What is Kairos?
|
 |
Kairos
is an ecumenical Christian ministry designed for use in
men’s and women’s correctional institutions. The
ministry is conducted, in cooperation with chaplains of
correctional institutions, by teams of laity and clergy
who are qualified by their experiences in Christian
renewal movements.
The
purpose of Kairos is to help build and nurture strong
Christian communities among the residents of correctional
institutions. The Kairos experience for residents starts
with a 3-day short course in Christianity. This weekend
involves 42 inmates selected by the Chaplain and a team of
55 lay and clergy persons. The weekend is modeled after
renewal weekends like Catholic Cursillo, Cum Christo,
Emmaus Walk and Via De Christo.
After
a Kairos weekend, residents continue their faith walk by
participating in small Prayer and Share Groups. These
groups meet weekly to share their lives on a deep
spiritual level and to pray for one another. Kairos
participants also attend monthly reunions in the
institution with Kairos volunteers. Kairos volunteers
conduct 2-day Christian retreats twice per year.
How
can you help -- MAKE COOKIES ! 10,000 to 12,000
dozen cookies are needed for each Kairos
Weekend!
Why So Many Cookies?
Each Kairos team member is to bring 200
dozen homebaked cookies to a Kairos Christian renewal
weekend. That adds up to 10,000 dozen cookies. How
are so many cookies used? The cookies represent at least
three truths of the Christian life:
-
God’s unending grace. Cookies are
everywhere in the prison. They are a physical symbol of
God’s grace, available to all believers (i.e. agape
love)
-
The power of Christian Community. All
Kairos cookies are home-baked, demonstrating that real
people on the outside can see the inmates through the eyes of agape love and have prayed for
the inmates while baking the cookies.
-
Availability of forgiveness. You can
imagine that God’s forgiveness and self-forgiveness
are difficult to accept in a prison. On Saturday
evening, each Kairos participant is asked to take a bag
of cookies to whomever in that institution he/she
considers his/her worst enemy and ask for, or grant,
forgiveness.
How
are Thousands of Dozens of Cookies Used on a Kairos Weekend?
-
On
Thursday evening, cookies go with coffee and other beverages to soften the first tense
minutes of the meeting between resident participants
and team members.
-
Every
evening, each of the 42 participants takes back to his/her cell or dormitory many
dozens of cookies that are shared with other inmates
as the participants answer questions about the
Kairos weekend.
-
Cookies
are available to the 42 participants every day, all day, in the meeting room.
-
Cookies
are provided daily to the security stations, break rooms and staff offices as a way of
thanking the corrections officers and other staff
for assisting Kairos and let them know that they too are
loved by the Lord.
-
All
inmates not involved in the Kairos weekend receive two dozen cookies. This takes almost 5,000
dozen. In addition, Kairos participants
return to their units on Friday evening with a
second grocery bag full of cookies to eat and give away
in their cell block or dormitory. By this time everyone
in the institution knows that something really
special is happening inside the walls.
-
On
Saturday, forgiveness day, Kairos participants learn about forgiving themselves, asking
for and accepting God’s forgiveness and
forgiving others. They each get an extra grocery bag of
cookies to give to another
inmate or corrections officer against whom they bear a grudge or from
whom they desire forgiveness for something.
Only
Home-Baked Cookies Are Used -- Baking
and Packaging Instructions
-
Cookie
mixes, pre-mixed cookie dough (tubes or tubs) from
your supermarket, or “frozen cookie balls” from
food wholesalers are easy beginnings.
-
Chocolate
chip, oatmeal, cookies with M & Ms or butterscotch
bits, peanut butter, plain sugar cookies are easy to
make and popular. Rice Krispy bars and brownies are
special.
-
Don’t
over-bake cookies; brittle cookies may break during
shipping and handling.
-
No
raisins, icing or powdered sugar.
-
Cool
cookies before packaging so they don’t stick
together.
-
Package
in one gallon zipper-lock bags (no metal ties), 2 Doz.
per bag. Mark bags “2 doz.” so dozens can be
easily counted.
-
Pray
for the Kairos weekend participants as you bake and
package your cookies, asking God to use the “agape
love” cookies and the team as instruments for his
love, forgiveness, healing, Christian renewal and
evangelism.
|