The Rev. Billy Graham, the
charismatic North Carolina pastor who took his evangelizing crusades around the
country and the globe, died on Wednesday morning, according to officials of his
organization. He was 99 years old.
Graham served as a counselor or minister to a dozen U.S.
presidents, and he preached to an estimated 215 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.
He also wrote more than two dozen books, including his 1997
memoir, "Just as I Am," which was a New York Times bestseller.
n a tweet, President Donald Trump
called Graham the "GREAT Billy Graham" and wrote, "There was
nobody like him! He will be missed by Christians and all religions. A very
special man."
Graham died just before 8 a.m. at his home in Montreat, North
Carolina, surrounded by family, according to a spokesman for Samaritan's Purse,
the nondenominational evangelical Christian organization headed by Graham's son
Franklin.
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.
Born William Franklin Graham, “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.
He met his future wife, Ruth McCue Bell, while they attended
Wheaton College, and they married in 1943. Together they would raise five
children, and she would become a trusted adviser.
“When it comes to spiritual things, my wife has had the greatest
influence on my ministry,” Graham said of Bell, who died in June 2007.
Graham was known for his sense of
humor and for maintaining a nonpartisan Christian view, which earned him some
criticism. But his dedication to ministry and unity is long evident and best
remembered in his refusal to pay heed to segregation policies, forcing churches
to integrate for his services.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. counted Graham as a close friend and
ally, once remarking, “Had it not been for the ministry of my good friend Dr.
Billy Graham, my work in the Civil Rights Movement would not have been as
successful as it has been.”
His son, Franklin Graham, took over his ministries, while Graham
returned to a quiet life in North Carolina — not far from the Billy Graham
Library in Charlotte.
"My home is in Heaven," Graham habitually said.
"I'm just traveling through this world."
Condolences poured in in the hours following Graham's death,
with Vice President Mike Pence calling him one of the greatest Americans of the
20th century.
"Billy Graham's ministry for the gospel of Jesus Christ and
his matchless voice changed the lives of millions," the vice president
said in a statement.
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