“I wanted to take a shortcut in life,” Rhonda recalls. “My whole life had been drugs, so I thought I would sell drugs and get myself financially OK so I could … be a mom to my kids.”Soon, she lost custody of her children and was wanted in Arkansas and six Oklahoma counties for various crimes, including burglary, possession of a controlled drug and possession of a controlled dangerous substance. She finally realized that if she ever wanted to see her kids again, she had to change. Rhonda agreed to turn herself in on one condition -- she be allowed to properly say goodbye to her kids.
“Dec. 7, 2000, I spent the day with my children,” Rhonda said. “I had Christmas with them and I told them I was sorry for being the mom that I had been and that I knew I was going to prison … and that I would be back to get them and I was coming back different. That’s when I determined my life was going to change.”The next day, Rhonda turned herself in and was sentenced to 10 years at Mabel Basset Correctional Facility. She entered prison a broken woman. But from that place of brokenness, she was finally ready to accept the love and grace from God that had been waiting all along.
“The one thing that really impacted me was the love and the kindness that came through Jean Key and the women who were serving with her,” Rhonda recalls. “It was something I had never experienced, and I thought, ‘whatever you have, I want.’”And the love of Jesus can transform even the hardest heart.
“It’s amazing,” Jean said. “We’ve seen some of the hardest, most violent (inmates) walk across the yard … changed. They’re changed and they’re advocates for the God who loves them.”RELATED: A man who tried to kill a police officer turns his life around Rhonda was one of those who was truly changed. Her transformation was evident to everyone, and she was released from prison on parole after 19 months. The former inmate was connected with Stand in the Gap Ministries -- a prayer-based, small-group that supports people released from prison, with the goal of empowering them to stay out of prison and avoid relapsing back into criminal behavior. Now that Rhonda was truly transformed, she knew there was no way she was going back to her former destructive lifestyle. She focused on working hard, and was eventually able to regain custody of her kids. She fell in love and remarried. Feeling utterly blessed by the divine intervention that had not just changed, but saved her life, the former inmate committed herself to helping other women released from prison. Rhonda says that in Oklahoma, women are often released from jail at midnight on the day their sentence ends. Most of them have no one to call and nowhere to go. And so, Rhonda figured she could start offering temporary housing for up to two weeks. But God had bigger plans!
“I believe God had another plan,” Rhonda said. “He was just getting my feet wet.”
“When people go to prison and they get a felony conviction and they do their time, many people don’t let that be sufficient. They continue to hold that against them for a long time, which creates barriers to employment,” Rhonda explained.As Rhonda started brainstorming with a friend on ways to help former inmates with this problem, her husband threw her a bit of a monkey wrench. He'd been completely supportive of her outreach, but told her he could no longer fund her efforts because they'd become too costly. Rhonda had only $300 to put towards her new venture. But she was out to do God's work, so she had all she needed! She took part of her money and rented a flea market booth. The rest she used to buy coffee beans, a coffee pot, hot chocolate and a crock pot for apple cider.
“And that’s how it got started,” Rhonda said. “We started She Brews with $300 and a whole lot of faith.”
“God has restored my life,” she said. “He has given me back my children. He’s given me grandchildren. I help 21 women at a time who focus on getting their children back. We help them with employment. We help them with education. We help them set goals so that their lives and their children’s lives can be different.”And if there's one thing to take away from Rhonda's incredible story, it's that it's never too late to seek out the Almighty Savior and Lover of our souls. Our God is the God of second chances.
"Second chances do make a difference in a life. People do change. They can. They can.”