No one should come home alone.
Remember My Chains walks with incarcerated individuals, returning citizens, and their families through faith-based encouragement, mentorship, reentry training, practical assistance, and ongoing community support.
“Remember my chains.” — Colossians 4:18
Paul’s words call the church to remember those still bound, stand with those coming home, and help restore lives through the hope of Jesus Christ.
Release is an event. Restoration is a journey.
Most incarcerated people will eventually return home. The question is whether they return to isolation, confusion, and survival — or to a path marked by faith, structure, responsibility, and support.
Remember My Chains helps bridge that gap by encouraging those still inside, preparing people for life after release, and walking with returning citizens as they rebuild with dignity and purpose.
What restoration can look like
A man comes home with a plan instead of panic.
A family begins the hard work of reconnection.
A returning citizen receives mentoring, training, resources, and a community that keeps showing up.
From the gate to a new life.
Our work centers on three core areas: support, training, and assistance.
Support
Spiritual care, mentorship, encouragement, accountability, family reconnection, and a consistent community of care.
Training
Life skills, job readiness, financial stewardship, leadership development, and preparation for responsible living.
Assistance
Practical help, reentry resources, document support, employment guidance, and connection to needed services.

Led by someone who understands the journey.
Trevon Gross, PhD
Founder, Remember My Chains
Remember My Chains was born from a conviction that incarceration should not be the final word over a person’s life.
Help someone walk out free — and stay free.
Your support helps provide spiritual care, letter-writing outreach, life-skills development, job-readiness support, family reconnection resources, and practical help.