Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Charles W. Colson
Charles W. Colson
May 14, 2026 5:13 AM

From 1931 to 2012.

One of the most wonderful things about being a Christian is that I don't ever get up in the morning and wonder if what I do matters.

Charles W. Colson was one of the most remarkable leaders of the evangelical world. An honors graduate of Brown University and the American University Law School, a Marine captain, and a successful lawyer, Colson first achieved fame (or notoriety) as Special Counsel to President Nixon. As a member of Nixon's inner circle, Colson quickly developed a reputation for ruthlessness as "Nixon's hatchet man." He was involved in leaking confidential FBI reports to the press to undermine Daniel Ellsberg during the Pentagon Papers trial and to discredit the antiwar movement, and was involved with Watergate and the subsequent cover-up.

Although he left the administration for private practice in 1973, Colson was indicted in connection with Watergate in March 1974. As Colson watched his life begin to unravel, a close friend gave him a copy of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity. After reading it, Colson gave his life to Christ and converted to Christianity. His conversion was roundly mocked by many in the press, but nonetheless it moved him to make a deal with prosecutors. He told them that he was not guilty of what they were charging him with, but that he was guilty of obstruction of justice and he was prepared to plead guilty to that. The prosecutors accepted his offer, and Colson went to prison.

Colson spent seven months in Maxwell Correctional Facility Alabama. While there, he was struck by the dehumanizing conditions in the facility and determined to do something to help those in prison. In 1976, he founded Prison Fellowship, which has grown into the largest prison ministry in the world. Prison Fellowship hosts Bible studies, sets up aftercare programs, and in some prisons, runs entire wards under a program called the InnerChange Freedom Initiative. A study by Dr. Byron Johnson of the University of Pennsylvania concluded that IFI cut the recidivism rate from 20.3 percent of the control group to 8 percent. In 1983, Colson also set up Justice Fellowship to work on bipartisan legislation for criminal justice reform.

In 1993, Colson was awarded the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, which he donated along with all of the royalties from his books to Prison Fellowship.

Given the high recidivism rate of released prisoners, Colson became interested in the causes of crime. Ultimately his research led him to the importance of worldview in shaping society and individual behavior. Much of the last period of his life was spent writing and teaching about this topic.

Another important venture spearheaded by Colson and Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, founder and editor of First Things, was Evangelicals and Catholics Together, a 1994 document that identified important areas mon ground between the two traditions. This helped lay the foundation for the 2009 Manhattan Declaration, which brought together Evangelical, Catholic, and Orthodox leaders in a joint statement on the sanctity of life, the dignity of traditional marriage, and religious freedom. He continued to focus on this to the end, falling ill at the "Breaking the Spiral of Silence" conference intended to move people to action to support the causes promoted in the Manhattan Declaration.

Colson was a prolific writer, authoring or co-authoring some 30 books. He was also responsible for developing curricula for worldview and for ethics, creating an initiative to bring together and informally to coordinate the work of worldview ministries, setting up a training program for worldview teachers, and a host of other projects. Even into his 80s, Colson had enormous energy and a tremendously fertile mind. His leadership will be sorely missed.

Hero of Liberty image attribution:White House photo (Nixon Presidential Library [1]) [Public domain], via Wikimedia

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The People We Need
Edmund Burke spoke a great and noble truth when he observed that the kind of society and government a nation has is an accurate reflection of the character and intellect of the people who inhabit it. A corrupt, careless, sluggish people will have a government to match their ill nature. A social order that contains a significant number of citizens of probity, intelligence, energy and imagination will be represented by statesmen like the fifty-five men who sat themselves down...
In the Meadow That Is Called Runnymede
Lord Acton, the great historian of freedom, understood that “liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization.” The liberty of which he spoke embraced a broad scope of human freedom, including dimensions political, intellectual, economic, and, especially, religious. The civilization of which he spoke was the West, whose heritage of Greek philosophy, Roman law, and Christian faith indelibly marked it and inexorably pushed it toward the full panoply of liberties we enjoy today and to which the rest...
Zoning as a Threat to Religious Liberty
If you take for granted your attendance at the church on the corner, it may be a good time to stop. You are about to be introduced to what many believe has e the worst threat to religious liberty in America: local zoning laws. In theory, zoning laws sound reasonable and those who back zoning regulations often have good intentions. However, the reality is that zoning controls are turning property rights, the freedom of assembly and the freedom of...
Mia Immaculee Antoinette Acton Woodruff
The phone rang at 3:30 a.m. on Tuesday, April 5th. “Her heart gave up” was how a mutual friend announced Mia’s death. Marie Immaculée Antoinette Acton, later the Hon. Mrs. Douglas Woodruff, was dead at 89. I had seen her scarcely two weeks prior and knew that the end was near: “One can live too long, Jim,” she had said. Though she had often joked about the nuisance of what she described as her “creeping decrepitude,” there was a...
Prosperity and Environmental Spirituality
Environmental thought is being used increasingly, not to preserve nature’s beauty, but to restrict economic prosperity. As a priest, I am concerned about this movement, not only because I believe that economic development is good for the human family but also because, under the guise of environmentalism, certain heresies are making inroads into our houses of worship. Of late, we have witnessed the rise of what some have called a “green spirituality,” said to blend nicely with traditional faith....
An Honor Well Deserved: Michael Novak
It is sometimes said that capitalism lacks poets. In twenty-five books and a career of lecturing and teaching all over the world, Michael Novak, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, had devoted much of his life to poetically explaining the crucial role of private initiative in public life. In doing so, he has roused the moral imaginations of scholars around the world. His service in defense of freedom has now been duly recognized. Mr. Novak has joined the...
The economics of sin taxes
“Sin Taxes” are so called because they are levied on modities, such as tobacco and alcohol, which are the objects of widespread disapproval. “Such taxes,” Paul Samuelson says, “are often tolerated because most people–including many cigarette smokers and moderate drinkers–feel that there is something vaguely immoral about tobacco and alcohol. They think these ”sin taxes“ stun two birds with one stone: the state gets revenue, and vice is made more expensive.” “Sin Taxes” is not a technical term in...
A Culture of Freedom?
The culture these days seems distinctly unfriendly to both freedom and virtue. For all of the rhetoric about the end of big government, the GOP Congress has made peace with Leviathan. At the same time, evidence of moral decline, from family disintegration to artistic obscenity, lies all around us. Superficially, at least, enhancing state power in order to make society more virtuous seems to be a losing strategy. Yet some conservatives, when not busy concocting new duties for government–to...
Recovering the Moral Foundations of Economics
During the summer of 1980, I met weekly for breakfast, prayer, and study with a minister friend of mine. A warm-hearted, intelligent man, Bob Hager kept challenging me to broaden my interest from the biblical studies, theology, and apologetics that were my great loves to include social concerns. One week, he told me of a book he’d read recently – Ronald J. Sider’s Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger. “Cal,” Bob said, “you’ve simply got to read this...
The Moral Nature of Free Enterprise
In the marketplace, the consumer is “king.” To e wealthy in free enterprise usually involves mass production for mass material consumption. The free market rewards entrepreneurs for their correct anticipation of consumer demand. It showers people like Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Alexander Graham Bell, John D. Rockefeller, and Andrew Carnegie with tremendous wealth, because they dramatically improved the consumer’s quality of life. Contrast this with socialist or pre-capitalist society. Those societies excel in producing an abundance of grinding poverty,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved