Inmate field ministers see wide-ranging impact inside prison

Four field ministers—(from left to right) Michael Rios, Billy Jones, Raymond Ramirez and Michael Ryan—carry the gospel's hope to fellow inmates at a Texas prison facility. (Photo by Matheus Oliveira)

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HUNTSVILLE (BP)—Michael Rios understands good intentions do not necessarily keep anybody out of prison. Life change demands a strong spiritual foundation, he knows now.

“I’ve been in prison before,” he said. “I came in when I was very young. I had the right ideas, I had the right intents—get out, get married, have a life.”

Dressed in a white prison uniform, Rios speaks slowly but directly, his tattooed hands slowly gesturing to accentuate his words. He has been in prison longer than some of his fellow inmates have been alive. Although Rios had the “right intents,” bad choices kept him locked up, and now he is serving a life sentence.

A sense of weariness can be detected in his voice, but curiously, it is overshadowed by another sentiment—hope. His years behind bars afford him an insight into prison life that opens doors to provide the other inmates exhortations of eternal value.

“I see a lot of myself in these guys,” Rios said. “They want to go home, but if they have no foundation in God, they’re going to fail. … God gave me a chance, and I failed, so I try to reach out to others so they won’t fail.”

Seminary extension grads serve fellow inmates

Rios is one of four field ministers at the Estelle Unit in Huntsville, deployed after graduating from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary’s baccalaureate prison program at the Darrington Unit in Rosharon. The program equips life-sentence inmates with a theological education and then sends them to other prisons across the state to invest their lives in fellow inmates.

“We weren’t born to live in this box,” Rios preaches. “We were born to be fathers, husbands, leaders and servants in our community.

“You’ve made maybe 3,000 decisions to get you over here. All you have to do is make that one decision to help you get out, which is (to follow) Christ.”


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Southwestern launched its Darrington extension program in 2011, with Rios and fellow Estelle field ministers Raymond Ramirez and Michael Ryan in the inaugural class of 33 inmates who graduated in May 2015 with bachelor of science in biblical studies degrees. An additional 33 inmates—among them Billy Jones, Estelle’s fourth minister— graduated the following year. These 66 men have since been deployed to other units—or, as they view them, mission fields—with Rios, Ramirez, Ryan and Jones all assigned to Estelle.

‘Shaped me to be what God wants me to be’

All four of Estelle’s ministers, who surrendered their lives to Christ while in prison, attest their seminary extension training affected them greatly.

“It really has taken me out of my shell,” Rios said. “It’s molded me and shaped me to be what God wants me to be.”

Ramirez added: “A lot of my questions were answered. And that has impacted me so much that it has given me a desire to teach, to pass on what I’ve received. So now, that’s actually what I’m doing. I’m doing a lot of mentoring, a lot of discipling, a lot of teaching.”

Since arriving at Estelle, Ramirez learned sign language in four months in order to minister to the prison’s deaf community. He often is asked how he managed to accomplish such a feat, and his response is straightforward: “Man, I don’t know. I’m freaking out about it myself.”

Ramirez also works with the unit’s Spanish community and runs a “mini-seminary” within the English-speaking community, walking his students through a theological curriculum he wrote based on his seminary education, complete with exams, quizzes, book reviews and presentations.

Rios, meanwhile, has become the guards’ go-to counselor for inmates in need, even gaining access to the high-security wing of the prison. Ryan leads Bible studies and does room visitations in the medical facility.

And Jones “tier walks” the north end of the prison, walking the runs from cell to cell and engaging the inmates in conversation. He also does counseling and teaches a discipleship class, covering such topics as biblical history and interpretation and how to do evangelism.

‘It has to be God doing these things’

Through the course of their ministry, Rios, Ramirez, Ryan and Jones have found simply being present for the inmates and assuring them they are loved can reduce even the most hardened criminals to tears. The experience of having such people open up and share their deep, intimate thoughts has led Rios to conclude: “It has to be God doing these things.”

“People over here really need somebody,” Ryan added. “So, God didn’t just put me over here and give me this education for no reason. He gave it to me not just for the knowledge, but so I can go be available for somebody.”

Chris Carter, senior warden at Estelle, said the efforts of the four ministers have transformed the culture of the prison. A basketball tournament last fall, for example, saw people of every race participate, without fights or issues of any kind. Previously, the warden says, the inmates would have been unwilling to stay in the same room with one another.

Because of the field ministers’ influence, the inmates not only had fun together during the tournament, but between periods of play, they all prayed together.

“When you introduce God into a culture, they stop fighting. The aggression goes away,” Carter said. “They start looking for ways to build each other up as brothers. They don’t look at each other as enemies anymore.”

Disciples make disciples

In line with this changing of culture, the ministers have begun to observe an eagerness in their disciples to make disciples of their own. Jones witnessed one of his students approach a member of a gang known as “the Aryan Circle” after learning an evangelism method called the “3 Circles Life Conversation Guide,” developed by the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board.

The student asked if the gang member had ever heard of “the three circles.” Intrigued simply by the word “circle,” which he assumed related to his gang in some way, the gang member said “no” and then inquired about them.

“And so the (student) was able to present the gospel using the three circles to him, and now the (gang member) comes to church every Sunday,” Jones said.

Similarly, Rios noted, he often is told: “I want to do what you do. You need to go ask the warden if I can get a (security pass) and just come walk with you.”

Although honoring such a request may not be possible, Rios nevertheless affirms the sentiment.

“That’s one thing I try to do—encourage them to seek the gifts that God gave them,” he said. “And I try to help them grow and become good servants and good leaders and just stay humble.”

The field ministers accept as a guiding Bible verse 2 Timothy 2:2, which says, “The things which you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.”

“I believe that by helping them instill (the values and principles from the Bible) in themselves, they can accomplish what I’ve accomplished, but even beyond me,” Ramirez said. “They can accomplish more than I even have, because that’s what the Bible is able to do.”


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