The Billy Graham I know — and why he matters

Church 조회 수 5167 추천 수 0 2013.12.04 19:00:13

By Ken Garfield
 

umns13-301-1-480.jpg

United Methodist writer Ken Garfield shakes hands with the Rev. Billy Graham. Garfield has written a new book, “Billy Graham: A Life in Pictures.” Photos courtesy of Triumph Books/The Charlotte Observer.

 

 

Billy Graham turned 95 on Nov. 7, a tender reason to affirm the life of modern Christendom’s most influential figure.

I come to the celebration from a special vantage point after covering Graham for more than a dozen years as religion editor for his hometown newspaper, The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. I witnessed his impact on millions the world over, felt his warmth one on one and came to admire a somewhat underappreciated dimension of his legacy: In Billy Graham’s world, hope comes from Jesus, not necessarily from Methodism or any other denomination. Those of us facing increasingly empty pews on Sunday mornings ought to pay special attention to that last point.
 
I poured much of what I know about Graham into “Billy Graham: A Life In Pictures,” a book blending memories and reflections in words and photographs. I signed a copy and sent it to Graham, who wrote me a thank-you note in which he reminisced about coming to Charlotte years ago to visit his mother.

 

In his tender words, I could see the frail, old man at the end of his life, looking back. That’s the Graham I experienced — warm, down to earth, more deeply personal than the pastor who commanded pulpits for 50-plus years.

 

Much to learn from Graham

 

If you and I were talking about all this over a cup of coffee, I’d tell you about the 305,000 people he drew to Charlotte in 1996 for his last hometown crusade. But I’d also tell you about the time he left a message on my answering machine, sharing a long and worried update on his ailing wife, Ruth, a message so long that the machine cut him off. Or, the times I wanted to focus an interview on the world leaders he knew, and he’d turn the conversation back to his childhood and memories of riding the bus to school. The prophetic and the personal, together making a connection.

 

There’s much that organized religion can learn from Graham.

 

By setting rules and surrounding himself with honest associates, he remained unsullied by scandal. The Modesto Manifesto was the most famous illustration, established at a meeting in Modesto, Calif., Graham and his colleagues agreeing never to be alone with a woman other than their wives.

 

Graham resisted the trappings of fame and fortune, living humbly in the small town of Montreat in the North Carolina mountains. That explains the Big Macs he served a colleague and me the day he had us over for lunch. He figured out how to effectively harness all forms of communications to spread the gospel — print, radio, television, movies and, of course, the mass spectacle of his crusades. If he was still active, I think he’d be tweeting.

 

Practices and principles worth heeding
 
What church these days couldn’t learn from him, for we all struggle to find the right balance of print and social media. He blended entertainment and religion, understanding that to win over hearts and souls, you first had to get them into the stadium with music and celebrities.
 
All of these practices and principles are worth heeding, especially at a time when Methodism and other mainline denominations struggle with declining numbers and impact.
 
As communications director at Myers Park United Methodist Church, I appreciate the need to learn another part of the Graham story: Throughout his ministry, he played down denominationalism by stressing the broader theme of salvation through Jesus. He grew up in an Associate Reformed Presbyterian church and became Southern Baptist. But that didn’t matter to most of the people drawn to his side, nor to him. He was trying to wrest people from the clutches of the culture, not from the competing church down the street. Not once during the dozen years I covered Graham all over the world do I remember him holding up one strain of Christianity over another.

 

We know this in the Methodist trenches: Most newcomers are coming to us in the hope that we can help them find their way and find meaning along life’s twisting path. The fact that we are Methodist, and that we stand on the foundation of John Wesley, matters not to the searchers. Same goes for those drawn to the church down the street, whatever the denomination.
 
Billy Graham understood that many of the 215 million people who came to the stadiums to hear him preach during his lifetime were looking for something beyond the emotion and the spectacle. They were looking for the meaning of life. Those of us preaching the same message, we need to understand that, too.
 
Ken Garfield is director of communications at Myers Park United Methodist Church in Charlotte, N.C. He is the author of “Billy Graham: A Life In Pictures” (Triumph Books, $19.99), available at most bookstores and online. He spent a dozen years covering religion and Billy Graham for The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. You can reach him at ken@mpumc.org.

 


umns13-301-2-280.jpg

Book cover of “Billy Graham: A Life in Pictures”
by Ken Garfield. View in Photo Gallery

List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수sort
193 World Kenyan: Rev. Dr. Stephen Sesi has Passed Away in Houston, Texas file db 2011-11-08 15934
192 Community Korean American Family Service Receives $35,000 Grant from Cedar-Sinai file db 2014-07-22 11679
191 Education [California Language School] ACCET Accreditation was approved on August 14, 2013 file db 2013-09-20 10803
190 Community Air Force Base Says No to Atheists; Nativity Scene Will Stay Up wonyil 2011-12-27 10688
189 Community PCUSA: Young Adult Volunteers (YAV Program) file db 2012-04-19 9637
188 Community Christians Grieve Death of Christopher Hitchens danny 2011-12-19 9448
187 Church Compassion CEO: Church Is Always One Generation From Going Extinct wonyil 2011-12-30 9008
186 Community San Gabriel Presbytery: Golf Tournament to support Living Waters for the World (May 14th, 2012) db 2012-04-02 8831
185 World In India, tribunal says state government failed to protect Christians danny 2011-12-16 8741
184 Community Major gift inspires generosity in Calif. congregation's hunger efforts danny 2011-12-13 8724
183 Community Arsonist Unsuccessful in Setting Church on Fire wonyil 2012-01-04 8517
182 World Lawyer Urges Removal of 'God' From Court Oath in Scotland wonyil 2011-12-27 8504
181 World Persecution hotspots in 2012 wonyil 2012-01-03 8411
180 Community Willow Creek North Shore “Just Serves” danny 2011-12-13 8278
179 Education More Transparency Needed in Science Textbooks, Museums danny 2011-12-16 8242
178 Community Survey: Unchurched Do Not Ponder Life's Purpose, Afterlife wonyil 2011-12-30 7958
177 Education Atheist Richard Dawkins Supports Bibles in Schools file wonyil 2012-05-22 7855
176 Community Ordinary people doing extraordinary things danny 2011-12-13 7720
175 World North Korea Vows No Change Despite New 'Supreme Leader' wonyil 2012-01-02 7617
174 Church Crystal Cathedral picks Chapman University as its buyer db 2011-10-31 7551