Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
Watts has been the director of PFM's Northern Illinois and Northern Indiana
region since 1989, overseeing volunteer teams for eight upstate prisons and
22 downstate prisons in Illinois. Considering that some 18,000 prisoners
are released from those prisons annually,
Watts has had a big job to do. However, he has seen in his own life that
advocacy can make a difference.
During military service in Crete, Greece, Watts was wrongly accused of
being a Communist by a superior officer and struggled with how to handle
the situation. After praying about the matter, he wrote to a family friend,
who knew a congressman. The congressman helped orchestrate an investigation
into the matter and Watts was cleared of the charges and immediately sent
to a base in the U.S.
Watts worked 10 years through Rev. Jesse Jackson's Operation Push, aiding
chaplain development in prisons. He also made connections with Chuck
Colson, who heads PFM. He began working regionally for the organization in
1989 and has put his knowledge to use to help many inmates.
"I used to go to prisons with Jesse and I knew then that, with so many
African Americans in prison, the church had to have some kind of prison
ministry operation," Watts said. For a long time, Watts made regular visits
to the Dixon prison and watched prison chaplain Henry Bouma organize what
was called a "church without walls." A bible study in the Dixon prison had
as many as 41 attendees and the mentoring that occurred in Dixon stands as
a model for Watts as he envisions ideal prison ministry. He also has a
model ex-offender in his own congregation as Danny Franklin, who once was
in prison, now serves as a key leader at Gospel Way Covenant. Franklin has
directed many of his efforts to helping prisoners and their families - he
has regularly driven to prisons in Pontiac and Dwight, Illinois, bringing
family members (many of them children) to visit their mothers and fathers.
Prison Fellowship Ministries, based in Reston, Virginia, was founded by
Colson in 1976 after the aide to former President Richard Nixon spent time
in prison. Throughout more than 25 years of ministry, PFM has become the
world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims and
their families. It has 50,000 ministry volunteers and (through Prison
Fellowship International) has national chapters in 88 countries.
For more information on PFM, contact Tom Platt at the national office,
703-478-0100. The PFM web site is www.pfm.org.
Editor's note: Watts is not the only Covenanter who has made an impact
through prison ministry. In the coming weeks, this online Covenant news
report will highlight other individuals and church ministries in North
America and beyond.
Bill Watts Honored for Prison Ministries Service
CHICAGO, IL (May 14, 2003) - Bill Watts, pastor of Gospel Way Covenant Church on
Chicago's south side, was recently honored during an open house at Moody
Bible Institute to celebrate his retirement from Prison Fellowship
Ministries (PFM) in Chicago.
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