Female ex-offenders find âGraceâ
Posted: 9/29/06
| Billy and Jacqueline Thornton provide a transitional home for previously incarcerated women. |
Female ex-offenders find ‘Grace’
By Lauren Kirk
Special to the Baptist Standard
SAN ANTONIO—Billy and Jacqueline Thornton may be retired, but their lives have been far from leisurely since they founded Grace House—a transitional residence for previously incarcerated women.
The Thorntons have taught Bible classes at Bexar County Adult Detention Center 15 years. Mrs. Thornton realized the women in her class needed help once they left the facility. Women made professions of faith in Christ and left thinking they had their lives together, but within six months, they would be back in the class because they lacked support, stability and spiritual guidance.
![]() |
| Jacqueline Thornton (right) offers guidance to female ex-offenders at Grace House. |
“Some of the women in my class have never entered a church. These are women who have been on the street. They have made bad choices because they don’t know any other way of life,” she said.
The needs they observed inspired the Thorntons to launch Grace House, a faith-based transitional home that helps recently released women overcome their addictive and destructive lifestyles. The Thorntons’ goal is to prepare these women to re-enter everyday life productively and confidently.
The Thorntons’ responsibilities at Grace House include interviewing prospective residents, feeding and clothing them, raising funds and meeting regularly with the ministry’s board of directors.
The women selected for Grace House receive 24-hour supervised care, as well as lodging, meals and clothing. They get formal training in anger management, substance abuse, and job and college preparation.
The women learn life-skills through parenting, nutrition and health classes. They are taught how to handle basic responsibilities such as balancing a checkbook, household shopping and housekeeping.
The women also receive spiritual training. They begin and end each day with devotions, and they participate in Bible studies and discipleship programs such as 40 Days of Purpose, based on The Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren. Three times a week, they also attend Celebrate Recovery, a Bible-based, Christ-centered recovery ministry.
The women live at Grace House anywhere from six months to a year. The Thorntons have seen women’s lives change dramatically. Many have alcohol or drug addictions, but every one of those women have “made a commitment to the Lord, and they are trying to get their life together,” Mrs. Thornton said.
All of the current Grace House residents are mothers—separated from their children because the children are not allowed to stay in the facility. One resident, who has two children currently living with her parents, told Mrs. Thornton, “I want to be the mother that God intends for me to be.”
The women who have graduated from Grace House are staying off drugs, doing mission work, enrolling in college and earning a living, Mrs. Thornton noted.
One Grace House graduate is going on a mission trip to Brazil with a prison ministry. Another graduate is back in college making a 3.8 grade-point average.
“Our girls’ lives are changed. They tell us they are so grateful for a second chance at life,” Mrs. Thornton said, noting the biblical inspiration for Grace House is Philippians 1:6, “Being confident in this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.”
“All of these women have had a good work started in them, and they’re hungry for more. Grace House is helping them complete their stability in the Lord.”


