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<text id=93TT0526>
<link 93TO0115>
<title>
Nov. 15, 1993: God's Billy Pulpit
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER, Page 70
God's Billy Pulpit
</hdr>
<body>
<p>After a lifetime of reshaping Protestantism, Billy Graham contemplates
his final years and a legacy that has no sure successor
</p>
<p>By NANCY GIBBS and RICHARD N. OSTLING/MONTREAT
</p>
<p> What is it in this man, in his urgent voice and eager eyes,
in the message and the messenger, that overwhelms even those
who are predisposed to distrust him? Long ago, Billy Graham
gave up the shiny suits and technicolor ties of the brash young
evangelist; the silver mane is thinner now, the step may falter
a bit, he no longer prowls the stage like a lynx. In his preaching
as well, the temperatures of hellfire have been reduced, the
volume turned down. Graham knows he needs to save his strength:
he is fighting Parkinson's disease, a progressive nervous disorder
that has already made it impossible for him to drive or write
by hand. But while he has learned to number his days, Graham
intends to make the most of them: "The New Testament says nothing
of Apostles who retired and took it easy."
</p>
<p> Numbers, poets complain, are soulless things, the anonymous
rungs of infinity. But it is hard to talk about Billy Graham,
the great reaper of souls, without talking about numbers. This
is the man who has preached in person to more people than any
human being who has ever lived. What began in country churches
and trailer parks and circus tents moved through cathedrals
and stadiums and the world's vast public squares, where he has
called upon more than 100,000,000 people to "accept Jesus Christ
as your personal Saviour."
</p>
<p> There may have been cleverer preachers and wiser ones, those
whose messages seemed safe, logic sound. But never in history
has a preacher moved so many people to act on the "invitation,"
that mysterious spiritual transaction that concludes every revival
meeting. Over the years, 2,874,082 men and women have stepped
forward, according to his staff's careful count. In Moscow a
year ago, a fourth of his 155,500 listeners answered the call.
"I don't know why God has allowed me to have this," Graham says.
"I'll have to ask him when I get to heaven."
</p>
<p> Billy Graham turned 75 this week, an occasion for some reckoning
of a life and career full of blessings and contradictions. Everyone
has a preferred description. George Bush called him "America's
pastor." Harry Truman called him a "counterfeit" and publicity
seeker. Pat Boone considers him "the greatest person since Jesus."
Fundamentalist leader Bob Jones III says Graham "has done more
harm to the cause of Christ than any other living man." Biographer
William Martin calls him "an icon not just of American Christianity
but of America itself."
</p>
<p> Weathering both applause and derision, Graham has through the
years become America's perennial deus ex machina, perpetually
in motion, sweeping in to lift up spirits befuddled by modernity.
When Presidents need to pray, it is Graham whom they call; he
ministered to Dwight Eisenhower in the White House, spent the
night with the Bushes on the eve of the Gulf War. Richard Nixon
offered him the ambassadorship to Israel at a meeting with Golda
Meir. "I said the Mideast would blow up if I went over there,"
Graham recalls. "Golda then reached under the table and squeezed
my hand. She was greatly relieved." When Billy arrived for a
crusade in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1989, Hillary Rodham Clinton
invited him to lunch. "I don't eat with beautiful women alone,"
Billy told her, so they met in a hotel dining room and talked
for a couple of hours.
</p>
<p> Moral authorities have come and gone, but Graham has endured,
his honor intact despite his proximity to the shattering temptations
of power. From the start, Graham presented to skeptics and believers
alike a raucous, muscular Christianity, full of fire and free
of doubt. Through it all, his message has been essentially the
same. Each person is sinful before God, a predicament that can
turn to redemption through faith in Jesus Christ and his death
on the Cross. And Graham is the master marketer of that faith.
</p>
<p> The act of preaching it, however, has always taken its toll,
especially these days. "There have been times...I've come
down from the platform absolutely exhausted," he says. "I feel
like I've been wrestling with the devil, who has been doing
everything in his power to keep those people from getting a
clear message of the Gospel." At the moment he gives the invitation,
he explains, "some sort of physical energy goes out of me and
I feel terribly weak. I'm depleted." After a crusade he returns
to relax with his wife Ruth in the rambling log home that she
designed years ago as their sanctuary. It sits up in the Blue
Ridge Mountains above Montreat, North Carolina, a retreat from
the demands that press upon him continually.
</p>
<p> The need to rest, of course, falls prey to the call to minister.
In a 12-day stretch last June, he visited John Connally in a
Texas hospital, escaped to a quiet hotel in southern France
to find the time and space to work on his memoirs, immediately
returned to Texas to preach at Connally's funeral, flew back
to France, then to California to conduct Pat Nixon's funeral,
then returned to France once again, too tired to get much work
done. "I found that this Parkinson's does slow you down," he
says, "whether you want to slow down or not." Mayo Clinic doctors
tell him he can stand and preach for, at most, five more years.
</p>
<p> That does not leave him much time. Graham's legacy will be measured
not only in the lives he has changed but in the cause he has
championed. If modern evangelicalism is in many ways Graham's
passionate creation, it could suffer grievously once he is gone.
A war over either the social agenda of the religious right or
the theological assertions of the Fundamentalists could rend
the movement that he held together almost against its fractious
nature.
</p>
<p> There are those who say he will never retire, including Graham
himself. Yet back in 1952, three years after he had arrived
as a national spiritual leader at the age of 30, he was so exhausted
that he wasn't sure he could continue much longer. "I've always
thought my life would be a short one," he told a group of churchmen
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. "I don't think my ministry will
be long. I think God allowed me to come for a moment and it
will be over soon."
</p>
<p> Four decades later, it's not over yet. William Franklin Graham
Jr. grew up on a North Carolina dairy farm, the son of pious
parents who believed in spankings and Bible readings and persistent
instruction in clean living. In 1933, on the day Prohibition
was repealed, his father made Billy and his sister Catherine
drink beer until they vomited, an early exercise in aversion
therapy that lasted a lifetime.
</p>
<p> Young Billy Frank was a big reader but a mediocre student who
dreamed of becoming a big-league baseball player. But destiny
had other plans for him, as Martin recounts in his exhaustively
researched, revelatory biography A Prophet with Honor (Morrow).
One day in 1934, 30 or so of the local farmers, squeezed by
the Depression and despairing of their future, gathered at the
Graham farm for a day of prayer. When Billy arrived home after
school and saw the crowd in the grove, he explained to a friend,
"Oh, I guess they are just some fanatics who talked Dad into
letting them use the place." Yet it was only a few months later
that Billy had his own conversion experience. "I didn't have
any tears, I didn't have any emotion, I didn't hear any thunder,
there was no lightning," he says. "But right there, I made my
decision for Christ. It was as simple as that, and as conclusive."
</p>
<p> It didn't look exactly simple at first: he was turned down for
membership in a church youth group on the grounds that he was
"just too worldly." After graduation he enrolled at Bob Jones
College, a Bible boot camp in Tennessee where hand holding was
forbidden, and dating was limited to chaperoned chats in a public
parlor. Between the rules and the course work, Graham soon found
himself on the brink of expulsion and thought about transferring.
The legendary Jones warned him about throwing his life away:
"At best, all you could amount to would be a poor country Baptist
preacher somewhere out in the sticks." Then he tempted him.
"You have a voice that pulls," he told the young man. "God can
use that voice of yours. He can use it mightily."
</p>
<p> Such prophecy notwithstanding, Graham fled south to the Florida
Bible Institute, where he could play golf and go canoeing and
court a pretty classmate named Emily Cavanaugh. Her decision
to break off their engagement hit Billy hard. "She wanted to
marry a man who was going to amount to something," Graham's
brother Melvin told Martin. The disappointment planted in Graham
a determination to prove her wrong; it ripened alongside his
commitment to discerning, and obeying, God's will. He would
practice sermons aloud in old sheds or in a canoe in the middle
of a lake. He ate a quarter-pound of butter a day to try to
spread some bulk across his lanky frame, and he worked on his
gestures and facial expressions as he traveled to tiny churches
or declaimed outside saloons frequented by drunkards and prostitutes,
sharing the Gospel.
</p>
<p> Even early on, friends sensed in him an ability to move people
that owed less to intellect than to the tug of sincerity. His
sermons in those days were highly colorful and factually creative,
to a point that would haunt him in later years. Heaven, he used
to explain, measured 1,600 sq. mi.: "We are going to sit around
the fireplace and have parties, and the angels will wait on
us, and we'll drive down the golden streets in a yellow Cadillac
convertible." Decades later, the vision has matured. "I think
heaven is going to be a place beyond anything we can imagine,
or anyone in Hollywood or on Broadway can imagine," he says
now. "There is a passage in Revelation that says we will serve
God in heaven. We're not going to have somebody fan us or sit
around on a beach somewhere."
</p>
<p> The chance to broaden his education came in 1940, when he won
a scholarship to Wheaton College in Illinois, then as now the
leading undergraduate institution of Evangelicalism. There he
met Ruth Bell, the daughter of missionaries to China who herself
wanted to go and evangelize in Tibet. Graham talked her out
of it, arguing that she knew God wanted them to marry, so "I'll
lead and you do the following."
</p>
<p> For his part, Billy says Ruth "was the one who had the greatest
influence in urging me to be an evangelist."
</p>
<p> Ruth: "I thought God called you."
</p>
<p> Billy: "Well, he told me through you too."
</p>
<p> After Wheaton and a brief stint in a small church, Graham joined
Youth for Christ International, a "para-church" group of vigorous
young evangelists who would travel the country, and soon the
world, working with churches to stage revival meetings to ever
larger crowds. In the immediate postwar years, there seemed
to be a hunger for the virile, vibrant call to faith that Graham
and his friends represented. On and on they came, until as many
as a million kids a week were attending such revival meetings
around the country. The YFC rallies included blaring bands,
quiz shows, horse acts, emcees with bow ties that lit up. As
for Graham, so loud and fast was his delivery that journalists
called him "God's Machine Gun." "Christian vaudeville," sniffed
skeptics.
</p>
<p> As his fame spread, first in evangelical circles and later nationally
and internationally, Graham and his friends understood the importance
of avoiding the hazards that, then and later, would disgrace
other freelance preachers. One day in 1948, Graham gathered
his tiny retinue in a Modesto, California, hotel room to inoculate
them against temptation. To prevent sexual rumors, each agreed
never again to be alone with a woman other than his wife. The
"Modesto Manifesto" also pledged honest statistical reports
and open finances. The money setup was further cleansed in 1950
after the Atlanta Constitution ran a photo of Graham next to
a picture of ushers with sackfuls of cash.
</p>
<p> "I said never again," recalls Graham, who put everyone on straight
salary and later set up a board dominated by outsiders. (Graham
has, however, ministered to his wayward fellow preachers; after
Jim Bakker's fall from grace, he quietly visited the imprisoned
televangelist in Minnesota for a prayer session.) For years
Graham's annual salary was $69,150 plus a $23,050 housing allowance,
but last April his board raised that to $101,250 plus $33,750.
He was given homes in Florida and California but donated them
to Christian causes.
</p>
<p> Graham always appreciated the importance both of appearances
and of self-promotion. Along the way he won some unlikely backers,
among the most useful William Randolph Hearst. The old reprobate
publisher was so taken with the evangelist's patriotism and
call for spiritual renewal that he telegraphed his editors around
the country: "Puff Graham." TIME for its part declared in 1949
that no one since Billy Sunday had wielded "the revival sickle"
as successfully as this "blond, trumpet-lunged North Carolinian."
</p>
<p> Even as Graham's preaching grew more confident, his concern
about his intellectual preparation lingered. But when his friend
and fellow YFC revivalist Charles Templeton urged him to come
to Princeton Theological Seminary and lay a deeper academic
foundation for his preaching, Graham balked. When they met on
their travels, they fell into deep debates, with Templeton now
armed with philosophy, anthropology and a willingness to read
the Bible as metaphor. Graham found he couldn't muster the logical
responses.
</p>
<p> As Martin tells it, this led to a spiritual and intellectual
turning point. "Chuck, look, I haven't a good enough mind to
settle these questions," Graham finally declared. "The finest
minds in the world have looked and come down on both sides."
Graham concluded that "I don't have the time, the inclination
or the set of mind to pursue them. I found that if I say `The
Bible says' and `God says,' I get results. I have decided I'm
not going to wrestle with these questions any longer."
</p>
<p> Templeton charged him with committing intellectual suicide.
But Graham came to believe doubt was a dangerous distraction
from his calling. He decided the Bible was the one true Word
in its entirety and never wavered. Looking back today, Graham
says, "I had one great failure, and that was intellectual. I
should have gone on to school. But I would talk to people about
that, and they'd say, Oh no, go on with what you're doing, and
let others do that. I do regret I didn't do enough reading,
enough study, both formal and informal."
</p>
<p> That does not mean he makes any apologies for his belief in
the Bible as the literal Word of God, a conviction that confounds
his critics. "I would never seek to solve the ethical problems
of the 20th century by quoting a passage of Holy Scripture,
and I read the Bible every day," says liberal Episcopal Bishop
John Spong of Newark, New Jersey, who used to deliver newspapers
to the Graham farm as a boy in North Carolina. "I wouldn't invest
a book that was written between 1000 B.C. and A.D. 150 with
that kind of moral authority." Graham, for his part, wouldn't
think of doing otherwise.
</p>
<p> His Biblical purity, however, did not protect him from conservative
attacks. Over the years, strict Fundamentalists came to see
Graham as a traitor for his willingness to work with everyone--Catholics, Anglicans, even liberal modernists--to bring
the unchurched into the tent. "Fundamentalist is a grand and
wonderful word," Graham says now, "but it got off track and
into so many extreme positions." Their hostility pained him
far more than the sneers of liberals. "I felt," Graham admits,
"like my own brothers had turned against me."
</p>
<p> If Graham's power as a spiritual leader came from authenticity
and fervent conviction, it did not mean he was incapable of
change. In the 1950s Graham's warnings about a diabolically
inspired Soviet empire helped inspire his frightened audience
to seek solace and protection in faith. By the 1980s he was
joining the peace movement. Graham was pilloried in 1982 for
speaking to a staged "peace" conference in the Soviet Union
and resolutely downplaying religious repression. His supporters
argued that in private he lobbied the Kremlin on behalf of Jewish
and Christian prisoners. Ruth Graham, herself fervently anticommunist,
opposed her husband's strategy, but it succeeded in gaining
him access to preach in Eastern Europe. She now says, "Jesus
said go into all the world and preach the Gospel, not just the
capitalist world. I mean, I was dead wrong."
</p>
<p> Back at home Graham was always an interested, although cautious,
student of politics. In public he was careful to keep his role
spiritual: it took an act of Congress in 1952 for Graham to
be allowed to hold the first religious service on the Capitol
steps. But in private he pestered Truman about the need to turn
back communism in Korea and encouraged Eisenhower to send troops
to Little Rock to enforce school desegregation. According to
Martin, so involved was he in counseling his friend Richard
Nixon that the defeated candidate would write in 1960, "I have
often told friends that when you went into the ministry, politics
lost one of its potentially greatest practitioners."
</p>
<p> In recent years, there has come a curious reversal. Fundamentalist
leaders who once shunned the political realm began to move forcefully
into it, bearing a moral agenda for family values and school
prayer, against abortion and gay rights. And Graham, in a sense,
returned to the pure power of the pulpit, preaching as forcefully
as ever of the need for moral renewal but without allying himself
with the political activism of the religious right. "I can identify
with them on theology, probably, in many areas," he says, "but
in the political emphases they have, I don't, because I don't
think Jesus or the Apostles took sides in the political arenas
of their day." He opposes abortion except in cases involving
rape, incest or danger to the mother's life, but he is critical
of Operation Rescue. "I think they have gone much too far, and
their cause has been hurt. The tactics ought to be prayer and
discussion."
</p>
<p> Critics on the left are just as likely as those on the right
to demand that he take a public stand. "I don't think you can
save souls without working for justice," says Professor James
Cone of Union Theological Seminary in New York City. "I hear
Billy Graham as interested in saving souls of the poor but not
interested in changing the conditions that create the poverty."
</p>
<p> But social commentary has never been the core of Graham's mission.
His ministry rests on the notion that if individuals are brought
to God and their lives transformed, they in turn will go out
and transform society. That priority, and even more his zeal
for social orderliness, often kept Graham on the sidelines,
particularly during the civil rights movement. Though he insisted
on racially integrated seating at his revival meetings, Graham
says Martin Luther King Jr. himself advised in a lengthy talk
that "if you go to the streets, your people will desert you,
and you won't have the opportunity to have these integrated
crusades." But then and ever since, he has been criticized for
his role. "He should have been more deeply involved earlier
on," argues Dean Joseph Hough Jr. of Vanderbilt University's
Divinity School. "Had he been, he could have had quite an impact."
</p>
<p> To this day, the spotlight on Graham is so bright that spiritual
gestures are taken as political statements. "I was distraught
and offended when he spent the night in the White House before
Bush launched Desert Storm," says Alan Neely, a professor at
Princeton Theological Seminary. "I saw that as Graham giving
his sanction for what was about to take place. I don't think
that's the role of the Christian minister."
</p>
<p> His congregation of past Presidents sees it rather differently.
"Billy came to the White House to give me the kind of reassurance
that was important in decisions and challenges at home and abroad,"
says Gerald Ford. "Whenever you were with Billy, you had a special
feeling that he was there to give you help and guidance in meeting
your problems."
</p>
<p> Graham is intent on saving time for his family, time he rarely
had for them when he was traveling at least half the year. Each
day becomes precious. "It doesn't make me feel any different,
turning 75, than when I turned 45," he muses. "But when I see
pictures of my 19 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren,
I know some time has passed. I let days like that slip by and
try to forget it. I'm not looking backward. I'm looking to the
future."
</p>
<p> The ceaseless demands leave him with hard decisions to make.
He wants to preach redemption to as many people as possible
while he still can: he is already committed to Atlanta, Cleveland,
Ohio and Tokyo for next year. Then comes a career climax, a
1995 revival meeting that will span the entire globe at once.
In this technological Pentecost, sermons will be translated
into dozens of languages and transmitted by satellite TV to
about 130 nations--possibly including mainland China.
</p>
<p> And yet achievements and the numbers, mighty as they are, mean
less and less now. Sitting in Montreat, Graham muses about America's
spiritual life. "It seems we've gotten caught up in numbers.
We have so many polls that give different figures about how
many go to church and synagogue, how many are saved and unsaved.
When I ask people to come forward and a thousand people respond,
I know in my heart they're not all converted." He mentions Bibles.
Everyone used to bring them to his revival meetings before.
Now only a small percentage do. It is as if they could not find
copies.
</p>
<p> Graham is determined to nurture his legacy, not only the people
he has touched but the movement he has led. Evangelical Protestantism
has triumphed over other, sugarcoated brands, not least because
his sincerity and his probity protected his movement from the
stain spread by the moral and financial disasters of other high-wattage
clerics. New studies show that Evangelical church bodies are
the largest segment in American religion in active membership,
and the most committed.
</p>
<p> While Graham is confident that Evangelicalism is firmly embedded
in the "mainline" churches, he has once again conquered the
individuals, not the institutions. So he is counting on individuals
to take up where he will one day leave off, sharing the good
news. He has a list in his computer of 43,000 evangelists around
the world, whom he visits when he travels or invites to training
meetings. If he can inspire one preacher, who goes home and
converts his family and neighbors, who in turn breathe new life
into a gasping church, which shines new light on a lost city...who knows how far it may go?
</p>
<p> But, Billy is asked, is he not the last of the big-time evangelists?
"After D.L. Moody was finished, they said the same thing," the
preacher says, "and after Billy Sunday they said the same thing,
and after I'm finished they'll say the same thing. But God will
raise up different ones who will do it far better than me."
If so, that will truly be a miracle.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>