Sunday, August 21, 2016

Prison Fellowship Hope Awards

Another group I support is Prison Fellowship started by Chuck Colson after he got out of prison for his role in Watergate with Nixon.  They have now started a new Hope Awards program out of their organization.  This is the link to the winners of this years Chuck Colson Hope Awards:

https://www.prisonfellowship.org/temp/2016tl/colson-hope-awards/

The Angel Tree founder, Mary Kay Beard, was one of the recipients:

The Restorer of Hope award goes to a person who, with sustained compassion for the terrible weight borne by the families of the incarcerated, has come alongside to help carry their burden, share God’s love, and offer hope for restoration. No one exemplifies that better than our inaugural award winner, Mary Kay Beard, whom we honor posthumously this year after her passing in April 2016.
Mary Kay Beard BW 500pxAfter her own release from prison, Mary Kay joined the staff of Prison Fellowship as the director for her home state of Alabama. Remembering the mothers she had met during her incarceration, who carefully saved items like soap and socks in order to have something to give to their children during Christmas visits, Mary Kay created the Angel Tree program from scratch. She visited prisoners to learn what they would want to give to their children. Then she cut out paper angels, placed them on the tree at a local mall, and invited shoppers to help provide Christmas gift for prisoners’ children. The rest, as they say, is history.
More than 30 years later, millions of relationships have been restored and strengthened through Angel Tree, and entire families have been transformed through the presentation of the Gospel and the care of faithful, local congregations. Through her legacy, Mary Kay has lightened the load borne by an incalculable number of families—and given them hope for the future. The ministry estimates that more than 10 million gifts have been given to children on behalf of their incarcerated parents.
Mary Kay understood that when parents become prisoners, they retain their love and concern for their children. By creating Angel Tree, she helped them restore and strengthen their relationships with their sons and daughters. She respected their ongoing dignity as parents. In fact, the dignity of prisoners and their families was always at the core of Angel Tree. Prisoners were deeply grateful to her for giving them a pathway to reconnect with their families. When Mary Kay spoke at an Easter event with Chuck Colson in 2011, prisoners leapt to their feet and almost tore the roof off the prison gymnasium with their cheers and applause.
Mary Kay also involved countless other people in the ministry to prisoners’ families, equipping them to fulfill their potential. She wisely helped make volunteers and churches the central vehicle for ministry delivery, so that they would develop a heart for prisoners’ families and the greater picture of prison ministry. Thanks to her legacy, thousands upon thousands of churches have discovered that prison ministry is a core part of Gospel-centered presence in their local communities. 
Patty, Christian, Wendell, and Emily Colson takes great joy in nominating May Kay for the Restorer of Hope Award. In their nomination, they wrote, “We have a tender place in our hearts for the ministry of Angel Tree, which seeks to bless the children that society sometimes excludes, and for its founder, Mary Kay Beard, who died this year. Through our late husband and father, Chuck Colson, it was our privilege to know this extraordinary lady from Alabama, and because she has helped restore hope to millions, it is the Colson family’s profound honor to nominate her posthumously for this award.”

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