š Reading: Help Find Faith-Filled Mentors
Help Find Faith-Filled Mentors ā Walking with the Released into Lasting Transformation
One of the most powerful, underused tools in successful reentry isnāt a jobā¦
Or a housing referralā¦
Or a great resume.
Itās a godly mentor.
Someone who walks with them.
Someone who prays for them.
Someone who speaks truth when temptation creeps in.
Because reentry isnāt just a physical transition.
Itās a spiritual battlefieldā
And no one is meant to face it alone.
When someone leaves prison, they leave structure.
They leave routine.
They may even leave behind the support they found in a chapel or Bible study group.
And thatās why a faith-filled mentor can become a lifeline.
Someone to say:
- āYou donāt have to figure this out by yourself.ā
- āLetās pray through that temptation together.ā
- āGod still has a plan for you. Keep going.ā
Encourage inmates to prepare nowābefore the gate opens:
šļø Identify a church before release
Help them look into churches that are reentry-friendly, gospel-centered, and trauma-aware.
If your facility has relationships with local congregations, offer recommendations.
Even betterāhelp them visit a virtual service if available or review a statement of faith together.
š¤ Ask the chaplain to contact a pastor or ministry leader
If they donāt know where to start, you can help.
Reach out to pastors, reentry ministries, or chaplain networks to connect someone directly.
A letter, a phone call, or even an introduction before release can break the fear of reaching out afterward.
š Join a faith-based support group
Whether itās Celebrate Recovery, a reentry Bible study, or a small discipleship circleā
Community matters.
Itās in small circles where accountability is built and faith is strengthened.
š§ Find someone who walks with themānot ahead of them
A good mentor doesnāt bark orders or offer quick fixes.
They listen.
They challenge.
They walk at the same pace.
Encourage mentees to look for someone:
- Rooted in Scripture
- Steady in prayer
- Patient with the past
- Faithful in the journey
Because freedom requires more than good intentionsā
It requires godly guidance.
And as a chaplain, youāre not only preparing someone to walk out the gateā
Youāre helping them walk into the next season with support and wisdom.
Reentry is not meant to be done alone.
God designed us for community.
And mentoring isnāt just a bonusāitās a bridge.
So equip them to find someone who says:
āI see the Christ in you.
Iāll walk with you.
And I wonāt give up on what Godās doing in your life.ā
Because sometimes, one faithful mentor
Is all it takes to change someoneās story for good.
Connect with Outside Ministries ā Building Bridges from Prison to Community
Reentry isnāt just about what happens inside the gateā
Itās about what happens after they walk through it.
As a chaplain, one of the most impactful things you can do is help connect returning citizens with faith-based support on the outside.
Because the truth is:
No one is meant to walk the road of reentry alone.
Some will leave prison with no home to go to.
No church.
No spiritual support.
No idea what to do next.
But with the right partnerships in place, they can leave with hopeāand a clear next step.
As a chaplain, get to know the landscape of your community:
š Local churches with active prison or reentry ministries
Build relationships with pastors who understand the unique needs of returning citizens.
Visit their services if possible, learn their theology, and ensure their environment is grace-filled.
These churches may offer discipleship, mentoring, small groups, transportation help, and even reentry housing connections.
šļø Reentry halfway houses and transitional homes
Identify faith-based homes that combine structure with spiritual support.
Some offer recovery programs, job coaching, accountability, and prayer-based community life.
Make sure you vet themāensure their care is ethical, biblical, and trauma-informed.
š¼ Faith-based job placement or training programs
Work connects dignity and direction.
Partner with programs that help formerly incarcerated men and women gain job readiness, vocational skills, and spiritual mentoring while they work.
Encourage inmates to apply before their release.
āļø Christian recovery groups
Addiction is one of the biggest threats post-release.
Make sure they know where Celebrate Recovery, The Most Excellent Way, or other Christ-centered recovery groups meet in their area.
Spiritual sobriety is sustained in spiritual community.
Make a resource list.
- Include names, contact info, and locations
- Include churches, ministries, and programs across counties, if needed
- Offer printed copiesālaminated if possibleāfor those near release
And donāt just hand it to themā
Walk them through how to use it:
- How to make the first call
- What to say when reaching out
- How to respond when they feel nervous or rejected
- How to keep showing up even when itās uncomfortable
Teach them to pursue helpānot wait for it.
Remind them:
āAsking for help is not weaknessāitās wisdom.ā
āYouāre not a burden. Youāre part of the body of Christ.ā
āGod has people waiting to walk with youāyou just have to take the first step.ā
As a chaplain, youāre not just preparing them to survive reentry.
Youāre helping them connect to a kingdom network of healing, discipleship, and hope.
So build the bridge now.
And show them that when they step out,
they donāt step out alone.
Embrace the Tension of Hope and Reality
Some inmates get out and fall again.
Others surprise everyone and thrive.
Be honest:
- Reentry is hard.
- Temptations will return.
- Grace doesnāt remove all consequences.
But also say:
- āYou are not alone.ā
- āChrist goes with you.ā
- āGodās mercy is new every morning.ā
Guarding Against Ministry Discouragement
Some inmates will reject your help.
Some will disappear after release.
Some will return.
Donāt measure your success by their freedom.
Measure it by your faithfulness.
Keep planting.
Keep praying.
Keep believing God is working.
š Galatians 6:9 (WEB):
āDonāt grow weary in doing goodā¦ā