Equipped with the Tools to Build Behind Bars
In the Fall of 1987, Wadell Fisher in utter despair cried out to the Lord. Some poor life decisions, including drug addiction, had ultimately led to him making the most destructive one, taking a life.
鈥淚 screamed out 鈥楪od Help Me!鈥欌 said Fisher.
For the next 36 years, Fisher would realize the significance of those three words.
From addiction to destruction
Fisher grew up going to church, was an altar boy, went to a parochial school for a time before switching to public school. As a teenager he started experimenting with alcohol and marijuana. He鈥檇 go on to serve two terms in the military, then work for a major airline as a transportation agent. But during this time he started to use cocaine and became what he called a 鈥渇unctioning addict.鈥 This addiction would lead to more bad choices and eventually to where he was at in 1987.
The same day he took a life, he tried to take his own. Today Fisher is quick to warn that 鈥渢o harm someone with malice is to violate one鈥檚 own soul.鈥 Fisher ended up in the hospital for 10 days under the custody of the Detroit Police and then the Wayne County Sheriff鈥檚 Department.
And so began his journey.
Help along the way
鈥淭he first sheriff who came into my room happened to be a Christian,鈥 said Fisher. 鈥淭his man began to minister to me. Every morning for 10 days, he came into my room and ministered to me.鈥
And when he left, another sheriff took over.
鈥淭he Lord sent me another Christian sheriff and that man ministered to me. It was God鈥檚 tag team and this brought me out of my despair and that was like a point where God said 鈥渘o, you are going where I want you to go, you鈥檙e not going to die, I am with you.鈥
First stop 鈥 county jail.
鈥淲hen I went there, there was a volunteer, he was a preacher,鈥 said Fisher. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 tell you who he was today, but he called me for a visit and so I went 鈥 He basically told me the Gospel and at the end of that, he asked me to go back and read 2 Chronicles 33.鈥
Finding himself in God鈥檚 Word
After the preacher left. 鈥淚 immediately went back to my cell and began to read it,鈥 recalls Fisher. 鈥渁nd when I read, I saw me.鈥
It was the story of Manasseh, king of Judah.
鈥淢anasseh did those things that were an abomination to God and then listed those things,鈥 said Fisher of the story. 鈥淚 thought about all the times my family members, some friends who knew of my addiction said I need to change, [in essence] be like Manasseh, but I wasn鈥檛 hearing that [at the time]. So I ended up committing this crime and I found myself in jail, like Manasseh.鈥
鈥淎nd it [the Biblical story] went on to say, he humbled himself and prayed unto the Lord,鈥 said Fisher.
Humbling himself in the sight of the Lord
鈥淸Murder] is one crime you can鈥檛 give back, can鈥檛 pay restitution for, it doesn鈥檛 work, you can鈥檛 give a life back,鈥 said Fisher as he held back tears. 鈥淪o, I told God I give my life to Him.鈥
Fisher began to read the Bible and people started noticing.
鈥淲hile I was in county jail the men around me always saw me reading my Bible and praying, so some would come up to me and say 鈥榩ray for me, I鈥檓 going to court.鈥 I knew very little about the Bible, but what I did know I would share, and God kept bringing people into my life.
Fisher found that the more he was reading the Bible and sharing with those around him, the more God would give him to share.
鈥淚 believe this was part of the healing God was doing in me. Because after taking a life, I felt worthless, I felt actually like one of the most worthless human beings on Earth. But, I believe that God began to work as he does in broken people, and it went from there and so from that time in the county jail he began to bring people into my life.鈥
Fisher served as an assistant to the chaplain in the facilities he鈥檇 be transferred to throughout the state of Michigan over the next 30 years. He continued to pour into his fellow inmates, and he continued to have faithful Christian friends and volunteers pour into him and encourage him along the way.
Equipped to build and renew
Then, in 2021, while at Lapeer Correctional Facility, Fisher saw the opportunity to apply to be part of the seventh cohort of the 17c起草社区 Prison Initiative program. He saw this as another way God would equip him to help others better, to help him continue to go beyond and to help others go beyond just surviving or living for physical freedom someday.
鈥淯nfortunately, for some prisoners, freedom is the ultimate end game. 鈥業鈥檓 free, I鈥檓 out of prison,鈥欌 said Fisher. 鈥淏ut when you continue to read about Manasseh鈥檚 life, you see he became a positive asset within his community. He tore down the idols that he had built to false gods, and he built up the temple to the true God, and he taught others to鈥攖hat鈥檚 what 17c起草社区 is, it鈥檚 a gift that God has given me so I can be a construction worker in here and God-willing after my release from prison.鈥
Fisher, like Manasseh, is working as an agent of renewal.
鈥淐PI gives me the academic knowledge to go along with the spiritual knowledge of God. It鈥檚 helping me to better understand the gospel that I preach, that I share. It gives me a stronger foundation to be able to reach more people,鈥 said Fisher. 鈥淪ome people might not quite understand the Bible or might not be ready to receive it, but if you have a broader base for conveying the Word of God to people and if you understand it better, you can share it with more people effectively. I believe that鈥檚 what CPI is sharing with me. It enables me to answer questions that someone who is not a Christian might ask. But all of those things [CPI classes, concepts taught] are building materials, tools so you can help people better understand the gospel. Why? Because it helps me better understand the gospel.鈥
鈥淩egardless of where I am, I want to be a construction worker in the Kingdom of God, building on the foundation of Jesus Christ,鈥 said Fisher.
And it all started with an act of submission in the Fall of 1987.
鈥淭hat cry鈥擥od heard it, and he answered it.鈥
And that decision is now impacting countless others.