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99-year old Rev. Billy Graham, whose sermons were broadcast in churches around the country, has died.
Graham served as a counselor or minister to a dozen U.S. presidents, and he preached to an estimated 200 million people in 185 countries around the world during his life. His message reached millions more as he maintained a near-constant presence on radio, television and the internet.
The longtime evangelist appeared on Gallup’s list of most admired men and women 60 times since 1955 — every year the research company asked the question.
“America’s Pastor” came from modest means and grew up on a dairy farm in Charlotte, North Carolina. He found his spiritual path at 16, charmed by the traveling minister and temperance movement leader Mordecai Ham. Graham later moved to Florida and was ordained there in 1939.
In the summer of 2005, Graham preached at what he called his “Final Crusade.”
Graham said: “Deep inside we need something else. And that something else can be brought about by Jesus.”
“When I touch the podium, I can feel a new strength and a new power come and it’s a thrilling thing for me to preach the gospel at this age,” Graham said.
The three-day event in New York City was the culmination of a lifetime of evangelism — seven decades of spreading the gospel to more than 200 million people in 185 countries around the world.
Graham once said: “Jesus Christ, the son of God, has an answer to every problem that you face!”
Raised in the fundamentalist faith of his native North Carolina, Graham dedicated his life to Christ when he was 16, and was ordained a Baptist minister in 1939. He created his own brand of populist evangelism. His “crusades,” as he called them, were soon attracting millions in person and later through television.
“We are United, and are ready to march under the banner of Almighty God, taking as our slogan that which we have on our coins, ‘In God We Trust,'” Graham once said.
Before long, Graham set his sights on the rest of the world, and took his “crusades” to Europe, Africa, India, the Far East. A staunch anti-Communist, one of his cherished ambitions was to bring the gospel message to the officially atheist countries behind the Iron Curtain.
“I would say 80 to 90 percent of the Russian people believe in God. And they’ve had communism now for all these many years, but it– they still believe in God,” Graham said.
Graham’s wife, Ruth, the daughter of medical missionaries, was raised in China. In 1988, the Grahams traveled there to encourage its fledgling Christian community.
“You have a great modernization program in China, and it’s my prayer that there will be a great moral modernization program — program, also,” Graham said.
Graham became a counselor and confidante to every American president, beginning with Harry Truman, but Graham himself denied he had a role in making policy. He said: “I don’t advise them, I pray with them.”
He blessed their inaugurations, dedicated their libraries and presided over their funerals.
“You know, few events touch the heart of every American as profoundly as the death of a president. For the president is our leader. And every American feels that he knows him in a very special way,” Graham said.
Graham’s friendship with Richard Nixon dated back to the early 1950s, but it was tested by the Watergate scandal and the release of secretly recorded White House tapes.
“I’d never heard him use any of those words. I didn’t know he knew them, some of them that came out on the tapes,” Graham said.
Despite his proximity to power, Graham was resolutely non-partisan, fearing that political favoritism would damage his ministry — a ministry that was never touched by the kind of scandal that destroyed those of televangelists like Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart.
Graham’s ethics and his emphasis on cooperation among different faiths earned him widespread respect.
In moments of national crisis, such as the Oklahoma City bombing, Graham was sought out for his ability to comfort and console with simplicity and eloquence.