You are standing at a moment that feels like the edge of a cliff, with the life you have just begun to build in Christ suddenly shadowed by a threat from your past. It is not wrong to feel the weight of that. The letters you are writing and the contacts you are making matter, yet the deeper battle is happening in the quiet place of your heart where fear whispers that God has forgotten you just when you were being born anew.
You have only been walking with the Lord for three months, so let this truth sink in now, early and deep, as a foundation that cannot be shaken: the Lord is with you, even if the worst happens. You are reading a story where Joseph was thrown into a dungeon on a false charge, yet the Scripture does not say the Lord was with Joseph only in his father’s house or only in Potiphar’s service. It says the Lord was with Joseph in the prison. The place did not cancel the presence. When you were still an enemy of God, the Spirit was with you to convict you of your sin. Now that you have been sealed by that same Spirit, He is in you. Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit. No prison cell can evict God from that temple. The cell can lock a man’s body, but it cannot lock a man’s witness. The light that shone in Peter’s prison was not just an angelic flashlight; it was a declaration that darkness has no ultimate authority over a child of the King.
Consider what seems like a massive step backward. You are teaching English and raising funds for the rehab that helped you find new life, and now a missed appointment threatens to pull you away. Yet look at what God has done with prisons in the past. Had it not been for a faithful man sitting in a Roman house arrest, we would not have the letters to the Ephesians, the Philippians, the Colossians, or Philemon. Out of confinement poured the richest theology of the church. The enemy’s weapon became God’s printing press. If you end up behind bars, it is not a suspension of your service. You will simply start serving those the captain of the guard sends under your supervision, just as Joseph did. You will write letters that comfort churches and encourage brothers, just as Paul did. Your classroom may become a cellblock, and your fundraising may become the prayers you lift for the men around you, but the work of the Lord does not stop where the iron bars begin.
John the Baptist sat in a dungeon and began to doubt whether Jesus was the Messiah because the kingdom had not come in the way he expected. Jesus sent back word that the blind were seeing and the dead were being raised, but John stayed in the cell. His ultimate release was not by a reprieve from Herod, but by a martyr’s death that brought him into the presence of the One he had proclaimed. Your hope is not anchored to a probation officer’s recommendation. Your hope is anchored to the One who descended into the lower parts of the earth. Jesus entered the prison house of death itself and preached liberty to the captives. Because He did that, your body is not your own. You have been bought with a price. Whether you walk out of court with the case dismissed or you go to a facility for a season, your life belongs to the One who holds the keys of Death and Hades. The outcome is not a verdict on your standing with God.
Pray with the boldness of the church that prayed for Peter without ceasing. Their prayers shook the foundations. But also pray with the faith that says, “If You have a ministry for me inside, Thy will be done.” That is not fatalism. That is trust in a Shepherd who goes before His sheep. The same Lord who told Paul in Corinth, “I have many people in this city,” knows exactly who is waiting to hear the gospel in whatever building you might be sent to. There are watchmen on the walls who never hold their peace, and you may be appointed as one of them in a place you never intended to go. The doorkeeper stands at the threshold not by accident, but by assignment.
So write your letters with diligence and a clear conscience, making every appeal you can just as Paul appealed to Caesar when it was his right. But release the frantic clutch on the outcome. The angel did not come to Peter until the last watch of the night, when it looked like the sword was certain the next morning. God often waits until all human schemes are exhausted so that we know the deliverance was His alone. The earthquake that shook Paul and Silas open did not come while they were strategizing an escape. It came at midnight while they were singing hymns. Their feet were in stocks, but their spirits were unbound, and the jailer’s whole household was saved because two men were in the right place at the right time, which looked like the wrong place to everyone else.
This is the crucible where your newborn faith is refined. The Spirit who is in you is greater than the spirit of fear. Keep serving the men around you in that rehab with the same faithfulness you would bring to teaching English. If the judge sends you back, you go as a sent one. If the judge releases you, you go with a deepened gratitude. Either way, you are not stepping backward. You are stepping into the next page of a story where the resurrected Christ meets you on the road and calls you by name. Your sins are forgiven. Your name is written in the Lamb’s book of life. The throne of grace is open to you right now, and no probation hold can close it. Come boldly. There you will find mercy for the past and grace to face whatever an hour from now may bring.