It's About Liberty: A Conservative Forum
Topics => The Departed => Topic started by: charlesoakwood on April 19, 2012, 12:21:30 AM
-
Chuck Colson, the evangelical leader who dedicated his life to ministering to convicts after serving time himself in prison and coming to know God, has died. He was 80.
Colson was hospitalized March 30 after having trouble getting through a speech at a "Breaking the Spiral of Silence" conference in Virginia. Doctors found a brain hemorrhage, and he underwent surgery to remove a pool of clotted blood.
http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2012/April/Devoted-Prison-Fellowship-Founder-Chuck-Colson-Dies/ (http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2012/April/Devoted-Prison-Fellowship-Founder-Chuck-Colson-Dies/)
RIP Chuck, you did good.
-
::angel:: ::thumbsup:: ::angel::
-
Truly a good guy.
RIP Chuck.
::USA::
-
I was getting email alerts for the last couple days saying that he was about to pass and that the family had been gathered.
I was in the position of working with Chuck's voice on radio PSAs. Never met him, because he always recorded spots remotely and his people sent me the audio to edit/mix/master. But he sure was one-of-a-kind in that regard. His voice was unique, and the joy of the Lord was in it.
-
I read his book, "How Now Shall We Live", a long time ago. I don't remember much about it right now except that it was good.
RIP Mr. Colson
-
Came across this nice post from someone who worked on productions with Colson):
It would be his time at the Maxwell Correction Facility in Alabama that would define his life. His Ivy League education at Brown, his Marine training, his law practice, and his rise to be the President of the United States’ right hand man were just a preface to watch a man fall from grace. (Kind of like that opening visual in the TV series Mad Men.)
“For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul.”
Mark 8:36
But it was Colson’s very public fall that set up his life’s work. His religious awakening while in prison set up his founding Prison Fellowship Ministries. What the The New York Times called a “remarkable reveral.” While Colson also became a much in demand speaker and writer, Timothy M. Phelps in the LA Times wrote, “he apparently never amassed great personal wealth from his work. He took an annual salary of $113,000 from his prison groups and donated all royalties from his 30 books, substantial speaking fees, and the $1 million Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion he was awarded in London in 1993 to his prison fellowship.”
<snip>
...The times I worked on the production side of Colson’s talks, the people he often quoted were the Nobel Prize writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn who spent time in the Russian Gulag, William Wiberforce who worked to end the slave trade in Britain, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer—the German Lutheran pastor who was arrested and executed related to his anti-Nazi views and actions.
Solzhenitsyn, Wilberforce, Bonheoffer and Colson were different kinds of mad men—reformers—ones that believed that there is a tomorrow.
link (http://screenwritingfromiowa.wordpress.com/2012/04/23/chuck-colson-the-right-story/#comment-5875)
-
RIP!
-
Solzhenitsyn, Wilberforce, Bonheoffer and Colson were different kinds of mad men—reformers—ones that believed that there is a tomorrow.
Amen................RIP