It took Zach Williams traveling to Europe, riding in a van, and hearing Big Daddy Weave to realize things needed to change. Williams reflected during a recent appearance on CBN’s “Faith vs. Culture,” where he talked about his forthcoming memoir, “Rescue Story: Faith, Freedom, and Finding My Way Home,” releasing Feb. 27, “It’s a pretty incredible story, what God’s done in my life, throughout my life.”
Williams developed an affinity for drugs in high school, addictive behaviors he carried into his twenties when he joined a rock band, stepping into a world of decadence and indulgence. He said, “We started traveling and touring, which that just led me down an even darker path. I thought in order to play music, I needed to live a certain lifestyle. If I was gonna be in a rock band, that meant you did drugs, and you use alcohol on a daily basis, and you live this reckless lifestyle.”
For more than 10 years, Williams was all in, trapped in a downward spiral. He admitted, “I went pretty hard. I didn’t think about the next day; I just lived for the moment. And I carried it into a marriage; I carried it into being a father and a husband. In the summer of 2012, as he was traveling to Europe with his band, Williams said he came to the realization the way he was living was not sustainable. He was raised in the church and knew — unless something changed — he was on a path that would cost him everything, including his wife and children.
Sick and tired of being sick and tired, Williams asked God to prove Himself to him. He said, “I was riding in a van one day, and the guy driving the bus was scanning radio stations and, out of nowhere, I hear this song called ‘Redeemed‘ by Big Daddy Weave come across the radio and, man, that song just hit me; it struck a chord. I listened to the lyrics when I got to the hotel room. I called my wife, and I said, ‘Hey, I’m done. I’m out of here,’ and she couldn’t believe it. But I came home from that tour and quit my band, and I canceled all my shows.”
Within a year, Williams and his family were part of a church community, and he had been asked to help launch a new campus for his church and work there as a worship leader. That’s when he got the opportunity to start writing Christian music in Nashville. Now, as a believer and recording artist whose songs testify to how the Lord has redeemed him, Williams said his life “is so much better.” He explained, “There’s a conviction in my life that I didn’t have before. So for me, I love sharing those stories with the world. I love writing songs from places in my life where I’ve been hurt, or I’ve experienced joy. I think, for me, [sharing my story] is a good thing.”
Growing up, the “Old Church Choir” singer said his parents prayed Jeremiah 29:11 over him, and now, he said, he’s seeing the fruit of that “prophetic” prayer from his mom and dad. It wasn’t until years later — after Williams abandoned his childhood faith, fell into drug addiction, and ran from his Christian roots all before returning to the Lord — that the recording artist learned his parents were impressed years earlier by the Holy Spirit when a pastor who prayed over him as a child told Williams’ parents their son would be “a voice for my generation.”