Between a Rock and a Grace Place
Today it's my pleasure to share with you an interview with my friend and fellow writer and speaker, Carol Kent, bestselling author of When I Lay My Isaac Down and A New Kind of Normal where Carol has shared her and her husband's painful yet faith-filled journey with their son J.P., who is serving a life sentence in a maximum-security prison for murder.
Her brand new book Between A Rock and a Grace Place: Divine Surprises in the Tight Spots of Life was just released by Zondervan. Here Carol shares not only more of her story and how God is seeing her through it, but includes the stories of others, as well, encouraging readers to find the 'sweet spot of grace' in the overwhelming obstacles they face.
Carol is an expert on public speaking, writing, and on encouraging people to hold on to hope when life’s circumstances turn out differently from their dreams. She lives in Florida with her husband Gene.
Carol, what are “grace places,” and how can hurting people in need find them?
All of us experience tight spots when life turns out differently from our dream. When we face the overwhelming obstacles of life, we can experience the last thing we ever expect—the sweet spot of grace. Grace places have a variety of forms, but some include:
• Receiving love when we don’t deserve it
• Finding safety in the middle of a fearful and uncertain experience
• Being comforted by friends and family (people who are extensions of God’s love)
• Experiencing the embrace of God when we have run out of strength and courage
“Grace means the free, unmerited, unexpected love of God, and all the benefits, delights, and comforts which flow from it.” (R.P.C. Hanson)
How important are contentment and gratitude in finding grace and peace?
My son, Jason, is teaching me that I need to choose contentment and thanksgiving in all things. As an inmate in a maximum-security prison, all of his personal items must fit in one small one-foot-high and one-and a half-feet-deep and two-and-a half feet long steel lockbox. He has learned to live comfortably with very little, which brings him a surprising sense of peace.
When I was visiting him one weekend I asked how he holds on to hope in the middle of a life-without-the-possibility-of-parole sentence. He said, “Mom, I have a gratitude list. Whenever the clouds of depression try to discouragement, I get out a piece of paper and write down everything I have to be thankful for. I’m thankful I have two parents who will be my advocates for as long as they live. The average number of years a lifer gets visits is five years and then no one comes anymore. I’m also thankful I can be a missionary on a compound that houses up to 1,700 men.” I’m learning from Jason that I find contentment when I choose to be thankful and when I invest my time in helping other people.
What are some unexpected gestures of kindness you’ve received in the past, and how did they help you through difficult times?
A couple of years ago Jason’s appendix ruptured and he was rushed from the prison to a civilian hospital. Gene and I were not allowed to know where he was and I prayed for someone to care for him as a mother would. He had two armed guards in his room at all times. Nurse Betty was assigned to Jason’s care. She treated him with respect and extraordinary care—and I knew she was a direct answer to my prayers.
A group of people who called themselves our “Stretcher Bearers” received an e-mailed monthly update on how to help with our needs. We were blessed with meals, cards, and financial gifts, often just before we needed extra funds for the next legal payment. These amazing people waited with us for two and a half years through seven postponements of the trial.
Between a Rock and a Grace Place releases 10 years after your son, Jason, was sentenced to life in a maximum security prison and includes excerpts from Jason’s letters. Can you tell us how he’s doing now?
He has just taken his 8th group of men through Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace University Course and he will be facilitating a biblical counseling class on marriage and family this fall. He has a prayer group of twelve inmates who fast and pray for the needs of each other and their families. Prison is a depressing, dark, and sad place, but Jason is living for things that will outlast him.
When you received news about Jason’s clemency hearing being denied, how did you respond?
I wailed like a baby, sobbed, felt angry, hurt, and disappointed in God. Then we saw Jason a day after this devastating news. He was calm and very much at peace. He hugged me as I wept and said, “Mom, this case isn’t about having the best attorney or about having the favor of Florida’s top executive political leaders. If I am ever allowed to walk in freedom in this lifetime, it will be because God miraculously opened a door that was closed.” My son helps me to develop an eternal perspective and that day he comforted me.
What advice do you have for those who are stuck between a rock and a grace place?
In the middle of your own hurt reach out to someone else who needs help worse than you do. When you involve yourself in meeting the needs of others, you discover an unexpected freedom on the inside. Corrie ten Boom once said, “What did you do today that only a Christian would have done?”
As a result of your journey, you and your husband have founded the nonprofit organization Speak Up for Hope. What are the goals of the organization, and how can people get involved?
Our vision: To help inmates and their families adjust to their new normal.
Our mission: We exist to provide hope to inmates and their families through encouragement and resources.
Please go to www.speakupforhope.org for a list of practical ways individuals, churches, and organizations can help with specific projects. Our goal is to live out the truth of Prov. 31:8-9: “Speak up for the people who have no voice, for the rights of all the down-and-outers. Speak out for justice. Stand up for the poor and destitute!”
Where may we connect with you further or to purchase a copy of Between a Rock and a Grace Place?
I would love for you to visit my web site at www.CarolKent.org, browse through the various events and other resources available. You may also join me on my Facebook page.
5 Comments:
What an amazing testimony! God uses us where we are—even prison. I admire Carol's strength. God's grace is sufficient!
HI Karen, Amazing testimony. So many things came to mind while reading your blog concerning Carol Kent and her incarcerated son. I admire her faith and attitude. That in itself is a great testimony.
As I read your blog, the one thing that popped for me was that the first sign of faith is the act of thankfulness. I have been guilty of this a few times in that I have not been thankful for what I have received before asking for something else.
Heard a saying the other day that said, "No matter how good things are in life, there is always something to work on. No matter how bad things are in life, there is always something to be thankful to God for."
There are always things a person can do to help our fellow man no matter where we are and what our circumstances. I just about destroyed both of my books on relationship after I got divorced. I figured, "What credibility would I have, writing such books?" God told me that "Man's ways do not work, but Mine do."
I learned from the Holy Spirit that who else would be better to know all or most of the pitfalls of a busted marriage? I didn't destroy them. I am reminded of 2 Corinthians 1:3-6.
To go along with Corrie Ten Boom, a saying says, "If you were arrested for being a Christian, would there be any evidence to convict you."
Reaching out is probably the MOST important thing we can do especially in this day and age as the return of Christ approaches. My new blog series covers this somewhat. My text is Acts 20:19-21, 27. Powerful Scripture. I haven't really studied Acts before and am finding many nuggets. Praise God.
God bless you Karen and Carol Kent for her faith, dedication to her son and the body, and for her book.
I forgot to say something Karen, I wanted to Say a God bless her son for his prison ministry. Only God knows how many lives will change because of his obedience to the Holy Spirit and his outreach. God bless him.
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We serve in exchange of something. There is nobody in his righteous mind serving anybody in his whole life for free or in vain.
1 Tim 6:5 Perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds, and destitute of the truth, supposing gain to be godliness: from such withdraw thyself.
1 Tim 6:6 But godliness with contentment is great gain.
1 Tim 6:7 For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out.
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