(Reuters) - U.S. evangelist Billy Graham, who counseled presidents and
preached to millions across the world from his native North Carolina to
communist North Korea during his 70 years on the pulpit, died on
Wednesday at the age of 99, a spokesman said.
Graham died at 8
a.m. EST at his home
in Montreat, North Carolina, according to Jeremy
Blume, a spokesman for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.
With
his steely features and piercing blue eyes, Graham was a powerful
figure when he preached in his prime, roaming the stage and hoisting a
Bible as he declared Jesus Christ to be the only solution to humanity's
problems.
According
to his ministry, he preached to more people than anyone else in
history, reaching hundreds of millions of people either in person or via
TV and satellite links.
Graham became the de facto White House
chaplain to several U.S. presidents, most famously Richard Nixon. He
also met with scores of world leaders and was the first noted evangelist
to take his message behind the Iron Curtain.
"He was probably the
dominant religious leader of his era," said William Martin, author of
"A Prophet With Honor: The Billy Graham Story." "No more than one or two
popes, perhaps one or two other people, came close to what he
achieved."
In a rare trip away from his home in his later years,
Graham had celebrated his 95th birthday on Nov. 7, 2013, at a hotel in
Asheville, North Carolina, where some 800 guests, including Republican
politician Sarah Palin, business magnates Rupert Murdoch and Donald
Trump and television hostess Kathie Lee Gifford paid tribute.
The
celebration featured a video of a sermon that his son Franklin said was
Graham's last message to the nation. Graham had been working for a year
on the video, which was aired on Fox News. In it, he said America was
"in great need of a spiritual awakening."
In his prime Graham had a
thunderous, quick-burst speaking style that earned him the nickname
"God's Machine Gun." Through his "Crusades for Christ," Graham sowed
fields of devotion across the American heartland that would become
fertile ground for the growth of the religious right's conservative
political movement.
His influence was fueled by an organization
that carefully planned his religious campaigns, putting on international
conferences and training seminars for evangelical leaders, Martin said.
Graham's
mastery of the media was ground-breaking. In addition to radio and
publishing, he used telephone lines, television and satellites to
deliver his message to homes, churches and theaters around the world.
Some
77 million saw him preach in person while nearly 215 million more
watched his crusades on television or through satellite link-ups, a
Graham spokeswoman said.
Graham started meeting with presidents
during the tenure of Harry Truman. He played golf with Gerald Ford,
skinny-dipped in the White House pool with Lyndon Johnson, vacationed
with George H.W. Bush and spent the night in the White House on Nixon's
first day in office.
George W. Bush gave Graham credit for helping
him rediscover his faith and in 2010, when it was difficult for Graham
to travel, Barack Obama made the trip to the preacher's log cabin home
in North Carolina's Blue Ridge Mountains.
Graham's ties to the
White House were mutually beneficial. His reputation was enhanced as
preacher to the presidents, while the politicians boosted their standing
with religiously inclined voters.
"Their personal lives - some of
them - were difficult," Graham, a registered Democrat, told Time
magazine in 2007 of his political acquaintances. "But I loved them all. I
admired them all. I knew that they had burdens beyond anything I could
ever know or understand."
Graham's reputation took a hit because
of Nixon after the release of 1972 White House tapes in which the two
were heard making anti-Semitic comments. Graham later said he did not
remember the conversation and apologized.
In the early half of his
career, Graham often spoke his mind on social and political issues of
the day, including his strong anti-communist sentiments. He dismissed
Vietnam War protesters as attention-seekers and, while he eventually
refused to hold segregated revival meetings, he did not take an active
role in the 1960s civil rights movement.
But Graham's politics
were not as overt as those of some religious leaders who came after him,
such as Pat Robertson, who ran for president in 1988, and Jerry
Falwell, co-founder of the Moral Majority, an organization whose purpose
was to promote Christian-oriented politics.
As he grew older,
Graham said he felt he had become too involved in some issues and
shifted to a middle-of-the-road position in order to reach more people.
He did, however, dive into the gay marriage issue in 2012 when he came
out in support of a state amendment to ban same-sex marriages in North
Carolina. He also met with Republican Mitt Romney in October 2012 and
told him he supported Romney's run for the presidency.
FROM FARM TO PULPIT
William
Franklin Graham was born on Nov. 7, 1918, into a Presbyterian family
and was known as Billy Frank while growing up on a farm near Charlotte,
North Carolina. As a teenager, he said he was mostly preoccupied with
baseball and girls until he was moved by God after hearing a fiery
revivalist in Charlotte.
After attending Bob Jones College, Graham
ended up at a Bible school in Florida, where he would preach at his
first revival, and was ordained in 1939 by a church in the Southern
Baptist Convention. He received a scholarship to Wheaton College near
Chicago, where he met Ruth Bell, whose parents were missionaries in
China. They married in 1943.
Rather than work from a home church,
Graham went on the road, preaching in tents and building a following.
His breakthrough came with a 1949 Los Angeles tent crusade that was
scheduled for three weeks but extended to eight because of the overflow
crowds he attracted.
The success of the Los Angeles campaign and
the fame it brought Graham was attributed to media magnate William
Randolph Hearst, who had liked Graham's style and anti-communist stance
so much that he ordered his newspapers to give Graham a boost.
Graham
eventually outgrew tent revivals and would preach at some of the most
famous venues in the world, such as Yankee Stadium and Madison Square
Garden in New York and London's Wembley Stadium. He delivered sermons
around the globe, including in remote African villages, China, North
Korea, the Soviet Union, East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
Liberals
accused him of giving credibility to abusive governments while
fundamentalist Christians criticized him for going to godless countries
and promoting peaceful relations with them. Graham said he simply saw
the trips as apolitical opportunities to win souls for Christ.
Graham
concluded his career of religious campaigns in June 2005 in New York
with a three-day stand that attracted more than 230,000 people, his
organization said. He turned over his evangelical association to his son
Franklin. Graham's other four children were also evangelists.
REPUTATION
Graham
managed to maintain his public integrity even as other TV star
evangelists such as Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart were hit in the 1980s
by financial and sex scandals. To keep his reputation pristine, Graham
had a policy of never being alone with any woman other than Ruth.
Graham's
closest presidential relationship was with Nixon, who offered him any
government job he wanted - including ambassador to Israel. It turned out
to be a painful relationship for Graham, who said Nixon and his circle
misled him on the Watergate scandal.
Nixon aide H.R. Haldeman
first mentioned Graham's anti-Semitic remarks in a 1994 book, which
Graham strongly denied. But when audio tapes from the Nixon White House
were released in 2002, Graham could be heard referring to Jews as
pornographers and agreeing with Nixon that the U.S. media was dominated
by liberal Jews and could send the United States "down the drain."
Graham,
who had a long history of supporting Israel, apologized again after the
tapes' release and said he had no recollection of the conversation.
"If
it wasn't on tape, I would not have believed it," Graham told Newsweek.
"I guess I was trying to please. I felt so badly about myself - I
couldn't believe it. I went to a meeting with Jewish leaders and I told
them I would crawl to them to ask their forgiveness."
The author
of more than two dozen books with titles such as "How to Be Born Again,"
Graham also ran the weekly "Hour of Decision" radio program broadcast
around the world on Sundays for more than 50 years.
Graham helped
bring religion into the television age. He first put together a
television show, which was eventually syndicated, in 1951 and began live
broadcasts of his revival meetings in 1957 from New York's Madison
Square Garden.
In a 2011 Fox News interview, Graham was asked what he would do differently in his career.
"I
would study more. I would pray more, travel less, take less speaking
engagements," he said. "I took too many of them in too many places
around the world. If I had it to do over again I'd spend more time in
meditation and prayer and just telling the Lord how much I love him."
In
addition to suffering with Parkinson's disease for many years, Graham's
health problems in his later years included a broken hip, a broken
pelvis, prostate cancer and installation of a shunt in his brain to
control excess fluid. He was hospitalized in 2011, 2012 and 2013 for
respiratory problems.
Graham and his wife, Ruth, who died June 14, 2007, had two sons and three daughters.
(Reporting by Ed Stoddard; Writing by Bill Trott; Editing by Frances Kerry and Diane Craft)
Source : MSN
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