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Ex-Prisoners Desperate for Redemption Find Hope: 'Second Chance Month'

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In a cancel culture, grace and mercy often fall by the wayside. However, Heather Rice-Minus, president and CEO of Prison Fellowship, a ministry serving the incarcerated and their families, believes everyone deserves a second chance.

Listen to them on the latest episode of “Quick Start”:

That’s why her organization launched Second Chance Month in 2017, an effort to support men and women with a criminal record looking to restart their lives on a positive footing.

Each year, Prison Fellowship designates April as a time of reflection and action to take steps that help formerly incarcerated people overcome roadblocks to success.

With bipartisan appeal, both former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden have issued proclamations in support of Second Chance Month.

And Rice-Minus said every Christian should openly herald this message.

“If we believe in the message of grace, if we believe in the message of redemption, then we have to believe it, not just selectively, but for everyone,” Rice-Minus told CBN News. “And, so, that includes people who are in prison.”

She said this doesn’t mean everyone will definitively make positive change, but that Christians are “supposed to believe that, through Christ, anyone can change.” This, she said, is one of the most encouraging elements of the Gospel.

“One of the most beautiful messages of the Gospel is that we don’t earn it,” Rice-Minus said. “It’s all through the power of Christ. And so, I think it’s a great time of year, coming off of Easter, to remember that the power of the cross is there for everybody.”

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Rice-Minus said there are 70 million Americans with a criminal record, noting this “pervasive problem” touches millions of Americans’ lives.

“A lot of times people complete their punishment in prison, or getting their criminal record and community supervision — whatever it may be … and they think they’re done,” she said. “But a lot of times people come out and they face a lot of challenges.”

These challenges include restrictions on housing or employment and struggles to get a job.

“We want people to no longer commit crimes, but then we make it really hard for people to earn an honest living and provide for their families,” she said. “And there’s just a lot of stigma that comes with having a criminal record.”

Rice-Minus said employers should spend more time examining a person’s attempts to rehabilitate and not simply ban them because of their pasts. Over the past few years, she said Prison Fellowship has seen some positive moves in this direction with the creation of the Second Chance Business Coalition.

Walmart, Google, and other companies have stepped in to participate, proclaiming they want to hire people with criminal backgrounds who have positively changed their lives.

“The other movement … that’s been — it’s been so exciting … is actually the church,” Rice-Minus said. “We started asking churches to celebrate a Second Chance Sunday as part of the Second Chance Campaign, and we’ve had churches all over the country step up and do that.”

This ranges from offering sermons on redemption to being welcoming places for individuals coming out of prison and looking to start their new lives.

Rice-Minus hopes to see this become a “movement of the church” in the coming years.

“I would just love if, [in] every church across America, it was just part of our DNA to welcome those home who have experienced the justice system,” she said. “To be a place where people can feel seen, heard, and loved, and feel belonging.”

Find out more about Prison Fellowship and Second Chance Month here.

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About The Author

Billy Hallowell writes for CBN's Faithwire.com. He has been working in journalism and media for more than a decade. His writings have appeared in CBN News, Faithwire, Deseret News, TheBlaze, Human Events, Mediaite, PureFlix, and Fox News, among other outlets. He is the author of several books, including Playing with Fire: A Modern Investigation Into Demons, Exorcism, and Ghosts Hallowell has a B.A. in journalism and broadcasting from the College of Mount Saint Vincent in Riverdale, New York and an M.S. in social research from Hunter College in Manhattan, New York.