Ep. 217 - Joe Ingle "God behind bars: Dignity, Justice & Prison Ministry" pt. 1
The Deconstructionists
John Williamson
4.4 • 823 Ratings
🗓️ 19 November 2025
⏱️ 36 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In this long-awaited and nearly lost conversation, John sits down with Pastor Joe Ingle, a longtime prison minister, advocate, and spiritual companion to people on death row. Joe’s work challenges our assumptions about justice, punishment, compassion, and what it means to show up for people society has thrown away.
This interview was recorded last year and was almost lost forever when the laptop it was saved on died unexpectedly. Miraculously, the file was recovered just in time — and we are finally able to share Part 1 of this important two-part conversation.
Following our recent episode with Chaplain Kerstin Hedlund, who offered insight into spiritual care within the military, Joe continues our exploration of ministry in difficult, often unseen places — where grief, hope, and humanity collide in profound ways.
In This Episode
In Part 1, we cover:
- Joe’s early call to prison ministry
- How he became involved with individuals facing execution
- What it actually looks like to walk with someone on death row
- The spiritual, emotional, and human complexities of prison chaplaincy
- How society frames “criminals” — and what we miss when we refuse to see their humanity
- The cost of compassion, and why Joe refuses to turn away
- Why faith traditions often struggle to handle justice and mercy well
- The surprising places Joe has seen grace show up behind bars
Why This Conversation Matters
Joe’s work invites us to confront just how uncomfortable — and necessary — compassion can be. His stories shine light on systems we rarely see and raise hard questions about accountability, punishment, redemption, and what Christian faith looks like when lived out in the shadows.
For listeners who appreciated our recent conversation with Chaplain Kerstin Hedlund, Joe’s perspective provides a powerful complement. Together, their episodes explore ministry in spaces most people never encounter, each revealing a different facet of what deep presence and care look like.
About Pastor Joe Ingle
Pastor Joe Ingle has spent decades ministering to incarcerated individuals across the United States, particularly those on death row. His work centers on accompaniment, advocacy, and restoring dignity to people society has deemed irredeemable. Joe is also an author and activist committed to criminal justice reform and the abolition of the death penalty.
Links & Resources
Grab a copy of Joe's book, "Too Close to the Flame: With the Condemned inside the Southern Killing Machine."
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Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Oh, church, when did we lose our way? |
| 0:12.0 | Welcome to the Deconstructionist podcast, and I apologize for the lateness of this episode, but there's a story behind it. |
| 0:22.5 | And it's an episode that I've been wanting to share with you for a very long time. |
| 0:26.7 | In fact, this conversation was almost lost forever. |
| 0:30.6 | Last year, I sat down with Pastor Joe Engle. |
| 0:33.2 | He's a remarkable voice in prison ministry. |
| 0:36.5 | And someone whose work has taken him into some of the most difficult, complicated, and deeply human spaces imaginable. |
| 0:43.4 | Definitely one of those conversations you walk away from knowing it needs to be heard. |
| 0:47.5 | And I was so excited to put it out and it was one of the rare episodes that I didn't use this online platform that I normally use. I recorded it |
| 0:55.7 | directly to my computer and it was on the laptop that stored the lion's share of the |
| 1:03.7 | deconstructionist podcast over the last 10 years and like all good laptops eventually, |
| 1:09.4 | you know, they've lived their life and that laptop |
| 1:13.7 | was ready to move on to the next life. |
| 1:15.8 | And it died on me. |
| 1:18.0 | And so I had to buy a new computer. |
| 1:20.1 | And for a time, I thought I completely lost that file forever. |
| 1:24.0 | It was stuck on the laptop. |
| 1:26.5 | And apparently Apple products are notorious for being |
| 1:29.6 | really difficult to retrieve files from once the computer has basically died on you. And so |
| 1:36.1 | fast forward to a few weeks ago and on a total whim, I pulled the computer out of a drawer. I |
| 1:41.5 | plugged it in and somehow miraculously it booted up just long enough |
| 1:45.8 | for me to air drop it to my new computer. |
... |
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