Prison Fellowship applauds restoration of access to Pell Grants for incarcerated students seeking to become productive citizens.
After her release from prison, Annie Goebel realized she needed a holy makeover. Her first resolution? To quit smoking. But she would need some help.
Investment enables Prison Fellowship to double efforts to transform prison culture through supporting prison wardens.
Everyone wants a fresh start, and that’s no less true for people in prison. But can we really change our nature on our own?
Even in a regular non-pandemic year, the separation from family can impact the mental health of men and women behind bars during the holidays.
Difficulties change us. How can we remain strong when nothing is the same?
“I want so bad to help in the same way that I was helped.” Reentry can bring a whole new set of problems for returning citizens. Prison Fellowship Academy provides prisoners with the tools they need for reentry.
Parole and credit policies can ensure proportional punishment is served while also offering an active and intentional pathway to redemption.
From the ministry’s first-ever virtual Easter celebration to socially distanced Hope Events safely conducted outside the prison fence, Prison Fellowship is finding new ways to continue to bring the hope of the Gospel to incarcerated men and women.
She witnessed her family and others being torn apart by incarceration. Now Erica is using her voice as a Justice Ambassador to help restore similar lives.
Prison Fellowship remembers Bishop Harry R. Jackson Jr., a heavyweight in the fight for criminal justice reform and a long-serving member of our board of directors.
Prison Fellowship leadership urges new administration to advance policies helping men and women impacted by crime and incarceration become productive returning citizens.
Prison could have been the end of Roderick’s story—and his relationship with his son. After years of missed birthdays and milestones, he discovered a chance to be a better dad.
Carl sees prison more now than he ever did as a police officer. And because of an unlikely friendship, prison is one of his favorite places to be.
“I was trapped in my own mindset. I was trapped into thinking that I had to be something that society said I had to be, instead of being what God said I was.”
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- …
- 139
- Next Page »