PEARL, Miss. — Twelve women incarcerated at the Mississippi Correctional Institute for Women were part of the fall 2024 graduating class of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (NOBTS) and Leavell College. The women graduated with either an Associate of Arts in Christian Service or a Bachelor of Arts in Christian Service.
Shawn Parker, executive director-treasurer of the Mississippi Baptist Convention Board (MBCB), gave a charge to the graduating class at a Dec. 16 ceremony.
“I’ve served in this role now for five years and one of the first significant decisions I was called to make was to give approval for the funding of this program at the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility,” Parker told graduates. “And I must say now, five years later, I consider it to be one of the proudest decisions that I have ever made.”
Beth Masters, director of the prison’s extension center at NOBTS, said the most rewarding part of her job is seeing women “fall in love with Jesus even more.”
“But also it’s for those women here who don’t know the Lord, getting to walk with them,” Masters said. “And we’ve been talking lately about we’re not only disciple makers, we’re disciple senders. And if we’ve missed the sending part, we miss the whole thing.”
Burl Cain, commissioner of the Mississippi Department of Corrections and former warden at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola in West Feliciana Parish, north of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, expressed his gratitude to Mississippi Baptists.
“I look back and can’t express how much we appreciate folks in Mississippi, particularly the Mississippi Baptist Convention Board (MBCB) because without the $90,000 you give every year, we wouldn’t have the graduation class we have,” Cain said. “This state, Mississippi, and Louisiana are the only two states that will have chapels in every one of their facilities, all paid for by private donations.
“And I have to thank Gov. (Tate) Reeves. Without him I wouldn’t be here. I promised him when he hired me that I was going to have a chapel in every one of the prisons because we needed more rehabilitation more than anything else, because we need God. He is really our Father and that’s what we need to rehabilitate people.”
Masters said four of the graduates will be heading to Delta Correctional Facility as field ministers.
“They are going to take on more responsibility, create new programs, and we’ll be able to expand our faith-based offerings because they will have the degree and are able to just be turned loose as field ministers,” she said. “And so my greatest aspiration would be to see them step into those roles with integrity and honesty, love people well and walk in obedience to the Lord.”
Masters said integrity is a big deal in prison.
“Integrity is not something that many of our women here have when they come in,” she said. “There’s lots of hiding things. There’s lots of, ‘I can be one way with these people and one way with these people.’ And so to be authentically a Christ-follower in every aspect of your life here is really hard. And over four years they’ve come to learn how to do that in a way that they didn’t before. And in a place that lives and breathes dishonesty and chaos and disruption, to walk in honesty is huge. And then just to love people well, because also in this environment, if you love somebody, your motives are always questioned. What are you trying to get out of them? What are you trying to do? What are you trying to manipulate me to do?”
Superintendent Tereda Hairston also spoke during the ceremony.
“There are 12 exceptional women graduating today,” Hairston said. “Your accomplishments today are a testament to your unwilling, unwavering faith, unyielding determination and resilience. As the first ever female graduates of this program in the state of Mississippi, you have not only earned the title of field ministers, but you have also carved a path for countless women who were following your footsteps. You have chosen a path of service, compassion, and spiritual guidance. You will minister to your fellow inmates offering solace, hope and the transformative power of faith. This is a calling that requires immense strength, empathy and a deep understanding of the human spirit.
“ … You are pioneers, you are role models and agents of change. May your journey as field ministers be filled with purpose, fulfillment and the enduring grace of God.”
Parker told graduates that ministry is not about notoriety.
“It took me a long time to recognize that that affirmation means very little,” he said. “… It’s not about establishing some exalted status. It really is about humble service to the Lord.
“Some of you may be meteoric, and it may be that over the course of the next month, you make such a splash in the ministry that God has given you that everybody in the Mississippi Correctional Facility and far beyond knows your name and knows who you are,” Parker said. “But my guess is most of you are going to fly below the radar and you’re not going to receive that level of notoriety. And the key is this, do it anyway. This is the kind of faith that pleases Christ.”
Other commencement speakers included Ben Browning, director of prison programs at NOBTS; Norris Grubbs, NOBTS provost, who gave the invocation and conferred the degrees; Mike Wetzel, director of prison programs at NOBTS, who brought a welcome from the seminary; Sandy Vandercook, associate vice president for accreditation and assessment at NOBTS, who shared the prayer of commissioning; Greg Wilton, dean of Leavell College, who presented the graduates; Tommy Doughty, who led the congregation in the “Hymn to Alma Mater;” and Masters, who gave the benediction.
(EDITOR’S NOTE — Tony Martin is associate editor of The Baptist Record. This article originally appeared in the Baptist Record.)