Prison ministry After his release from prison, Colson founded
Prison Fellowship in 1976, which today is "the nation's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, and their families". Colson worked to promote prisoner rehabilitation and reform of the prison system in the United States, citing his disdain for what he called the "lock 'em and leave 'em" warehousing approach to criminal justice. He helped to create prisons whose populations come from inmates who choose to participate in
faith-based programs. In 1979, Colson founded
Prison Fellowship International to extend his prison outreach outside the United States. Now in 120 countries, Prison Fellowship International is the largest, most extensive association of national Christian ministries working within the criminal justice field, working to proclaim the Gospel worldwide and alleviate the suffering of prisoners and their families. In 1983, Prison Fellowship International received special consultative status with the
Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. During this time, Colson also founded Justice Fellowship, using his influence in conservative political circles to push for bipartisan, legislative reforms in the U.S. criminal justice system. On June 18, 2003, Colson was invited by President
George W. Bush to the
White House to present results of a scientific study on the
faith-based initiative, InnerChange, at the
Carol Vance Unit (originally named the Jester II Unit) prison facility of the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice in
Fort Bend County, Texas. Colson led a small group that included Byron Johnson of the
University of Pennsylvania, who was the principal researcher of the InnerChange study, a few staff members of Prison Fellowship and three InnerChange graduates to the meeting. The commonly-reported results from the study have been strongly criticized for selecting only participants who were unlikely to be rearrested (especially those who were successfully placed in post-prison jobs), and when considering all of the InnerChange study participants, their recidivism rate (24.3%) was worse than the control group (20.3%).
Christian advocacy Colson maintained a variety of media channels which discuss contemporary issues from an
evangelical Christian worldview. In his
Christianity Today columns, for example, Colson opposed
same-sex marriage, and argued that
Darwinism is used to attack Christianity. He also argued against evolution and in favor of
intelligent design, asserting that Darwinism led to forced sterilizations by
eugenicists. Colson was an outspoken critic of
postmodernism, believing that as a cultural worldview, it is incompatible with the Christian tradition. He debated prominent
post-evangelicals, such as
Brian McLaren, on the best response of the evangelical church in dealing with the postmodern cultural shift. Colson, however, came alongside the
creation care movement when endorsing Christian environmentalist author
Nancy Sleeth's ''Go Green, Save Green: A Simple Guide to Saving Time, Money, and God's Green Earth''. In the early 1980s, Colson was invited to New York by
David Frost's variety program on
NBC for an open debate with
Madalyn Murray O'Hair, the
atheist who, in 1963, brought the court case (
Murray v. Curlett) that eliminated official public school prayers. Colson was a member of
the Family (also known as the Fellowship), described by prominent evangelical Christians as one of the most politically well-connected fundamentalist organizations in the US. On April 4, 1991, Colson was invited to deliver a speech as part of the Distinguished Lecturer series at
Harvard Business School. The speech was titled "The Problem of Ethics", where he argued that a society without a foundation of moral absolutes cannot long survive. Colson was later a principal signer of the 1994
Evangelicals and Catholics Together ecumenical document signed by leading Evangelical Protestants and
Roman Catholic leaders in the United States, part of a larger ecumenical rapprochement in the United States that had begun in the 1970s with Catholic-Evangelical collaboration during the
Gerald R. Ford Administration and in later para-church organizations such as the
Moral Majority founded by
Jerry Falwell at the urging of
Francis Schaeffer and his son
Frank Schaeffer during the
Jimmy Carter administration. In November 2009, Colson was a principal writer and driving force behind an ecumenical statement known as the
Manhattan Declaration calling on evangelicals, Catholics and
Orthodox Christians not to comply with rules and laws permitting abortion, same-sex marriage and other matters that go against their religious consciences. He had previously ignited controversy within
Protestant circles for his mid-90s common-ground initiative with conservative Roman Catholics
Evangelicals and Catholics Together, which Colson wrote alongside prominent Roman Catholic
Richard John Neuhaus. Colson was also a proponent of the Bible Literacy Project's curriculum
The Bible and Its Influence for public high school literature courses. Colson has said that Protestants have a special duty to prevent anti-Catholic bigotry.
Political engagement In 1988, Colson became involved with the
Elizabeth Morgan case, visiting Morgan in jail and lobbying to change federal law in order to free her. On October 3, 2002, Colson was one of the co-signers of the
Land letter sent to President
George W. Bush. The letter was written by
Richard D. Land, president of the
Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the
Southern Baptist Convention and co-signed by four prominent American evangelical Christian leaders with Colson among them. The letter outlined their theological support for a
just war in the form of a pre-emptive
invasion of Iraq. On June 1, 2005, Colson appeared in the national news commenting on the revelation that
W. Mark Felt was
Deep Throat. Colson expressed disapproval of Felt's role in the Watergate scandal, first in the context of Felt being an FBI employee who should have known better than to disclose the results of a government investigation to the press (violating a fundamental tenet of FBI culture), and second in the context of the trust placed in him (which demanded a more active response, such as a face-to-face confrontation with the FBI director or Nixon or, had that failed, public resignation). His criticism of Felt provoked a harsh response from
Benjamin Bradlee, former executive editor of
The Washington Post, one of only three individuals to know who Deep Throat was prior to the public disclosure, who said he was "baffled" that Colson and Liddy were "lecturing the world about public morality" considering their role in the Watergate scandal. Bradlee stated that "as far as I'm concerned they have no standing in the morality debate." Colson also supported the passage of
Proposition 8. He signed his name to a full-page ad in the December 5, 2008
The New York Times that objected to violence and intimidation against religious institutions and believers in the wake of the passage of Proposition 8. The ad said that "violence and intimidation are always wrong, whether the victims are believers, gay people, or anyone else." A dozen other religious and human rights activists from several different faiths also signed the ad, noting that they "differ on important moral and legal questions", including Proposition 8. == Public lectures ==