History: God's Story, Our Story
1976 - Watergate crook founds Prison FellowshipIn 1974 the Watergate scandal sent White House special counsel Chuck Colson to federal prison. A new Christian, he faced challenges and adversities that tested his faith and self respect. Paroled in 1975, Chuck could easily have opted to close the book on that dark time and move on with his life as inconspicuously as possible. But Chuck knew that God wanted him to hold onto his ties to prison and continue to identify with his fellow prisoners-despite the skepticism and scorn of Chuck's critics. So in 1976, with little more than a vision and the support of a few friends, Chuck began Prison Fellowship (PF) to proclaim to inmates the love and the power of Jesus Christ.
At first-through the support of the director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons-PF began transporting dozens of Christian prisoners out of prison for intensive training through Washington Discipleship Seminars (WDS) held in the nation's capital. Those prisoners then returned to prison to evangelize and teach their "colleagues." But in 1977, PF ran into a hurdle when a warden from Wisconsin refused to furlough one of his prisoners to attend the WDS. Instead, he challenged: "If your program is so good, why don't you bring it inside the prison?" Chuck and his team were up for the task, and three weeks later, 93 inmates attended PF's first ever in-prison seminar in Oxford, Wisconsin. That seminar paved the way for hundreds of thousands of prisoners across the country to received biblically-based teaching through in-prison seminars and Bible studies over the past 33 years. That first in-prison event also reinforced the importance of training local volunteers to go inside prisons and build relationships with inmates. TodayPF's ministry relies on a volunteer network of more than 20,000.
As PF was expanding its ministry inside prisons, its leadership saw firsthand all the signs of a justice system in chaos: overcrowded and violent prisons, neglected crime victims, communities shattered by crime. In 1983 Justice Fellowship (JF) was formed promote biblical standards of justice in our nation’s justice system. JF volunteers successfully implemented reforms across the country: victim-offender reconciliation programs, alternatives to incarceration for nonviolent offenders, victims’ rights legislation, and more. In 1995, former California legislator and ex-prisoner Pat Nolan took the helm of JF and has since spearheaded efforts to pass the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000, the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003, and the Second Chance Act of 2007.

