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Name: Charles “Chuck” Colson

Why You’ve Heard of Him: Colson was Richard Nixon’s “hatchet man” and spent seven months in prison for Watergate-related charges. He entered Alabama’s Maxwell Prison in 1974 as a new Christian and became a staunch advocate for prisoners. After telling his story in the bestselling Born Again, Colson used the royalties to found Prison Fellowship, the world’s largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims, and their families.

Positions: Founder and chairman emeritus of the board for Prison Fellowship and Prison Fellowship International (1976 to present); Commentator for Breakpoint; founder of the
Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview
.

Previous career:
Captain, U.S. Marine Corps (1953-55)
Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (1955-56)
Admin. Asst. to U.S. Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R-Mass.) (1956-61)
Partner, Gadsby and Hannah Law Firm (1961-69)
Special Counsel to President Richard M. Nixon (1969-73)
Partner, Colson and Shapiro Law Firm (1973-74)

Education:
B.A., Brown University (1953)
J.D. with honors, George Washington University (1959)

Area of Expertise/Interest: Restorative justice; worldview analysis and cultural criticism

Honors: Won the $1 million dollar Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion (the prize money was donated to Prison Fellowship); Born Again was made into a movie in 1978

Books: Colson has written more than 20 books, including Born Again (1976), Kingdoms in Conflict (reissued as God and Government) (1987), The Body (1994), Loving God (1997), and How Now Shall We Live (w/ Nancy Pearcey) (2000)

Why You Should Know About Him: Other than the apostle Paul, there are few ex-prisoners who have done more to fulfill the duties of a Christian than Charles Colson. Along with Prison Fellowship, he has overseen the founding of Justice Fellowship (the nation’s largest faith-based criminal justice reform group) and Angel Tree (a program that provides Christmas presents to more than 500,000 children of inmates annually on behalf of their incarcerated parents). The ministries now reach more than 40,000 prisoners in 100 countries around the world.

As an author, Colson has written some of the most influential books in the evangelical community, including The Body and How Now Shall We Live? (both co-written with Nancy Pearcey). His Kingdoms in Conflict (1987), a centrist view of the relationship between church and state, is one of my personal favorites. He is also the co-author, along with the late Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, of Evangelicals and Catholics Together, a seminal document that provoked questions such as, “Is the Reformation over?” but also brought him under heavy criticism from fellow evangelicals for underestimating profound theological differences that remain.

Colson was also a co-drafter of the Manhattan Declaration, a “clarion call to the church to take a stand on three vital issues: The sanctity of life, the dignity of marriage as the union of one man and one woman, and religious liberty.”

While others have used the infamy of Watergate to line their own pockets, Colson donated all of his speaking honoraria and book royalties to Prison Fellowship and accepts only the salary of a mid-range ministry executive as compensation. The man who was once considered “Nixon’s evil genius” now models Christian charity and service, an example of how God can transform our lives and use us for his greater purpose.

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