Billy Graham
William Franklin Graham Jr. (November 7, 1918 – February 21, 2018), known as Billy Graham, was an American Christian evangelist and ordained Southern Baptist minister whose large-scale crusades proclaimed the gospel of Jesus Christ to an estimated 215 million people in live audiences across more than 185 countries.[1][2][3]
Graham founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association in 1950 to organize his evangelistic events and media efforts, including the long-running radio program Hour of Decision, and co-founded the influential magazine Christianity Today in 1956, helping to shape modern evangelicalism through innovative use of radio, television, films, and eventually the internet.[3][2]
Renowned as a counselor to U.S. presidents from Harry Truman to Barack Obama—meeting with every chief executive in that span—he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1983, yet his legacy includes controversy from 1972 Oval Office tapes with Richard Nixon, where he privately expressed anti-Semitic views about Jewish influence in media, remarks that surfaced publicly in 2002 and prompted his apology and plea for forgiveness from the Jewish community, highlighting a tension between his public moral authority and occasional private lapses in judgment.[4][5][3][6][7]
Early Life and Education
Childhood and Family Background
William Franklin Graham Jr. was born on November 7, 1918, on a dairy farm near Charlotte, North Carolina, to William Franklin Graham Sr., a dairy farmer, and Morrow Coffey Graham.[3][8] As the eldest of four children, including two younger sisters and a younger brother, Graham grew up in a Scots-Irish Presbyterian family that attended the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church.[8][9] The Graham family operated a 200-acre farm with approximately 70 dairy cows during the Great Depression, where young Billy contributed to daily chores such as milking and fieldwork, instilling values of hard work and self-reliance.[10][3] His father, who had limited formal education but expanded the dairy operation into one of Charlotte's largest, emphasized practical labor over academics in the household.[11] Both of Graham's grandfathers had served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, reflecting the family's Southern roots just 53 years before his birth.[9] The farm's location near the intersection of Woodlawn and Park Roads exposed Graham to rural life amid emerging suburban development in Mecklenburg County.[12]Religious Conversion and Early Influences
Graham was raised in a devout Presbyterian family on a dairy farm near Charlotte, North Carolina, where daily Bible reading and kneeling in prayer after supper were routine practices that instilled early exposure to Christian scripture and devotion.[13] His parents, William Franklin Graham Sr. and Morrow Coffey Graham, attended the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, emphasizing a Calvinist-influenced faith that shaped the household's moral and spiritual environment.[14] Despite this upbringing, Graham exhibited youthful skepticism toward organized religion, occasionally skipping church and questioning doctrinal rigidity, though he remained nominally connected to Presbyterianism through infant baptism.[15] In 1934, at age 16, Graham's path shifted dramatically during a series of revival meetings led by itinerant evangelist Mordecai Ham in Charlotte, where Ham preached against sin and called for personal repentance.[16] The attendance stemmed from a chain of peer influences: Graham's friends, initially plotting to disrupt Ham's services due to the preacher's confrontational style targeting youth vices like gambling and drinking, invited Graham along out of curiosity, leading him to hear messages that convicted him of his need for salvation.[17] On November 1, 1934, during one such meeting at the Charlotte fairgrounds, Graham responded to the altar call, walking forward to publicly commit his life to Christ, an event he later described in his autobiography as a pivotal, unemotional yet transformative surrender without immediate ecstatic feelings but with lasting assurance of forgiveness.[16][18] Post-conversion, Graham sought deeper immersion in evangelical circles, transitioning from Presbyterian roots toward Baptist influences, including adult believer's baptism by immersion under the guidance of Florida Bible Institute associates.[19] Ham's fundamentalist emphasis on biblical inerrancy and personal evangelism became a foundational model, reinforcing Graham's rejection of liberal theology and commitment to scriptural authority, while early mentors like Bible school peers encouraged his initial preaching attempts at local gatherings. This period marked the onset of his shift from farm life to itinerant ministry aspirations, driven by a conviction of divine calling amid the broader fundamentalist-modernist controversies of the era.[20]Formal Education and Initial Ministry Training
Graham briefly attended Bob Jones College in Cleveland, Tennessee, for one semester in the fall of 1936 following his high school graduation, but departed after accumulating demerits and receiving counsel from the administration that he was not suited for such rigorous fundamentalist training.[21] [22] In 1937, he transferred to Florida Bible Institute (now Trinity College of Florida) in Temple Terrace, Florida, where he pursued biblical studies and practical ministry preparation, including public speaking and evangelism techniques.[23] [24] There, Graham experienced a deepened sense of calling to preach, delivering his first sermon in 1937 at a small church in Palatka, Florida, which lasted eight minutes and received mixed feedback from congregants.[25] He graduated from the institute in 1940 with a diploma in theology.[3] [2] During his time at Florida Bible Institute, Graham was ordained to the Southern Baptist ministry on April 16, 1939, by the Peniel Baptist Church in Palatka, Florida, following endorsement from local pastors who observed his early preaching efforts at the Tampa Gospel Tabernacle and other venues.[26] [24] This ordination marked the formal start of his ministerial training, emphasizing scriptural exposition and personal evangelism under the guidance of institute faculty such as John Minder, who mentored him in pulpit delivery.[24] Following his graduation, Graham enrolled at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois, in 1940, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in anthropology in 1943, supplementing his biblical foundation with broader liberal arts and intercultural studies to prepare for potential missionary work.[23] [3] At Wheaton, an evangelical institution affiliated with the Conservative Baptist movement, he continued ministry training through campus preaching, involvement in the Student Foreign Missions Fellowship, and rigorous coursework in Bible, theology, and homiletics, which honed his expository style and commitment to inerrancy.[23] It was also at Wheaton that he met Ruth Bell, whom he married in 1943, providing personal stability amid his vocational development.[23]Rise to National Prominence
Youth for Christ Involvement
In 1945, following a period of recovery from health issues in Florida, Billy Graham joined Youth for Christ (YFC), a newly formed nondenominational organization founded by Torrey Johnson to evangelize teenagers and military personnel in the post-World War II era through high-energy Saturday night rallies featuring music, testimonies, and preaching.[27][3] Graham became YFC's first full-time evangelist and field representative, tasked with organizing and delivering sermons at events across the United States.[28][29] Graham's role involved extensive travel, preaching at rallies that drew thousands of young attendees and emphasized personal conversion to Christianity amid cultural shifts like the rise of youth culture and secular influences.[30] In this capacity, he developed key elements of his evangelistic style, including direct calls to faith and collaboration with musicians and local churches, while helping expand YFC's reach internationally, including early efforts in Europe.[31] His involvement lasted until 1947, when he accepted the presidency of Northwestern Bible College (later Northwestern College), though YFC's structure and focus on youth outreach laid foundational strategies for his subsequent independent crusades.[28]Early Radio and Tent Revivals
In late 1943, while pastoring the Village Church in Western Springs, Illinois, Billy Graham accepted an invitation from Torrey Johnson to assume hosting duties for the radio program Songs in the Night on Chicago's WCFL station.[30] The 45-minute weekly broadcast, which debuted under Graham's direction on January 2, 1944, combined gospel hymns sung by George Beverly Shea with Graham's brief evangelistic sermons focused on biblical salvation and moral repentance.[32] [33] This local outlet marked Graham's initial foray into electronic media evangelism, supplementing his pulpit ministry and exposing his preaching style—characterized by direct scriptural exposition and calls to personal conversion—to urban audiences amid post-World War II spiritual interest.[34] Transitioning to full-time itinerant evangelism after resigning his pastorate in 1945, Graham organized early campaigns that frequently employed large tents to host outdoor gatherings, adapting the traditional revival format to accommodate growing crowds in open-air settings.[35] These tent meetings, often spanning multiple weeks, featured Graham's sermons on sin, redemption, and eternal judgment, accompanied by choir music and counseling for responders.[36] His first documented city-wide effort occurred in Grand Rapids, Michigan, from September 13 to 21, 1947, drawing approximately 6,000 attendees per session in the Civic Auditorium, though subsequent regional revivals in the Southeast relied on tents erected in parking lots or fields to seat thousands.[37] A follow-up campaign in Charlotte, North Carolina, from November 9 to 23, 1947, under a capacious tent, saw over 200 decisions for Christ nightly, underscoring the logistical challenges and successes of tent-based outreach, including weather-dependent attendance and cooperative church sponsorships.[38] These efforts honed Graham's approach to mass evangelism, emphasizing advance publicity, interdenominational unity, and verifiable commitments tracked through follow-up cards, while navigating financial strains covered by freewill offerings that occasionally fell short.[39] By blending radio's reach with the visceral immediacy of tent assemblies, Graham built momentum toward larger stadium events, reporting thousands of professions of faith across these nascent ventures.[40]Breakthrough Crusades in the Late 1940s
Graham's first city-wide evangelistic crusade occurred in Grand Rapids, Michigan, from September 13 to 21, 1947, at the Civic Auditorium, attracting approximately 6,000 attendees over the week-long event.[41] This campaign, organized under the auspices of local churches, featured nightly meetings where Graham preached on themes of personal salvation and repentance, establishing a template for future large-scale gatherings with choir music, prayer, and follow-up counseling for converts.[42] The modest success, including reported conversions, provided early validation for Graham's approach amid postwar spiritual interest in the Midwest.[43] In 1948, Graham conducted additional crusades that honed his organizational methods, such as the two-week event in Modesto, California, which drew an estimated 28,000 participants and emphasized cooperative efforts among Protestant denominations.[44] Similarly, the Augusta, Georgia, crusade that year further demonstrated his growing regional draw, though attendance remained on a smaller scale compared to later national efforts.[45] These mid-decade campaigns benefited from Graham's prior Youth for Christ experience, focusing on youth engagement and anti-communist undertones resonant with Cold War anxieties, yet they did not yet yield widespread media attention.[46] The pivotal breakthrough arrived with the Greater Los Angeles Crusade, commencing on September 25, 1949, under a 6,000-seat canvas tent at Washington and Hill Streets, initially slated for three weeks but extended to eight due to surging crowds.[47] Total attendance exceeded 350,000, with over 3,000 individuals making public commitments to Christianity, facilitated by on-site counseling tents and church follow-up systems.[48] Key publicity boosts included the conversion of radio personality Stuart Hamblen on October 9, whose program reached millions and amplified Graham's message, alongside extensive coverage from William Randolph Hearst's newspapers, which reportedly instructed editors to "puff Graham," disseminating stories via wire services nationwide.[39] Sponsored by the Christ for Greater Los Angeles committee comprising over 400 clergy, the event's emphasis on biblical inerrancy, moral reform, and critiques of secularism aligned with evangelical priorities, catapulting Graham from regional preacher to national figure and attracting invitations for broader tours.[42]Establishment of the Evangelistic Ministry
Founding of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
Following the success of his 1949 Los Angeles Crusade, which extended from three weeks to eight due to widespread public interest and media coverage, Billy Graham recognized the need for a permanent organization to sustain and expand his evangelistic efforts beyond ad hoc arrangements.[49] This realization intensified during the 1950 Portland, Oregon, Crusade, where advocates including Fred Dienert, Walter Bennett, and Dr. Theodore Elsner pressed for a national radio broadcast, culminating in a spontaneous midnight donation of $25,000 specifically earmarked for that purpose.[50] Without a formal nonprofit entity, handling such funds legally and transparently posed immediate challenges, prompting swift action to incorporate.[51] On September 15, 1950, George Wilson, Graham's business manager, drew up the articles of incorporation for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) in St. Paul, Minnesota, with the documents officially sealed two days later on September 17.[51] The stated purpose was “to spread and propagate the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ by any and all…means,” encompassing live crusades, radio broadcasts, publications, and other media.[51] Initial directors comprised Graham, Cliff Barrows (music director), Grady Wilson (associate evangelist), and George Wilson, with George Beverly Shea (soloist) added shortly thereafter; Mary Cook was hired as the first employee to manage accounting.[51] The BGEA's establishment drew directly from the Modesto Manifesto, a set of ethical guidelines adopted by Graham and his core team in Modesto, California, in July 1948 while preparing for a local campaign.[52] Motivated by observed scandals in other fundamentalist circles—such as financial opacity, moral lapses, sensationalized publicity, and denominational rivalry—the Manifesto committed the team to four principles: full public disclosure of finances to avoid even the appearance of impropriety; avoidance of situations compromising personal morality, including not being alone with women other than one's wife; reliance on factual rather than exaggerated promotion; and cooperation with local churches without criticism or competition.[52] [43] These standards, which emphasized verifiable accountability over charismatic appeal, formed the operational bedrock of the BGEA and distinguished Graham's ministry amid broader evangelical skepticism toward high-profile evangelism.[52] Headquartered initially in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the BGEA enabled rapid institutionalization, launching the "Hour of Decision" radio program in November 1950 and establishing mechanisms for crusade planning, follow-up discipleship, and global outreach.[53] By prioritizing donor trust through audited financial reports and church partnerships, the organization addressed causal factors in prior evangelistic failures, such as unchecked personal ambition and fiscal mismanagement, fostering long-term credibility essential for scaling operations.[52]Organizational Structure and Media Strategies
The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA), incorporated on September 15, 1950, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, adopted a streamlined organizational model centered on Graham's leadership as president, supported by a small cadre of trusted associates including business manager George Wilson, music director Cliff Barrows, and soloist George Beverley Shea.[50][51] This structure emphasized functional departments for crusade coordination, financial stewardship, and media outreach, reflecting Graham's commitment to accountability formalized in the 1949 Modesto Manifesto, which prioritized ethical practices to sustain donor trust and ministry integrity. Operations remained centralized under Graham's oversight, with associate evangelists handling regional events, enabling rapid scaling of activities without hierarchical bureaucracy; by the 1950s, the organization had relocated key functions while maintaining non-profit status dedicated to Gospel proclamation.[54] BGEA's media strategies innovated mass communication to extend Graham's live crusades, leveraging radio, film, and later television to reach audiences unattainable through in-person events alone. The flagship "Hour of Decision" radio program debuted on November 5, 1950, as a 30-minute weekly broadcast featuring Barrows' hosting, Shea's hymns, Scripture readings, and Graham's sermons, airing initially on ABC stations and expanding to over 1,200 outlets by the 1960s, with an estimated global listenership in the millions.[55][56] Television adaptations followed in 1951, while the 1951 establishment of World Wide Pictures produced feature-length evangelistic films—beginning with titles like The Green Pastures adaptations and originals such as For Pete's Sake (1966)—distributed to churches for screenings that reportedly prompted thousands of conversions, with over 40 productions completed by the ministry's close in 2003.[57][58] These efforts integrated media directly with crusades, using recordings and follow-up materials to reinforce inquirers' commitments, prioritizing content that tied personal testimony to biblical proclamation over entertainment.[59]Expansion of Global Crusades (1950s–1970s)
Following the establishment of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association in 1950, Graham's ministry shifted toward international outreach, with the first major overseas campaign occurring in London from March 1 to May 22, 1954, at Harringay Arena.[60] Initially met with skepticism in a post-war Britain wary of American revivalism, the crusade drew growing crowds, exceeding the arena's capacity and necessitating overflow venues, culminating in a final rally at Wembley Stadium attended by over 100,000 people.[61] Over the 12 weeks, more than 1 million individuals attended, with approximately 38,000 recording decisions for Christ, marking a pivotal breakthrough that validated Graham's approach abroad and led to widespread media coverage in British newspapers.[62] The London success spurred rapid expansion across Europe in the mid-1950s, including events in Aarhus, Denmark, in 1955, and subsequent campaigns in West Germany, such as in Düsseldorf and Berlin, where Graham addressed audiences amid Cold War tensions, emphasizing spiritual renewal as a counter to communism.[63] These European efforts, often coordinated with local churches and supported by emerging BGEA infrastructure like advance teams and media amplification, reached hundreds of thousands and fostered ecumenical cooperation, though Graham maintained his insistence on biblical inerrancy and separation from liberal theology.[64] By the late 1950s, the ministry extended to Asia and the Pacific, with a 1959 crusade in Adelaide, Australia, drawing record-breaking crowds of over 100,000 per night and contributing to a nationwide revival that saw tens of thousands of professions of faith.[65] The 1960s accelerated global reach into Africa and the Middle East, highlighted by 1960 crusades in Accra, Ghana, and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where Graham preached to integrated audiences and met with Emperor Haile Selassie, underscoring his commitment to evangelism irrespective of racial or national barriers.[65] A 1959–1960 tour encompassing Australia, New Zealand, Africa, and the Middle East attracted over 3 million attendees, demonstrating logistical scaling through radio broadcasts, film distribution, and partnerships with indigenous leaders.[66] Into the 1970s, crusades continued in diverse locales, including South Africa in 1973, where Graham advocated for racial reconciliation in preaching that Christ transcends divisions, amid apartheid-era challenges, further solidifying his reputation as a worldwide evangelist who had by then conducted events in dozens of countries.[67] This period's expansion, reaching an estimated tens of millions cumulatively, relied on Graham's consistent message of personal repentance and faith in Jesus Christ, unadapted to local cultural pressures.[53]Stances on Social and Cultural Issues
Position on Civil Rights and Racial Integration
Billy Graham viewed racial segregation as incompatible with Christian teachings, declaring early in his ministry that he could not understand its practice within the church.[68] He attributed racial discrimination to human sinfulness rather than divine order, stating in sermons that "without the Bible, this world would indeed be a jungle" of such divisions.[69] Graham preached that Scripture provided no basis for segregation, emphasizing spiritual unity over social customs during a 1952 crusade in Jackson, Mississippi, where he told audiences, "There is no scriptural basis for segregation."[70] Initially, Graham's events in the segregated South followed local practices with ropes separating audiences by race, as in early crusades like those in Georgia in 1948 and 1950.[71] However, he shifted toward integration amid growing conviction; in 1953, during his Chattanooga, Tennessee, crusade from March 15 to April 14, Graham ordered the removal of segregation ropes despite committee protests, marking his first fully integrated event and setting a policy for all subsequent crusades.[72] This decision defied Southern norms, as Graham insisted on mixed seating to reflect biblical equality, a stance that drew threats but aligned with his evangelistic goal of reaching all people without racial barriers.[69] By 1957, in his New York Crusade, he invited Martin Luther King Jr. to deliver the opening prayer, fostering a personal friendship where King reportedly credited Graham's integrated efforts with aiding the broader civil rights struggle.[73][74] Graham's approach prioritized individual spiritual conversion as the root solution to racial prejudice, cautioning against what he saw as politicized activism that risked escalating tensions.[75] He publicly denounced racism as sin but refrained from endorsing mass protests or marches, such as declining to join the 1965 Selma voting rights campaign, later expressing regret for not participating alongside King and other clergy.[76] In 1964, following the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing, Graham held an integrated Easter crusade in Birmingham, Alabama, urging repentance over retaliation. Critics, including historians, argue this reflected a moderate theology that addressed personal bias but overlooked systemic injustices, potentially allowing white evangelicals to evade deeper structural reforms.[77] Graham countered that heart change through evangelism, not legislation alone, would endure, as evidenced by his 1993 statement naming racial hostility the world's foremost social problem solvable only via the Gospel.[68] His positions, while pioneering integration in evangelical circles, drew accusations of inconsistency for private counsel to presidents like Richard Nixon against policies such as school busing, prioritizing social stability.[74]Anti-Communism and Moral Critiques of Secularism
Billy Graham emerged as a prominent voice against communism during the early Cold War era, framing it as a spiritual adversary to Christianity rather than merely a political ideology. In sermons and writings throughout the 1950s, he described communism as "Satan's religion," supernaturally inspired and directed by the Devil himself, positing that only a divinely empowered Christian response could counter its influence.[78][79][80] During his 1949 Los Angeles Crusade, which marked his national breakthrough, Graham integrated anti-communist rhetoric, declaring communism a religion motivated by demonic forces amid heightened fears of Soviet expansion.[79] By 1950, he emphasized in public addresses that "Communism is supernaturally inspired" and that "an equally inspired Christianity is the only answer to it," aligning his evangelistic message with broader American anxieties over atheistic totalitarianism.[81] This stance resonated with figures like William Randolph Hearst, who amplified Graham's crusades partly due to their shared Manichean opposition to communism.[82] Graham's premillennialist theology reinforced his view of communism as an apocalyptic threat, akin to the Antichrist's system, which permeated his preaching and contributed to his rise as a cultural influencer.[83] He consistently portrayed the global struggle as a battle between communism and Christianity, warning that communist philosophy denied God's sovereignty and promoted state ownership as a substitute for divine order.[84][85] This position extended into his support for anti-communist policies, including during the Vietnam era, where he initially backed U.S. involvement as a bulwark against communist expansion, though his focus remained on spiritual rather than partisan warfare.[86] Despite later efforts to preach in communist nations—such as negotiations for visits to Hungary and China—his core critique in the 1950s and 1960s held communism as inherently antithetical to biblical faith, incompatible with human freedom under God.[87] Parallel to his anti-communist advocacy, Graham issued moral critiques of secularism, viewing it as a corrosive force eroding America's foundational Christian ethics and inviting divine judgment. He warned that societal drift toward secularism and materialism constituted idolatry, stating, "We worship the gods of secularism and materialism. God is displeased, and I warn you that His anger is being kindled."[88] In this framework, secular influences promoted moral relativism, absorbing individuals into earthly patterns that conformed people away from biblical standards, particularly in social and cultural spheres.[89] Graham argued that abandoning secularism in favor of a "Biblical concept of man" was essential for societal salvation, as secular humanism undermined the recognition of inherent sin and the need for Christ-centered redemption.[90] These critiques often highlighted secular media and cultural shifts as mocking Christian convictions, yet he opposed censorship as a remedy, advocating instead for gospel proclamation to counteract secular decay.[91] His emphasis on returning to scriptural authority positioned secularism not as neutral progress but as a causal driver of ethical erosion, contrasting sharply with communist atheism while addressing domestic moral drift.[90]Responses to Cultural Shifts in the 1960s–1970s
During the 1960s and 1970s, Billy Graham characterized the prevailing cultural shifts—including the sexual revolution, widespread drug experimentation, and the counterculture's rejection of traditional authority—as evidence of spiritual emptiness and moral decay leading to societal breakdown.[92] He argued that an obsession with sex marked decaying civilizations, stating, "When people lose their way, their purpose, their will, and their faith, they turn to sex as a substitute," viewing such pursuits as futile attempts to fill a void only Christ could satisfy.[93] In sermons, Graham critiqued the era's hedonism, warning that temporary pleasures from drugs and premarital sex offered no lasting fulfillment, as "the whole country's on a quest for something... in drugs, in sex, in entertainment," but true satisfaction required commitment to Jesus.[94][95] Graham addressed youth directly in his 1971 book The Jesus Generation, portraying the younger cohort—amid rebellion, drug use, and escape from reality—as a generation seeking meaning but misled by countercultural excesses, urging them instead toward evangelical faith as the authentic "revolution."[96] He positioned the Gospel as the antidote to drug addiction, emphasizing that "even if your minds have been corrupted by drugs, they can be restored by the power of Christ," and preached against the normalization of substances as a modern manifestation of ancient vices.[97][98] In response, Graham endorsed the Jesus Movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s, which drew disaffected youth from hippie and drug subcultures into evangelical Christianity, bridging countercultural elements with traditional faith through events like his 1971 Chicago crusade focused on "Who is Jesus?"[99][100] His organization facilitated large-scale youth outreaches, such as Explo '72 in Dallas, where over 80,000 young attendees heard messages countering the era's moral relativism with calls for personal conversion and biblical absolutes.[101] These efforts reflected Graham's strategy of confronting cultural permissiveness not through isolation but by offering an alternative rooted in scriptural authority, resulting in thousands of reported conversions from countercultural backgrounds.[102]Political Engagements and Influence
Relationships with U.S. Presidents
Billy Graham met every sitting U.S. president from Harry S. Truman to Barack Obama, offering spiritual counsel irrespective of political affiliation.[103][4] His interactions spanned personal friendships, advisory roles, and participation in events like National Prayer Breakfasts, though he later committed to political non-partisanship following controversies.[104] Graham's initial White House visit occurred on July 14, 1950, with Truman, lasting 30 minutes; however, Graham's subsequent disclosure of details to reporters offended Truman, who deemed it a protocol violation and declined future meetings.[104][105] With Dwight D. Eisenhower, Graham forged a bond through golf outings and faith discussions, counseling on spiritual matters and contributing to the inception of the Presidential Prayer Breakfast in 1953.[4][104] He met John F. Kennedy in Palm Beach, Florida, four days prior to the 1961 inauguration, conversing on moral leadership despite Graham's prior opposition to Kennedy's candidacy over concerns of Catholic papal influence.[106][107] Lyndon B. Johnson treated Graham as a confidant during the Vietnam War era, including informal activities like swimming in the White House pool.[108] Graham's closest presidential friendship developed with Richard Nixon, who confided in him regularly from the 1950s onward and sought counsel during his presidency.[109] A 1972 Oval Office recording revealed Graham agreeing with Nixon's private anti-Semitic comments on Jewish media control, leading to public backlash after the tapes surfaced in 2002; Graham apologized repeatedly, attributing it to a lapse in memory and affirming no personal animus.[6][110] Despite Watergate revelations, Graham defended Nixon's character, blaming external influences like sleeping pills for lapses, limited post-resignation contact, and delivered the eulogy at Nixon's 1994 funeral.[109][110] Gerald Ford maintained cordial ties with Graham, though less intimate than predecessors.[4] With Jimmy Carter, a fellow Southern Baptist, relations were tempered by policy divergences; Graham privately favored Ronald Reagan in 1980 but avoided endorsement.[111] Reagan awarded Graham the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1983 and valued his input at prayer events.[112] George H. W. Bush, connected through family ties, regarded Graham as a mentor.[113][114] Bill Clinton sought Graham's counsel amid personal scandals, while George W. Bush credited early encounters for spiritual influence.[115][116] Graham met Barack Obama in 2010 at his North Carolina home, discussing faith despite theological differences.[115][107]Views on Foreign Policy and National Security
Billy Graham viewed communism as an existential threat to Christianity and Western civilization, describing it in 1954 as "Satan's religion" due to its atheistic foundations and suppression of religious freedom.[78] During the Cold War, he framed the U.S.-Soviet conflict as a spiritual battle between godly principles and godless ideology, urging Americans to recognize communism's diabolical roots while preaching the Gospel as the ultimate counterforce.[117] Graham conducted crusades behind the Iron Curtain, including in the Soviet Union in 1992, where he shared the Christian message amid communist restrictions, believing that evangelism rather than military confrontation alone could erode atheistic regimes over time.[118] [87] On the Vietnam War, Graham consistently supported U.S. military involvement as a necessary stand against communist expansion, visiting troops twice—once in 1966 and again at Christmastime in 1968—to deliver sermons emphasizing sacrifice and divine purpose in their service.[119] He denounced anti-war protesters for providing "comfort to the enemy" and, in a private April 15, 1969, letter to President Richard Nixon drafted after consultations with Vietnam missionaries, urged intensified bombing to force a swift North Vietnamese surrender, estimating it could end the conflict despite potentially high civilian casualties.[120] [121] In conversations with Nixon, such as a 1971 phone call, Graham echoed the president's rationale for escalation, attributing the war's origins to prior administrations while affirming its moral imperative against communism.[122] Graham expressed strong support for Israel as a democratic ally in the Middle East, advocating in 1967 that its leaders resist diplomatic pressures compromising national security and directly negotiate with Arab states from a position of strength.[123] He met Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir during his 1960 tour of the region and championed the release of Soviet Jews for emigration to Israel, viewing their plight as a biblical call intertwined with U.S. interests in countering Soviet influence.[124] [125] Regarding nuclear weapons and the arms race, Graham initially warned in the early Cold War years of an apocalyptic trajectory, stating in sermons that escalating atomic capabilities risked global destruction absent spiritual revival.[126] By the 1980s, he advocated mutual disarmament, proposing in 1982 a "SALT 10" plan for the U.S. and Soviet Union to verifiably destroy all nuclear arsenals under international supervision, while addressing antinuclear conferences in Moscow to promote peace through Christian principles.[127] [128] He rejected unilateral disarmament or pacifism, arguing in 1984 that the superpower arms race posed less peril than nuclear proliferation to smaller nations, but insisted on negotiated elimination of mass destruction weapons as feasible if rooted in moral commitment.[129] [130]Interactions with Global Leaders
Billy Graham engaged with numerous international leaders through his global evangelistic campaigns, emphasizing discussions on Christianity, morality, and peace amid Cold War tensions and decolonization. These interactions often stemmed from invitations tied to his crusades in over 185 countries, where he preached to millions and sought opportunities to share the Gospel personally.[131][132] One of his most enduring relationships was with Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, whom he first met in 1955 following her viewing of his televised preaching during a London crusade the prior year. The queen, intrigued by his message, invited Graham to Buckingham Palace for tea, and subsequent meetings occurred at Windsor Castle and Sandringham House over the decades, totaling at least a dozen encounters from the 1950s through the 1980s. Graham described her as cordial and faith-oriented, noting in his autobiography that she inquired about sermon preparation and expressed genuine interest in evangelical theology, though she maintained Anglican formality in public.[133][134][135] ![Emperor Haile Selassie I with Billy Graham][float-right] In 1966, Graham introduced Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I at the World Congress on Evangelism in Berlin, Germany, on October 26, where the emperor addressed the assembly on propagating Christian faith globally. This event highlighted Graham's role in bridging evangelical gatherings with heads of state from Africa, as Selassie praised the congress's focus on evangelism while affirming Christianity's role in national development. The interaction underscored Graham's efforts to foster dialogue between religious leaders and monarchs in post-colonial contexts.[136][137] Graham demonstrated support for Israel through correspondence and advocacy with its prime ministers, including a 1978 telegram to Menachem Begin expressing condolences after Golda Meir's death and affirming Israel's biblical significance. His pro-Israel stance, rooted in evangelical interpretations of scripture, influenced broader Christian Zionist sentiments without formal diplomatic roles.[124] In a striking departure from his long-standing anti-communist rhetoric, Graham visited North Korea in April 1992 at the invitation of President Kim Il Sung, becoming the first foreign religious leader to preach publicly in Pyongyang. During the three-day trip, he lectured at Kim Il Sung University, presented his book Peace with God to the leader, and urged religious freedom, though state media later misrepresented his words to claim he called Kim a "god." The visit, amid U.S.-DPRK tensions, aimed to promote dialogue and Gospel access but yielded limited verifiable conversions due to regime controls.[138][139][140]Theological Views and Ecclesiastical Relations
Commitment to Evangelical Fundamentals
Billy Graham's evangelistic ministry was anchored in orthodox evangelical doctrines, as codified in the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's (BGEA) statement of faith, which he established in 1950 and upheld throughout his career. This included the belief that the Bible is the inspired, infallible, and authoritative Word of God; the triune nature of God; the full deity and humanity of Jesus Christ, including His virgin birth, sinless life, miracles, vicarious and atoning death through shed blood, bodily resurrection, ascension, and personal return in power and glory; salvation by grace through faith alone in Christ's finished work; the regenerative ministry of the Holy Spirit; and the ultimate resurrection of the body with eternal life for believers and conscious punishment for unbelievers.[141][142] Graham resolved an early crisis of faith in 1949 by recommitting to the Bible's divine inspiration during a meeting with theologian Harold Ockenga, rejecting modernist skepticism and affirming Scripture's reliability as essential to his preaching.[143] This commitment shaped his approach, as he later wrote that his confidence in the Bible's inspiration and authority intensified with age, viewing it as the foundation for understanding God's love and human sinfulness.[144] In sermons and writings, such as his 1953 book Peace with God, he consistently proclaimed the Bible's inerrancy in matters of faith and practice, urging hearers to accept its teachings without compromise.[145] Central to Graham's message was Christ's deity and redemptive work, including the virgin birth as the means of His sinless incarnation, enabling substitutionary atonement for humanity's sin.[146] He preached that Jesus was "born to die," shedding blood as a vicarious sacrifice, with the bodily resurrection validating this atonement and offering assurance of eternal life to believers through repentance and faith.[147] For crusade cooperation, Graham required participating denominations to affirm these essentials—the deity of Christ, virgin birth, atonement, and resurrection—ensuring doctrinal unity amid broader ecumenical outreach.[148] This fidelity to fundamentals, drawn from his fundamentalist-influenced youth and Wheaton College training, distinguished his evangelism from liberal theology while prioritizing soul-winning over secondary disputes.[149]Ecumenism and Cooperation with Other Denominations
Graham's evangelistic crusades were organized through local committees comprising representatives from multiple Protestant denominations, fostering cooperation to maximize outreach while emphasizing the core gospel message of personal conversion. These interdenominational executive committees, established for each crusade, included evangelical, mainline Protestant, and occasionally liberal theological participants, as seen in the 1957 New York Crusade where the committee featured 120 individuals holding modernist views that denied biblical inerrancy.[150][151] This approach, termed "cooperative evangelism," aimed to unite churches around evangelism rather than doctrinal uniformity, with Graham insisting that participants affirm only the basics of Christian faith—belief in Christ's deity, virgin birth, atoning death, bodily resurrection, and second coming—without requiring rejection of other doctrines.[152] Initially rooted in fundamentalist circles, Graham's willingness to collaborate with non-fundamentalist Protestants marked a shift toward neo-evangelicalism, drawing criticism from separationist fundamentalists who viewed such partnerships as legitimizing doctrinal error. For instance, after the 1956 Minneapolis Crusade included Arminian Methodists and the 1957 New York event featured liberal endorsers, figures like Bob Jones Sr. severed ties, accusing Graham of compromising biblical separation by platforming those who denied scriptural authority.[153][154] Graham defended this by prioritizing souls saved over ecclesiastical purity, stating in 1958 that he would work with any Bible-believing group but later broadened to include those affirming minimal creedal points, arguing that post-crusade follow-up in converts' home churches allowed denominational retention.[155] Cooperation extended to Roman Catholics starting in the late 1950s, evolving from limited participation to formal endorsements and joint efforts by the 1970s. Following the 1957 New York Crusade, Graham began permitting Catholic advisors and follow-up with Catholic churches, a policy formalized in 1963 when his association allowed Catholic participation in crusades worldwide, sending inquirers back to Catholic parishes for discipleship.[156] He met Pope John XXIII in 1959, expressing admiration for Catholic moral stands against communism, and in 1981, Pope John Paul II affirmed brotherhood during a Vatican audience, with Graham later recounting the pontiff's words: "we are brothers."[157] Graham publicly stated that faithful Catholics adhering to Roman teachings could be saved, reflecting his ecumenical view that salvation transcended denominational boundaries via personal faith in Christ, though this drew fundamentalist charges of diluting Protestant distinctives like sola fide without works or sacraments.[155][158] Despite these alliances, Graham avoided institutional ecumenism, declining membership in the National Council of Churches or World Council of Churches, which he criticized for liberal theology undermining evangelism. His model influenced grassroots unity, as evidenced by over 417 crusades from 1947 to 2005 involving diverse denominations, yet it prioritized non-separatist cooperation, contributing to evangelical fragmentation from fundamentalism while expanding reach to an estimated 215 million attendees.[159][160]Doctrinal Positions on Salvation and Scripture
Billy Graham maintained that salvation is exclusively through personal faith in Jesus Christ as the atoning sacrifice for sin, requiring repentance and a deliberate commitment to Him as Lord and Savior. He described it as a free gift of God's grace, not merited by human works or religious rituals, but received by confessing sin and inviting Christ into one's life.[161] [162] This position aligned with evangelical soteriology, emphasizing the necessity of the new birth—spiritual regeneration by the Holy Spirit—over mere intellectual assent or moral reform. Graham's crusades, spanning decades from 1947 onward, culminated in public altar calls where attendees were urged to make an immediate decision for Christ, often reciting a version of the sinner's prayer to express faith.[163] Central to his preaching was the doctrine that all humanity is separated from God by sin, with Christ's crucifixion and resurrection providing the sole means of reconciliation and eternal life. He rejected universalism or salvation through other faiths, insisting that "no one comes to the Father except through" Christ, as stated in John 14:6.[164] While Graham occasionally expressed pastoral hope for those unaware of the Gospel—such as unevangelized peoples or infants—his core message remained the imperative of explicit faith in Christ for forgiveness and assurance of heaven.[165] This was evident in his affirmation of the 1974 Lausanne Covenant, which he endorsed as a key drafter, declaring salvation as found only in Jesus and calling for global proclamation of this truth.[166] Regarding Scripture, Graham upheld the Bible as the verbally inspired, infallible, and inerrant Word of God, authoritative in all matters of faith, doctrine, and conduct. He viewed it as without error in its original manuscripts, serving as the ultimate standard over human reason or tradition.[145] [167] This conviction crystallized in July 1949 at a conference near Los Angeles, where, amid doubts sown by modernist scholars during his early ministry, Graham resolved under the influence of mentor Henrietta Mears and others to trust the Bible's full reliability, marking a pivotal shift that underpinned his lifelong preaching.[168] [143] Graham frequently cited 2 Timothy 3:16—"All Scripture is given by inspiration of God"—to affirm its divine origin and sufficiency for equipping believers.[169] He resisted liberal theological trends questioning biblical historicity or miracles, instead preaching its literal truth, including accounts of creation, the virgin birth, and bodily resurrection.[170] Though he avoided making inerrancy a divisive litmus test to foster broader cooperation, his personal adherence remained unwavering, as reaffirmed in later interviews where he defended the Bible against skepticism.[144] This stance informed his evangelistic method, treating Scripture as the unchanging foundation for proclaiming salvation rather than adapting to cultural shifts.[171]Controversies and Criticisms
Recorded Anti-Semitic Remarks and Jewish Relations
In a private Oval Office conversation on February 1, 1972, evangelist Billy Graham concurred with President Richard Nixon's assertions regarding Jewish dominance in the American media and entertainment industries.[172] Graham described this influence as a "stranglehold" on the country, stating, "This stranglehold has got to be broken or the country's going down the drain," and noted that many Jews were antagonistic toward Christianity while maintaining personal friendships with him due to his restraint in public criticism.[6] [173] He further remarked that evangelicals hesitated to address the issue publicly for fear of reprisal from Jewish-controlled media outlets in Hollywood and news organizations.[174] These remarks, captured on Nixon's secret White House recording system, remained undisclosed until their release by the National Archives on February 28, 2002, as part of a broader batch of tapes documenting Nixon's presidency.[175] Critics, including Jewish organizations and media outlets, labeled the comments anti-Semitic for invoking longstanding tropes of Jewish conspiratorial control over information and culture, though Graham's defenders contextualized them as candid frustrations shared in a trusted private setting amid Nixon's own documented prejudices.[176] [177] Upon learning of the tapes' content—professing no personal recollection of the discussion—Graham issued a public apology on March 2, 2002, asserting, "My remarks did not reflect my love for the Jewish people," and requesting forgiveness while emphasizing his lifelong actions in support of Jews, such as advocacy for Soviet Jewry's emigration.[172] [178] Graham's broader relations with the Jewish community exhibited a pattern of public philo-Semitism and cooperation, contrasting with the 1972 exchange. He visited Israel in May 1960 for evangelistic meetings in Jerusalem and Nazareth, expressing admiration for the nation's resilience and biblical significance.[176] In a 1967 Jewish Telegraphic Agency article amid the Six-Day War, Graham affirmed, "The Jews are God's chosen people," urging Christians not to oppose Israel and highlighting its strategic importance against communism.[123] He lobbied U.S. presidents, including Nixon, for the release of Soviet Jews, raised funds for their resettlement, and in the 1970s advised evangelical leaders against aggressive proselytizing of Jews, stating in private correspondence that such efforts could harm interfaith dialogue.[176] [177] By the 1990s, Graham met regularly with rabbis and Jewish leaders, fostering ties through joint humanitarian initiatives, though some Jewish commentators noted lingering tensions from the tapes' revelation, viewing his apology as insufficiently addressing evangelistic undertones in his Israel support.[179]Accusations of Compromise from Fundamentalists
Fundamentalist critics, adhering to strict principles of ecclesiastical separation, accused Billy Graham of doctrinal compromise starting in the early 1950s for partnering with theological modernists and liberals in his evangelistic crusades.[180][152] These partnerships included inviting clergy from mainline denominations—many denying biblical inerrancy, the virgin birth, or Christ's deity—onto crusade platforms and committees, which opponents viewed as unequal yoking with unbelievers prohibited by 2 Corinthians 6:14.[181][182] The flashpoint was the 1957 New York Crusade at Madison Square Garden, which ran for 16 weeks and involved over 120 modernist clergy in sponsorship roles; Graham's follow-up policy directed inquirers to their home churches for discipleship, regardless of those churches' orthodoxy, thereby allegedly endorsing error-prone institutions.[182][181] Critics argued this practice diluted the gospel's purity, as converts might receive unsound teaching post-decision, undermining true regeneration.[152] Prominent voices included Bob Jones Sr., who in May 1952 correspondence advised Graham against political entanglements and later reproved his modernist alliances, foreseeing regret that Graham ignored.[180][181] John R. Rice, initially supportive, met Graham in Scotland in 1955 and Montreat, North Carolina, in 1958 to urge scriptural fidelity on separation but publicly withdrew endorsement in 1957 over ecumenism.[181] James Bennet resigned from a pre-1957 New York committee and published warnings against the ecumenical model, while Charles Woodbridge confronted Graham in a two-hour 1958 meeting, invoking Romans 16:17 to demand avoidance of divisive false teachers.[181] Such opposition framed Graham's "cooperative evangelism" as a departure from fundamentalism toward neo-evangelicalism, prioritizing broad appeal over doctrinal vigilance, though Graham countered that excluding partners would limit outreach without implying theological agreement.[152][182] The divide persisted, with fundamentalists like those at Bob Jones University viewing the crusades as unwittingly advancing apostasy despite Graham's personal orthodoxy.[180]Traditional Views on Homosexuality, Gender Roles, and Divorce
Billy Graham consistently articulated views on homosexuality aligned with traditional evangelical interpretations of Scripture, describing homosexual acts as sinful and contrary to God's design for human sexuality. In his writings and sermons, he referred to homosexuality as "a sinister form of perversion" that posed spiritual peril, emphasizing that individuals could find deliverance through repentance and faith in Christ.[183][184] Graham advised those struggling with homosexual temptations to seek victory exclusively through Jesus Christ, who provides strength to overcome sin, rather than through secular therapies or acceptance of the behavior as innate.[185] He rarely emphasized the topic in public crusades, noting that Jesus did not explicitly address it, but maintained that biblical prohibitions in passages like Leviticus 18:22 and Romans 1:26-27 rendered it incompatible with Christian living.[186] On gender roles, Graham upheld complementarian principles rooted in biblical texts such as Ephesians 5:22-33, portraying marriage as a union between one man and one woman where the husband serves as the spiritual head and provider, while the wife nurtures the home and submits in love. He exemplified this in his own 64-year marriage to Ruth Bell Graham, which he described as grounded in mutual respect but with distinct roles to mirror Christ's relationship to the church.[187] Graham's famous "Modesto Manifesto" of 1948 included a personal rule against being alone with any woman other than his wife, a precaution against temptation that reflected his belief in the inherent differences between sexes and the need for boundaries to safeguard fidelity.[188] He critiqued cultural shifts blurring these roles, warning that redefining marriage beyond male-female complementarity undermined family stability and societal order, as evidenced in his sermons stressing the home as society's foundation built on scriptural gender distinctions.[189][190] Regarding divorce, Graham taught that God despises it as a violation of the lifelong covenant in Genesis 2:24 and Malachi 2:16, permitting it only in cases of marital unfaithfulness (Matthew 5:32, 19:9) while urging forgiveness and reconciliation wherever possible. He viewed remarriage after unbiblical divorce as adulterous unless the original union was invalid, yet stressed God's grace for restoration through repentance, rejecting divorce as an unforgivable sin.[191][192] In sermons like "How to Save Your Marriage," delivered in the 1970s and later, Graham lamented rising divorce rates—reaching 50% in the U.S. by the 1980s—as evidence of moral decay, advocating premarital counseling, prayer, and commitment over no-fault dissolution.[189][193] He counseled couples to endure hardships, citing his own marital trials, and warned that easy divorce eroded children's security and national character.[194][195]Later Years and Retirement
Final Evangelistic Efforts (1980s–2000s)
As Graham entered his sixties, he maintained an active schedule of evangelistic crusades through the 1980s, though at a gradually reduced pace owing to the onset of health issues including early signs of Parkinson's disease. In July 1985, he conducted a 10-day crusade at Anaheim Stadium in Southern California, marking his fifth major campaign in the region since 1949; the event drew a cumulative attendance of approximately 500,000, with a record single-night crowd of 81,000 on the final evening.[196][197] Similar efforts in the UK under the "Mission England" initiative included nine-day meetings in Liverpool and Birmingham in 1984, where Graham emphasized repentance and salvation amid urban audiences.[198] These gatherings, supported by local church committees, continued to feature music from artists like Cliff Richard and George Beverly Shea, with decisions for Christ recorded through follow-up counseling.[199] The early 1990s saw Graham expand into formerly restricted regions, exemplified by his October 1992 crusade in Moscow's Olympic Stadium, the first such public event in Russia with government-permitted advertising and a 7,000-voice choir. Over 10 days, the meetings attracted 155,000 attendees, with reports of one-quarter responding to the invitation for commitment to Christ, signaling a post-Soviet openness to evangelism.[200] In 1994, he returned to Atlanta for a crusade that reinforced his domestic outreach, drawing on collaborations with diverse denominations.[71] By mid-decade, technological innovation marked his approach: the March 1995 Global Mission from San Juan, Puerto Rico, involved a live sermon translated into 48 languages and simulcast via satellite to 3,000 sites across 185 countries, extending reach to an estimated 175 million viewers worldwide beyond the 175,000 in-person attendees.[201][202] Into the 2000s, crusades became sparser as Graham's mobility declined, yet he persisted with select events like the 2004 Bakersfield, California, gathering.[65] His final public crusade occurred June 24–26, 2005, at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens, New York, where, at age 86 and visibly frail, he preached to 242,000 over three days, urging listeners to "make your decision for Christ" in what he described as his last such effort.[203][204] This culmination reflected a lifetime total of over 417 crusades in 185 countries, with in-person audiences exceeding 84 million, though Graham later noted the unverifiable nature of response counts while affirming the Gospel's enduring call.[65]Health Challenges and Withdrawal from Public Life
Graham's primary health challenge emerged in the late 1980s with the onset of symptoms later identified as Parkinson's disease, though the diagnosis was not publicly disclosed until July 1992, when his son Franklin Graham stated that the evangelist had been experiencing mild tremors and balance issues for three years without significant impairment to his ministry.[205] Despite the condition's progressive nature, which caused increasing frailty and mobility limitations, Graham persisted with international crusades through the 1990s and into the 2000s, adapting by using mobility aids and shortening appearances.[206] In 2000, Graham underwent surgery to install a shunt for hydrocephalus, a buildup of fluid in the brain that compounded his neurological symptoms and had been mistaken by some for Parkinson's progression; the procedure drained excess fluid but required maintenance, including a valve replacement in 2008.[207] Additional complications arose in 2004, when at age 85 he suffered a broken left hip from a fall, necessitating replacement surgery in January, followed by a fractured pelvis in May that required stabilizing operations and extended rehabilitation.[208][209] These injuries, linked to osteoporosis exacerbated by prolonged inactivity and age-related bone density loss, severely restricted his physical capabilities and marked a turning point toward diminished public engagements.[210] Graham's final major evangelistic crusade occurred in June 2005 in Flushing Meadows, New York, where he preached to over 230,000 attendees across three days despite evident frailty, voice weakness, and reliance on a wheelchair; he described it as potentially his last large-scale effort, citing health constraints as the primary factor.[211] Following this event, he formally retired from conducting crusades after nearly 60 years, retreating to his Montreat, North Carolina, home for a private life focused on writing, occasional recorded messages, and family.[212] Thereafter, public appearances ceased almost entirely, with Graham confining activities to his residence amid ongoing management of Parkinson's-like symptoms, hydrocephalus, and recurrent infections such as pneumonia, until his death in 2018.[213]Reflections on Ministry and Personal Regrets
In his 1997 autobiography Just As I Am, Billy Graham reflected on his decades-long evangelistic ministry as a profound privilege marked by divine calling, yet tempered by personal shortcomings and missed opportunities for deeper preparation. He emphasized the simplicity and urgency of his gospel message—centered on Christ's atonement and the need for personal repentance and faith—while acknowledging the logistical and spiritual challenges of reaching an estimated 215 million people through crusades, radio, television, and literature by the 1990s. Graham credited the success of his efforts to collaborative teams and the Modesto Manifesto of 1949, which established ethical guidelines for financial transparency and moral conduct to safeguard integrity amid growing fame.[214][215] Graham expressed regret over insufficient personal study of Scripture and theology, stating, "One of my great regrets is that I have not studied enough. I wish I had studied more and preached less," attributing this to external pressures that led to overcommitment in speaking engagements rather than scholarly depth. He also lamented the toll of constant travel—averaging 300,000 miles annually in peak years—on his family, noting it caused him to miss formative moments with his five children and strained relationships, as detailed in Just As I Am where he admitted, "I have failed many times, and I would do many things differently." These admissions underscored his view that ministerial demands, while fruitful in conversions, often came at the expense of balanced personal discipleship and home life.[216][217][218] A particularly acute regret centered on his entanglement with politics, especially his close advisory role to President Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1974. Graham later described this as a misstep that blurred the lines of his apolitical evangelistic focus, regretting his endorsement of Nixon during the 1972 campaign and subsequent support amid the Watergate scandal, which he believed damaged his credibility among some evangelicals. In a 2005 interview, he reiterated wishing he had "steered clear of politics," viewing it as a distraction from the gospel's universality. Additionally, upon the 2002 release of Nixon White House tapes revealing their 1972 conversation with anti-Semitic undertones—where Graham concurred with Nixon's views on Jewish media influence—he issued a public apology, stating, "I deeply regret comments I apparently made," despite claiming no recollection, and affirmed his lifelong support for Israel as atonement.[219][6][172]Personal Life
Marriage and Immediate Family
Billy Graham married Ruth Bell on August 13, 1943, at Montreat Presbyterian Church in Montreat, North Carolina, shortly after their graduation from Wheaton College, where they had met as students.[220][221] Ruth, born June 10, 1920, in Qingjiang, Kiangsu, China, to medical missionary parents L. Nelson and Virginia Leftwich Bell, had aspired to missionary work herself but deferred to support Graham's evangelistic calling after their engagement, which followed three months of dating.[220][222] The couple remained wed for 63 years until Ruth's death from pneumonia and neurodegenerative disease on June 14, 2007, at age 87; Graham described their union as a partnership rooted in shared faith, with Ruth managing their North Carolina home, Little Piney Cove, and providing counsel amid his extensive travels.[223][220] They had five children, all of whom pursued paths influenced by their parents' evangelical commitments: Virginia "Gigi" Graham (born September 21, 1945), an author and speaker; Anne Graham Lotz (born 1948), a Bible teacher and evangelist; Ruth Graham (born 1950), an author and speaker who worked in international relief; Franklin Graham (born July 14, 1952), president of Samaritan's Purse and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association; and Nelson "Ned" Graham (born 1958), founder of East Gates Ministries, focused on Bible distribution in China.[224][225][226] The family grew to include 19 grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren, with Graham emphasizing in his autobiography the challenges of balancing ministry absences with family responsibilities, crediting Ruth's resilience for their stability.[227][224]Daily Habits, Finances, and Modest Lifestyle
Billy Graham maintained a disciplined daily routine centered on spiritual practices, beginning each day with extended time in prayer and Bible study. He read five Psalms and one chapter from Proverbs daily, cycled through the Gospels four times annually, and supplemented this with Scripture memorization, prayerful reflection on passages, and application to personal decisions.[228] These habits, which he sustained for decades, prioritized communion with God over mere information gathering, viewing them as essential for sustaining his ministry amid global travel and public demands.[229] Financially, Graham adhered to modest compensation through the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA), with his annual salary starting at $15,000 in 1950 and reaching $39,500 by the late 1970s—figures significantly lower than those of contemporary televangelists.[230] He directed much of his book royalties to charity rather than personal enrichment and donated 10 to 15 percent of his gross income annually to nonprofit causes, a practice he and his wife Ruth upheld consistently.[231] The BGEA maintained transparent financial records open to scrutiny, avoiding high-pressure fundraising tactics and ensuring accountability to prevent perceptions of profiteering.[232] Graham's lifestyle reflected this fiscal restraint, as he resided in a simple log cabin-style home on 150 acres in Montreat, North Carolina—a modest mountain retreat without ostentation, despite his international prominence and access to influential figures.[233] He eschewed luxury, favoring practical vehicles and avoiding extravagance, which biographers attribute to his farm-raised upbringing and deliberate commitment to integrity over accumulation.[234] This approach contrasted sharply with peers in media ministry, reinforcing his reputation for personal humility.[232]Long-Term Health Issues
In his later decades, Billy Graham contended with neurological conditions that impaired mobility and cognition. He received a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease in 1989, manifesting in tremors, unsteady gait, and handwriting deterioration that limited his preaching stamina.[235][236] Symptoms emerged around age 73 in 1991, initially attributed to Parkinson's, though later assessments identified normal pressure hydrocephalus—a buildup of cerebrospinal fluid causing overlapping effects like coordination loss and forgetfulness—as a primary factor, prompting surgical intervention.[237][238] To manage the hydrocephalus, Graham underwent shunt implantation by 1992 to drain excess fluid from his brain, with subsequent revisions in 2000, 2008, and 2011 to address blockages and optimize flow.[239][240] His son Franklin Graham affirmed an ongoing "element of Parkinson's disease" requiring treatment alongside the hydrocephalus management, indicating comorbid or persistent parkinsonian features despite the fluid-related etiology.[241] These conditions collectively confined him to a wheelchair by the early 2000s and necessitated withdrawal from public appearances after 2005.[242] Graham also battled prostate cancer starting in his eighties, around the late 1990s or early 2000s, which proved chronic and incurable despite interventions, contributing to his frailty.[237][213] Recurrent respiratory ailments, including multiple bouts of pneumonia in 2011 and 2012, exacerbated by age-related decline and prior infections, further diminished his vitality and required hospitalizations.[243][244] Falls resulting in pelvic fractures added to his physical burdens in the 2000s.[245] Despite these, he maintained lucidity for writing and limited engagements until shortly before his death in 2018.[246]Death, Funeral, and Immediate Aftermath
Final Days and Cause of Death
In his final years, Billy Graham resided at his longtime home in Montreat, North Carolina, where his mobility and public appearances were severely limited by progressive health decline, including advanced Parkinson's disease and other chronic conditions.[247][213] He remained there quietly, having largely withdrawn from active ministry decades earlier, with family nearby and medical support managing his frailty.[248] Graham died on February 21, 2018, at 7:46 a.m., at the age of 99 years and 3 months.[248][249] The official cause was natural causes, attributed to the cumulative effects of multiple ailments, including Parkinson's disease (diagnosed in 1992), prostate cancer, hydrocephalus, and recurrent pneumonia.[213][247] He passed peacefully in his sleep, attended only by a nurse.[236][250] No autopsy was performed, consistent with the non-suspicious nature of his age-related decline.[248]Funeral Arrangements and Public Mourning
Following Billy Graham's death on February 21, 2018, his body lay in repose at the Billy Graham Homeplace on the grounds of the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte, North Carolina, on February 26 and 27, allowing public viewing from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day, with more than 12,000 mourners paying respects.[251][252] On February 28 and March 1, his casket lay in honor in the United States Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C., the fourth such honor for a private citizen, drawing thousands more for public viewing.[253][254] President Donald Trump ordered American flags flown at half-staff nationwide until sunset on February 22 in recognition of Graham's contributions. The private funeral service occurred on March 2, 2018, at noon in a tent on the Billy Graham Library grounds in Charlotte, attended by approximately 2,300 invited guests including President Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, and various dignitaries.[255][256] Graham was interred in a simple pine plywood casket handcrafted by inmates at Angola Prison in Louisiana, consistent with his prior wishes and matching his wife Ruth's, containing a Bible placed inside.[257][258] He was buried adjacent to Ruth at the base of the Library's Prayer Cross, with his tombstone inscribed "Billy Graham, Preacher of the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ" alongside a Bible verse.[259] Public mourning extended globally, with processions from Graham's Montreat home to Charlotte, extensive media coverage, and tributes from political and religious leaders emphasizing his evangelistic legacy, reflecting his status as a pivotal figure in 20th-century American Christianity.[260][261]