
Phil Young, director of prison ministry at Carson-Newman University, shares a light moment with his faculty team during a fall planning meeting. The university’s prison ministry enters its second year this fall.
JEFFERSON CITY — Phil Young’s morning routine in preparing for class looks a bit different than most college professors. He arrives on site around 7:45 in the morning.
“We go through all the normal screening that all the staff goes through to make sure we’re not bringing anything in we shouldn’t,” says Young. “We get to the classroom between 7:45 and 8 a.m. Prepare the room for the day. Students begin arriving around 8:15.”
It’s a structured routine that the Carson-Newman University director of prison ministry and the students have become accustomed with since the university launched its prison ministry last fall in coordination with Morgan County Correctional Complex.
Fourteen inmates comprise the group, which began its second year this fall. Each student had to apply to the program designed to offer a bachelor of arts degree in Christian studies, with an emphasis in Christian ministry. Along with applying, each student had to meet certain criteria. [Read more…]