA of the college. Most significantly, there was not one incident of violence or criminal violation of any kind on campus during that time that was attributed to any of our students.

Many students went on to four year colleges, some pursuing advanced degrees, which has led me to often wonder what has become of their work over the intervening years.

The success of this program led me to work as a consultant with an Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) funded program providing training and technical assistance to other OEO funded criminal justice programs.

As a government funded program, the tendency to structure the work primarily for the benefit of staff (we were paid very well and had a large budget for our training and conferences) overshadowed the work itself.

Though I felt I was able to provide the clients with some help, assisting many of them over rough times, and giving them new ways to look at the work they were doing, it was ultimately trumped by the needs of the bureaucracy.

The OEO work was an opportunity to share with other organizations some of the tools I’d developed at the college program such as a 50/50 peer to non-peer staffing, and ensuring experiential knowledge was involved in program management.

After this period of several years of relatively intense criminal justice work in the public sector, I felt a respite would be helpful and spent a few years in the private sector and just on the verge of making it permanent, realized it was time for the vacation to end.

Private Sector

My puttering around in the private sector was restful and I did some property management, some consulting and training seminars, and became very comfortable and serene, at least on the surface.

Internally I struggled with my past and quit sharing with people my turbulent days as a criminal and prisoner and began being accepted just as the person I was rather than the person I had been. Along with this though, I began drinking a lot, writing morbid though often exhilarating poetry, and essentially wallowing in the prison of my past and the bars of my present.

During one brief period of youthful nostalgia, often called a mid-life crisis, I purchased a motorcycle and two weeks later was rammed by a car which took part of my left leg with it. This happened the morning after Halloween, when I had attended a party as the one-legged pirate Long John Silver, play acting what was soon to be a reality even down to the leg and length of amputation.

Many months of adjustment to this new reality followed as I learned to walk in the unsteady, halting nature that my prosthesis required. Walking had always been a consistent pleasure in my life, from circular treks around various prison yards to solitary journeys into the mountains to day-long walks around Sacramento and San Francisco.

Now all that was over.

Once adjusting to my new reality, and after seeing the value insurance and investments had been in our family’s financial stability during my medical recovery, I began a career in that business after additional study about the great value that insurance and investments had brought to families, and seeing in it a way to help others as we had been helped.

I particularly loved studying the stock market and watching all of the world’s commercial knowledge flowing across your desk, and tying to determine how, what, and where it was going.

During this period however, I had been getting strong internal indications that I should be working back in criminal justice but fought them off, attracted as I still was to the challenge and lucrative aspects of the insurance and investment business. I was comfortable and did not want to deal with the jarring raw world of crime again, nor did I want to again tell people about my past, enjoying the feeling of people thinking I was just a normal guy.

In the process of becoming licensed as a stockbroker, which was much more detailed and exhaustive than that of insurance agent, I was subjected to an in-depth FBI background check which caused me to have to explain, in excruciating detail, each arrest of each crime over the approximately 20 year period of my criminal activity.

I had always been under the assumption that crimes committed when I was a minor were sealed, but not so. When I got a copy of my FBI report it was a 15 page compendium of every criminal justice event in my life, including the routine transfers in and out of prisons and jails when I was in the federal prison system and was being transferred for various reasons; such as to move closer to my release location, custody classifications changing, growing too old for some youth institutions, and causing trouble in one prison or another.

During this process of writing down and thinking again about the sordid details of my past, I really thought hard about the reasons I should be using the knowledge I had gained to help others. Finally, right on the verge of taking the test to get my stockbroker’s license I realized with utmost clarity that the knowledge I had was not what would make me a stockbroker, but would make me a helper of other criminals wanting to transform their lives, but this time in a different way.

Transition

The next several years were spent re-connecting to the public criminal justice sector through focusing on my community. I served as the executive director of an addiction medicine clinic, served as a commissioner on two local governmental commissions, developed my consulting practice and completed my college education.

Through all of this work I was beginning to shape the slowly forming realization of the importance of a new type of leadership to operate successful grassroots programs dealing with the transformation of criminals.

In coming to this conclusion, that it was not just about the money, nor management techniques, but ultimately came back to individual leadership and what qualities they were able to bring to their organization; a conclusion reached by the private sector some time before.

The roots of deep knowledge leadership were starting to grow and I began moving into the final preparatory work encompassing my spiritual and intellectual growth.

Becoming Catholic

My search for personal spiritual truth has always been a search for reaching an optimally positive understanding of the four big questions: 1) why are we here, 2) how did we get here, 3) where are we going, and 4) what should we do while we are here. That search has led me through the study and practice of several major religious and philosophical traditions and some attachments to mystics and gurus.

Over the past several years—years of transition— my spiritual path has remained within the Jewish and Christian tradition, ultimately culminating in a conversion to Catholicism which has finally brought me the daily work and internal fulfillment which I had been seeking.

My search for God had ended, and in many ways had just begun.

The religious tradition I was raised in was enough of an outsider’s vision to prepare me admirably for the search ahead. The cornerstone of that tradition was that man entered the world innocent, and the rest of his life would be shaped by the free choices he made; free choice was God’s gift and burden.

In my criminal years, I broke completely from the rigidity of that tradition, and began looking at other ways to live that were unconstrained by the morality and spiritual considerations I had been led to believe in.

For many years I did not think of things in a spiritual way. I was a criminal and lived according to that paradigm, which was primarily hedonistic. I did not pay serious attention to any spiritual reality other than my own pleasure and being young and occasionally free, and single. This worked okay for awhile; but something more serious in me always struggled for more meaning.

At some point, deeply embedded within the criminal world and in prison, I began to develop a sense of seriousness, a certain strange liking for dense books about mysterious ideas.

I read voraciously over the next several years about all things spiritual, philosophical, psychological and sociological. I would reach conclusions that I attempted to live by for a time, trying them on to see how they felt in actual living, and succeeded in learning lessons from each brief sojourn.

However, not yet wishing to attach myself to accepting any consequences for my ongoing selfish actions, I adopted the ways of existentialism. Its incredibly convoluted forms allowed me to construct anything I wished to better suit my needs.

I learned perhaps one of the most important of all spiritual truths which remained with me; that even in the most horrifying conditions, meaning in living is still possible. Suffering has value and we can choose to use suffering to gain knowledge.

Also within existentialism is where I discovered the concept of creation as the product of the outsider, the specially gifted who stand and live outside of the bounds of normal people and because of that stance, are able to see things more deeply and with greater clarity.

This was particularly attractive to me as a criminal and outlaw and I embraced this self-identity for many years.

Existentialism however, was ultimately too bleak for me, too redolent of stale coffee houses, the acrid smoke of cigarettes, and the aftermath of irresponsible sex. I sought out sunnier visions and soon found the Eastern ways to spiritual truths for my somewhat worn-out spiritual palate.

For many years I studied the tangled thicket of Eastern belief that first appeared so bright and shiny, but ultimately also led into dark alleys and fatalistic dead ends. But even here, as in all the studies, there were great truths.

The East understands, appreciates and reverences nature like perhaps no other way and that stayed with me, deepening and enriching my emerging spirituality. I learned about sensuality, of the earth, of the flesh, of food, and the pleasure of the other senses in a way beyond that of hedonism; which now seemed the cruel play of children. I learned about quiet, contemplation, and letting go.

I became absorbed by the mystical ideas that revolved around the insight that man was a bundle of several selves; selves often hidden from one another. This was the human being’s essential problem; he was a slave to the desires and drives of his hidden selves, whose appetites arose at the most inopportune times. He would be enjoying the peace and serenity of a contemplative sunset and coming closer to the link between matter and spirit so often found in those moments of natural change, and suddenly be hit by a sudden overpowering urge to have a steak dinner, and the moment is lost, the little self of appetite wins again.

This period and way of learning was very precious to me. The discipline and focus on self caused me to continually remind myself of who I was while doing what I was doing and the various contexts within which it all was happening.

This period merged into another which encompassed the study of paganism, the occult, nature poets, and Grail based mythology. There is a richness here that cuts across the larger, traditional religious traditions, deepening them. They are of a place, time and spirit that speak to us of the comfort of the old ways, and the power of ritual and symbols. What they all share, ever so subtly in some instances, is the knowledge that everything is alive, that everything has a certain accessible power, but only the wise human can become the high priest/priestess with the wisdom to release that power.

This was also the period, in which I wrote a lot of poetry, attempting to verbalize the spiritual. Writing poetry still gives me great enjoyment on those rare occasions when I feel moved to express myself and no other word format will do.

This amalgam of psycho-spiritual movements is the soup from which the new age has arisen and it is a strong blend, ancient in origin, tantalizing to the eye and mind; ultimately however, a diversion and distraction from the real task.

During my spiritual searching, there was one recurring concept that always seemed in front of me, “the harder you seek, the harder it is to find.” So, several years ago I quit searching, settled into a roughly spiritual sort of life, finding among the debris and relics of spiritual paths I had left, enough fabric to fashion something that somewhat sustained me.

And, for a time, that satisfied me.

As I re-entered the world of criminal justice, I saw many changes in the field, particularly in the public organizational role and realized I needed to advance my education.

I enrolled at the University of San Francisco, a Jesuit University, as an undergraduate in organizational behavior and after earning my bachelor’s degree, entered the masters program in public administration, graduating with both degrees five years later.

Though I had obviously heard about the Jesuits and the Catholic Church, I had never really studied either, as the message I had received from the religions I pursued, was that Catholics were bad and the Jesuits were the worst of them.

However, I had always been struck by the intellectual commitment of Jesuits and this seemed an appropriate time to look more into their history while attending their college.

I began my study with the concept of social justice, which I had some familiarity with through my years of working in the nonprofit sector but I had never delved into the deeper discussion of its implications and historical development.

I learned that social justice is one of the central concepts in Catholic social teaching and eventually found my way to the source documents, the papal encyclicals. The Catholic Church is a hierarchical structure, and when we have confusion or uncertainty about the interpretation of Christ’s teaching, we ultimately need to rely on the Magisterium, that body of teaching composed of the papal encyclicals, church tradition and scriptural study.

The papal encyclicals are difficult but deeply rewarding reading. I developed a habit of studying only five pages at a time, after having downloaded the documents from the Vatican website to my computer as a Word document, so that I could make notes and highlight as I read.

One of the tenets of the faith I grew up in was that Christ would return once everyone had been exposed to the Christian doctrine.

I felt at the time and more so later in life, that surely Christ would be returning soon, as who hadn’t heard the Christian truth? The answer to that question shocked me—as I soon learned studying Catholicism— that many had not heard the Christian truth, including me, for the fullness of Christian truth is Catholic.

I had been studying all of the religions of the world when right in front of me was the true and only church Christ founded.

For me conversion was primarily an intellectual progression through the social teaching and by the time my wife and I entered the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults—the year-long process of study that precedes baptism—I was certain I had found what I had been seeking for so long. A very powerful and precious moment was reading, with entirely new eyes, Matthew 16:18 “And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” (Douay-Rheims)

So, either Christ lied or the scripture was mistranslated, or Christ told the truth and the Catholic Church was the true church.

At the Easter Vigil, Saturday, April 10, 2004 in the parish of St. Ignatius Loyola, my wife and I were baptized, confirmed, and received our first communion in the Roman Catholic Church.

It has been a long journey and is, as many Catholics are saying to us, “Welcome Home!” truly a return to a place we had given up on finding, our true spiritual home.

My earliest spiritual memories, tinged now with the warmth and golden hue imbuing memories of long ago, are of getting up at 5:00 AM, in the bitterly cold Nevada mornings, and being driven by my mom to the local seminary for scripture study before school.

As I sat in that wood paneled room, with a small group of other boys, focusing on the crinkly India paper pages of our bibles, shading with red pencils those scriptural verses most meaningful to us, I felt deeply at home.

Over the intervening years, seeking through the world’s churches, religions, philosophies, and ways of being, I had found no such home again until now.

 

Member Only Publications

24 Sunday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications, Members Only

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories which I will be expanding as needed.

Member only Publications

Membership information is in the Membership Info, Organization Overview category.

Annual Policy Primer Research Reports

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #1: (Terms-Thesis-Policy, March 25, 2007) E-Report (Free to members)

Summary: A criminal, as we use the term, is a professional criminal. Our thesis is that it takes a reformed criminal to reform criminals, and the policy we suggest is that of providing financial support for a model reentry program managed by a reformed criminal.

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #2: (Catholic Social Teaching & Capital Punishment: A Tradition of Support, March 25, 2008) E-Report (Free to members)

Summary: One of the strongest statements from Christ concerning capital punishment is Matthew 18:6. The magisterium of the Catholic Church supports the use of capital punishment. Those within the social science field informed by Catholic teaching, with professional knowledge of criminal justice issues and an understanding of how evil is expressed within the criminal world, embrace that tradition. Research clearly indicates that capital punishment deters crime and saves lives.

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #3: (Justice, Theology, Criminal Transformation & Pope Pius XII, (March 25, 2009) E-Report (Free to members)

Summary: Justice informed by the theology of the Church, expressed through the social teaching, and responding to the call of Pope Pius XII, can transform criminals. These stated principles, when coupled with the work of the Church through its saints, through its Popes, and the entire history of two thousand years of standing against the gates of hell, is a concrete story of standing on principle, speaking truth to power, walking the talk, proclaiming the truth to man; that will resonate with the criminal—when presented by another who shares the depth of experience represented by the criminal/carceral world—like none other.

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #4: (Unpacking the Lampstand Catholic Reentry Program Model, March 25, 2010) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: The purpose of the Lampstand reentry model program is to evangelize criminals–those who are not Catholic and those who are–bringing them the truths of the social teaching of the Church, from a transformed criminal who has become a deep-knowledge leader, as it will lead to the leaving of their criminal life and conversion to communal life. The truths of the Catholic Church trump the truths of the criminal/carceral world, and as important to the criminal–as it is to all men–is the drive to know the truth; which the criminal already thinks he knows and has been living–the truths of the world–taught and learned under the influence of the prince of the world.

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #5: (The Prison Ministry, March 25, 2011) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: The Lampstand prison ministry is evangelization using words, and when the words are from the sanctified teaching of the Church, enhanced through the sacramental Word and congruent with the history of the Church, the seeds of transformation for prisoners due to be released and actual transformation of the prisoner serving natural life into a spiritual warrior or prison monk able to literally change prison life from the inside out, is possible, as all things are possible through Our Lord.

St. Dismas Day Policy Primer #6 (The Criminal’s Search for God: Sources, March 25, 2012) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: The collection of source books and the seminal ideas within them, that have played a large role in the development of my thinking—initially to deepen my criminality, but eventually became the soil from which my transformation grew—is a potential transformative tool that can be used as a guide for those criminals seeking to restructure their lives who are not yet prepared to embrace Catholic works.

St. Dismas Feast Day Policy Primer #7 (Catholicism, Communism & Criminal Reformation, March 25, 2013) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: In this paper we have focused—as we always have—on the internal development of criminals moving toward reformation, whether consciously or unconsciously, with a specific focus on the influence Communism (often masquerading among Catholics as Liberation Theology) has had on the academy and criminal justice professionals, and by extension, many criminals.

St. Dismas Feast Day Policy Primer #8 (Women in the Church, Teilhard de Chardin, & Criminal Reformation, March 25, 2014) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: It is so appropriate that today, March 25, is the day in 1347, that St. Catherine of Siena, Doctor of the Church, was born; a woman clearly capable of being a priest, cardinal or pope; and it is also the feast day of St. Dismas, as well as the Annunciation of the Lord; a great day to release this policy primer on women in the Church.

St. Dismas Feast Day Policy Primer #9 (Judaism, Knights Templar, & Criminal Reformation, March 25, 2015) E-Report (Free to Members)

Summary: This is a paper calling on transformed professional criminals—excluding rapists, pedophiles and informers—who have done time in maximum security prisons, who have gained graduate degrees from the Academy and an in-depth knowledge of Catholic Social Teaching, to take to the city streets and country byways of this world to defend, spiritually and martially, Catholics being persecuted, and thus to evangelize in the toughest and most dangerous mission fields they can find; for the Church needs you, the People of God need you, and you need to do this for you are among the few who can do this without fear; for who can remain fearful who has survived and thrived on the main yards of America’s maximum security prisons.

Lampstand Leadership Resources

#1 Resources for Leaders of Criminal Transformation Programs (An annotated listing of professional associations, books, journals, newspapers, websites, reports and other resources for grassroots leaders.) E-Booklet, 21 Pages, (Free to members)

#2 A Catholic Grassroots Organization Model (A workbook about a model reentry community program, staffed by one transformed criminal, helping 60-70 reentering prisoners annually on an annual budget of $70,000.00) E-Booklet, 19 Pages, (Free to members)

#3 Annotated Catholic/Criminal Justice Bibliography (A resource that can help guide study, research, and reference around the issues that intersect with Catholicism and criminal justice.) E-Booklet, 20 Pages, (Free to members)

#4 Lampstand Leader’s Circle: Definitions, Experiential Requirements, Daily Practice, & Resources (A workbook defining the professional criminals our work is directed to, their life benchmarks, and the daily practice necessary to become a member of the Lampstand Leader’s Circle. E-Booklet, 16 Pages, (Free to members)

#5 Praying the Rosary for the Criminal (A resource that is useful for penitential criminals who pray the rosary, incorporating prayers and brief histories of five great penitential criminal saints: St. Mary Magdalen, St. Dismas, St. Pope Callistus, St. Mary of Egypt, & St. Paul Hanh.) E-Booklet, 31 Pages, (Free to Members)

Lampstand Periodic Monographs

Lampstand Monograph #1: (Capital Punishment & Matthew 18:6) May 23, 2008, E-Paper (Free to members)

Abstract: Matthew 18:6 is perhaps the clearest expression of support for capital punishment spoken by Christ. The Catholic & Protestant commentaries about this verse and the teaching of the entire chapter reveal the vigorous sanctions – capital punishment and banishment – Christ taught as applying to the members of the church community who violate its teachings. Matthew 18 has long been acknowledged as a Discourse on the Church, but not enough attention has been devoted to its support for capital punishment; and the historic support of the magisterium for capital punishment, and the corrosive direction taken by some segments of Catholic leadership in the United States to abolish capital punishment, all of which are the subject of this monograph.

Lampstand Monograph #2: (The Way of the Saints & Doing Life) July 23, 2013, E-Paper (Free to members)

Abstract: Professional criminals who are serving life sentences in maximum security prisons and who will never be released from prison under any conditions, have an opportunity, though in only a very few cases will it actualize, to trod the path to sainthood. Becoming a true soldier of Christ, fighting to gain entry to heaven, fighting the evil one; this is a call of substance, depth, and honor, which penitential professional criminals imprisoned for life can respond to if the teaching and history of the Church is presented with potency by deeply orthodox Catholics. An unusual cultural aspect of criminal/carceral world culture is the power and influence the elder exerts—almost tribal like in its potency—due to the simple fact that no criminal/prisoner hardly ever retires due to age. I have seen men well into their seventies and eighties who retain the physicality and intellectual heft of men decades younger. The benefits to the criminal/carceral world from the intercessory abilities of a prison saint would be immeasurable.

Lampstand Overview

23 Saturday May 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Membership Info, Organzation Overview

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The Lampstand Foundation is a 501 c (3) nonprofit corporation I founded in Sacramento, California in 2003 as a lay apostolate built on the social teaching of the Catholic Church, to provide leadership development tools for community & prison apostolates—managed by reformed criminals—working to reform criminals.

Our Vision

Inspiring criminals who have transformed their lives, secured college degrees, and returned home to Rome; to show others the transformative path, and how the pain of suffering can become the power of teaching.

Our Mission

To transform the repentant criminal, suffering from his distance from God, into a deep knowledge leader who can teach other criminals the path to redemption through the Catholic Church.

Our Core Beliefs

Suffering transformed builds souls. Just as the muscle tissue tearing that leads to greater physical muscle growth resulting from body building, suffering is soul tearing which, through redemption, allows soul growth.

1) Deep knowledge leadership—college-educated, transformed criminals, professionally trained to manage criminal transformative organizations—will dramatically improve the effectiveness of criminal transformation.

2) Catholic social thought forms the intellectual and spiritual foundation of criminal transformation.

3) Grassroots criminal transformation organizations need ongoing access to capacity building services.

4) Business and professional leadership, working to create community social capital through the transformation of criminals, will benefit from gaining knowledge about Catholic social thought.

Our Goals

We want to facilitate the leadership development of penitential criminals whose personal transformation, education, and reconciliation or conversion to Catholicism has inspired them to seek graduate degrees, professional organizational training, social teaching training, and assume a leadership role in the community helping other criminals transform their lives.

1) To inspire educated and transformed criminals who are baptized Catholics and want to help others, gain a graduate college education and professional training.

2) To provide capacity building tools to criminal transforming organizations about Catholic social teaching, start-up planning, strategic planning, fund development, board development, communications & marketing, and for profit business development.

3) To educate the business and professional community about the leadership capability of educated, transformed criminals and the use of Catholic social teaching as a transformative tool.

Our Apostolate Principles

1) We will defend innocent human life in all that we do.

“80. Reason attests that there are objects of the human act which are by their nature “incapable of being ordered” to God, because they radically contradict the good of the person made in his image. These are the acts which, in the Church’s moral tradition, have been termed “intrinsically evil” (intrinsece malum): they are such always and per se, in other words, on account of their very object, and quite apart from the ulterior intentions of the one acting and the circumstances. Consequently, without in the least denying the influence on morality exercised by circumstances and especially by intentions, the Church teaches that “there exist acts which per se and in themselves, independently of circumstances, are always seriously wrong by reason of their object”. The Second Vatican Council itself, in discussing the respect due to the human person, gives a number of examples of such acts. “Whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia, or wilful self-destruction, whatever violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, torments inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will itself; whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where people are treated as mere instruments of gain rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others like them are infamies indeed. They poison human society, and they do more harm to those who practise them than to those who suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator.” (Pope John Paul II, 1993,Veritatis Splendor #80)

2) We will work for social justice in all that we do.

“1928. Society ensures social justice when it provides the conditions that allow associations or individuals to obtain what is their due, according to their nature and their vocation. Social justice is linked to the common good and the exercise of authority.

“1929. Social justice can be obtained only in respecting the transcendent dignity of man. The person represents the ultimate end of society, which is ordered to him:

“What is at stake is the dignity of the human person, whose defense and promotion have been entrusted to us by the Creator, and to whom the men and women at every moment of history are strictly and responsibly in debt.

“1930. Respect for the human person entails respect for the rights that flow from his dignity as a creature. These rights are prior to society and must be recognized by it. They are the basis of the moral legitimacy of every authority: by flouting them, or refusing to recognize them in its positive legislation, a society undermines its own moral legitimacy. If it does not respect them, authority can rely only on force or violence to obtain obedience from its subjects. It is the Church’s role to remind men of good will of these rights and to distinguish them from unwarranted or false claims.” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #1928-1930)

3) We know that our work is with, and through, the community.

“In our time, the role of human work is becoming increasingly important as the productive factor both of non-material and of material wealth. Moreover, it is becoming clearer how a person’s work is naturally interrelated with the work of others. More than ever, work is work with others and work for others: it is a matter of doing something for someone else.” (Pope John Paul II, 1991, Centesimus Annus, #31)

4) We know that Catholic social thought is a transformative social force.

“2419 “Christian revelation…promotes deeper understanding of the laws of social living.” The Church receives from the Gospel the full revelation of the truth about man. When she fulfills her mission of proclaiming the Gospel, she bears witness to man, in the name of Christ, to his dignity and his vocation to the communion of persons. She teaches him the demands of justice and peace in conformity with divine wisdom.

“2420 The Church makes a moral judgment about economic and social matters, “when the fundamental rights of the person or the salvation of souls requires it.” In the moral order she bears a mission distinct from that of political authorities: The Church is concerned with the temporal aspects of the common good because they are ordered to the sovereign Good, our ultimate end. She strives to inspire right attitudes with respect to earthly goods and in socio-economic relationships.

“2421 The social doctrine of the Church developed in the nineteenth century when the Gospel encountered modern industrial society with its new structures for the production of consumer goods, its new concept of society, the state and authority, and its new forms of labor and ownership. The development of the doctrine of the Church on economic and social matters attests the permanent value of the Church’s teaching at the same time as it attests the true meaning of her Tradition, always living and active.

“2422 The Church’s social teaching comprises a body of doctrine, which is articulated as the Church interprets events in the course of history, with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, in the light of the whole of what has been revealed by Jesus Christ. This teaching can be more easily accepted by men of good will, the more the faithful let themselves be guided by it.” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2419-2422)

5) We know that corporal works of mercy are essential to comfort the suffering, and that spiritual works of mercy are essential to stop the suffering.

“2447 The works of mercy are charitable actions by which we come to the aid of our neighbor in his spiritual and bodily necessities. Instructing, advising, consoling, comforting are spiritual works of mercy, as are forgiving and bearing wrongs patiently. The corporal works of mercy consist especially in feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned, and burying the dead. Among all these, giving alms to the poor is one of the chief witnesses to fraternal charity: it is also a work of justice pleasing to God:

He who has two coats, let him share with him who has none and he who has food must do likewise. But give for alms those things which are within; and behold, everything is clean for you. If a brother or sister is ill-clad and in lack of daily food, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled,” without giving them the things needed for the body, what does it profit? (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2447)

Our Guiding Criminal Justice Principles

1) Broken windows policing works. Allowing even the minor violation of a broken window in an area helps create the impression of an environment where law and order does not prevail and where crime flourishes. Responding quickly and efficiently to all crimes, regardless of the perceived state of seriousness or other local community concerns, is the foundation of good police work.

2) The response to crime should be timely, balanced, and just. When justice is for sale, either through wealth, influence, or ideology, a fertile soil is created from which crime grows. The training and education of professionals in the criminal justice system is built on a foundation of traditional and well-reasoned concepts of justice and it needs continual reinforcement to remain an effective response to crime.

3) Prison is an appropriate criminal sanction to protect society and punish the criminal, while allowing the opportunity for criminal reformation. Prison is an effective sanction for crime which has been used by human beings since ancient times. It serves to protect the public from predatory crime, acts as a deterrence and as incapacitation, and allows the penitential criminal the opportunity—while removed from the community—to reflect upon and correct his criminal behavior.

4) Capital punishment is an appropriate response to the criminal evil of murder, rape, and pedophilia.  Capital punishment is often the only effective social method available to protect the innocent and applied with dispatch after legal review of the crimes charged and determining the fitness of its application, should be considered an appropriate sentence for murderers, rapists and pedophiles; who, knowing the time of their death, are able, with certainty of their remaining time to do so, seek God’s forgiveness. Lane (2010) notes: “During the decade beginning in 1997, five states enacted the death penalty for rape of a child–though the Supreme Court struck those laws down in 2008.” Lane, C. (2010). Stay of execution: Saving the death penalty from itself. New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. (p. 66

5) Repentant criminals deserve a second chance. Excepting those cases of serious predatory behavior deserving the death penalty or natural life in prison, repentant criminals, once they have clearly shown—over a ten year period after being released from criminal justice supervision—that they have transformed their life by becoming a productive member of their family, their church, their work, and their community, should be allowed to apply for a complete pardon in a simple straightforward process.

6) It takes a reformed criminal to reform criminals. For generations the ability of non-criminals—even those with the highest professional and academic credentials—to effectively rehabilitate criminals has proven, based on sound evaluations, to be virtually non-existent. Recruiting reformed criminals who have, through education, training, and the development of a deep knowledge leadership approach to criminal transformation, may well succeed where others have failed. Considering the current recidivism rate of 70%, and with the consensus that peer-based help does, at the very least, attract those who want help to transformative programs, it is time to try this approach in a substantial enough way, over time and properly evaluated, to discover if we can rely on it as a valuable tool for large-scale implementation.

7) In the work of criminal reformation, it is vital to keep in mind that the criminal—not society, capitalism, or the criminal justice system—is the problem. Some criminal justice advocates take the position that among the people connected with the carceral world, the good guys are the criminals and the police, district attorneys, prison guards, and the legislators who support stringent criminal sanctions, are the bad guys.

This is the absolutely wrong position, for in virtually any carceral population in America it is the criminals who are the indisputable bad guys, while the good guys are the ones protecting the public from the depredations of criminals. Those who parlay the myths of Hollywood or Marxism into an intellectual stance that fails to understand this basic fact, does everyone a disservice—in particular the penitential criminal—who may find little reason for proper expiation within a culture defining criminality as somehow admirable.

Our Program

Lampstand’s direct teaching work is supplemented by a monthly e-letter, quarterly newsletter, an annual policy primer research report released on the feast day of St. Dismas on March 25th (nine of these were done completing the series in 2015) , an annual book from Chulu Press , a Lampstand imprint (eleven of these were published completing the series in 2016) and periodic monographs (two of these have been completed so far), A Lampstand Foundation Monograph, Capital Punishment & Matthew 18:6 in 2008 & A Lampstand Foundation Monograph, The Way of the Saints and Doing Life, in 2013.

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