Lauren Daigle says that in God's eyes she's no different than the women in the Ohio Reformatory for Women.

An inmate lifts her hands in praise during the performance. (Screenshot: Lauren Daigle/YouTube)Daigle spent a day at the women's prison ministering to the women, including an outdoor performance. She also spent time talking with the inmates and encouraging them about their identity in Christ.

"If you ever question your identity I tell you what, just open up a Bible somewhere and watch His sacrifice, watch His love for you," Daigle says to the women.

"It doesn't change just because you're in here. His love for you, it doesn't waiver just because of the things that you've done or the things that you've felt have gripped you for your whole life. The love that may be absent in some places; the love that we're all longing for."

It's the fifth time Daigle has visited a penal institution, but only the second time she's visited a women's institution. 

Daigle says that she wants prisoners to know that they are cared for and remembered by others.

"I remember when we were at Folsom, one woman came up to me and she said 'You feel like you're forgotten. The rest of the world outside is spinning in circles, and just having someone come in and let you realize that you're not forgotten in the process.'"