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part01
Aired May 17, 2021

Billy Graham

Prayer. Politics. Power.

Film Description

Billy Graham explores the life and career of one of the best-known and most influential religious leaders of the 20th century. From modest beginnings on a North Carolina farm, Graham rose to prominence with a fiery preaching style, movie-star good looks and effortless charm. His early fundamentalist sermons harnessed the apocalyptic anxieties of a post-atomic world, exhorting audiences to adopt the only possible solution: devoting one’s life to Christ.  Graham became an international celebrity who built a media empire, preached to millions worldwide, and had the ear of tycoons, royalty and presidents. At age 99, he died a national icon, estimated to have preached in person to 210 million people. Billy Graham examines the evangelist’s extraordinary influence on American politics and culture, interweaving the voices of historians, scholars, witnesses, family, and Graham himself, to create a kaleidoscopic portrait of a singular figure in the American experience.

Credits

Edited by
Jawad Metni

Produced by
Helen Dobrowski

Written by
Keven Mcalester

Directed by
Sarah Colt

Composer
Troy Herion

Post Production Supervisor
Nathan Manley

Associate Producer
Susan Resnick

Archival Production Assistant
Isaree Thatchaichawalit
Olivia Marsh

Field Producer
Michael Haviland

Additional Editing
Jon Neuburger
Mark Dugas

Director of Photography
John Baynard

Additional Photography
Jason Longo
Neil Barrett
Kelvin Edwards
Ben Mccoy
Keith Walker
M. Andrew Barrera
Josh Gibson
Jacob Kurtz

Production Sound
John O’connor
Adam Zletz
Andrew Smith
Damion Haux
Paul Gonzales
Sam Kashefi
Mark Mandler
Jason Pawlak
Eli Swenson
Matt Wefel

Re-Recording Mixer & Sound Supervisor
Ken Hahn C.A.S.
Audio Post @ B, Llc

Evan Anthony, CSI

Post Production Picture Services
Goldcrest Post Productions New York

Graphics Animation
G.R.O.W.
Alisa Placas Frutman
John M. Nee
Asher Nee
Brian T. Lee

Assistant Editor
Sandy Davis

Additional Archival Research
Amber Thomas Reynolds
Stephen Sowers

Fact Checking 
Hannah Peckham
Leah Ford

Bookkeeping
Quant Solutions, LLC

Music Assistant
Noah Fishman

Score Producer
Mark Baechle

Music Clearance
Chris Robertson
Global Image Works

Legal Services
Justine Jacob
Heather Butterfield

Advisors
Anthea Butler
Steven P. Miller
Grant Wacker

Archival Materials Courtesy of
ABCnews Videosource
Alamy
AP Archive
AP Photo
Atomic Footage - Atomcentral
Bill Moyers Journal

Archival Materials Courtesy of
Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
Bob Jones University
Brad Templeton
British Pathé
Buswell Library Special Collections, Wheaton College (Il)
Buyout Footage
Criticalpast
Chuck Nacke
Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum
Footage Farm
Getty Images
Franklin Graham
Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin
Harry S. Truman Library and Museum
Historic Films Archive, LLC
H. Lee Waters Film Collection, Rubenstein Library, Duke University
Huntley Film Archives
Internet Archive
Jean And Leighton Ford
John E. Allen Archive
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
John Guest
John Huffman
Kansas State Historical Society
Kanter Collection, The University of Oklahoma
Bill Wilson, Kenan Research Center at The Atlanta History Center
Liberty University
Library of Congress   
Bill Murphy, Los Angeles Times
L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University
Mdc’s Wolfson Archives
Miller Center, University of Virginia
National Archives and Records Administration
NBC5/Kxas News Collection, University of North Texas
NBC News Archives Via Getty Images
Newspapers.Com
Periscope Film
New-York Historical Society
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Publicdomainfootage.com
Reelin’ In the Years Productions
Reuters Via British Pathé
Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum
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Texas Archive of The Moving Image
Times Record News
Trinity College of Florida
University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center
USC Digital Library, Los Angeles Examiner Photographs Collection
UT Arlington Special Collections
Veritone / CBS
Western Carolina University
Wheaton College Billy Graham Center Archives
Wilson Library, UNC-Chapel Hill
WIAR-TV
The WPA Film Library
Youth for Christ

Archival Consultant
David Eades

Additional Music
"Eyes of Texas" 
Written by John Sinclair
Performed by Bill Boyd And His Texas Ramblers
Courtesy of Rca Records
By Arrangement With Sony Music Entertainment
Apm Music

Special Thanks
David Belton
Patsy Colhoun
Buffy Colt
Noah Dephoure 
Matthew Dobrowski
Katherine Graber
Callie T. Wiser
Chris Wolf

Billy Graham Original Production Funding Provided by
The Pew Charitable Trusts
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations

American Experience Original Production Funding Provided by
Corporation for Public Broadcasting
Liberty Mutual Insurance
Consumer Cellular
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation
The Documentary Investment Group

For American Experience

Post Production Editors
Paul Sanni
Lauren Noyes

Production Coordinator
Alexa Miguel 

Business Manager
Jaime-Lyn Gaudet  

Senior Contracts & Rights Manager
Susana Fernandes

Legal and Business Affairs
Jay Fialkov

Talent Relations
Janice Flood 

Marketing Manager
Violet Zarriello

Audience Engagement Editor
Carolyn Macleod

Special Projects Assistant
John Campbell

Publicity
Mary Lugo
Cara White

Digital
Kirstin Butler
Eric Gulliver
Tsering Yangzom

Director of Digital Content 
Ben Greenberg

Director of Audience Development 
Chika Offurum

Development Producer
Charlotte Porter

Series Producer
Vanessa Ruiz

Supervising Producer
Nancy Sherman

Senior Producer
Mark Zwonitzer

Deputy Executive Producer
Susan Bellows

Executive Producer
Cameo George

A Sarah Colt Productions Film for American Experience.

American Experience is a production of WGBH, which is solely responsible for its content.

© 2021 WGBH Educational Foundation
All Rights Reserved.

Transcript

Chicago / June 17, 1962 

BILLY GRAHAM: A nation never falls until it starts to decay at the center. Rome was a striking parallel to America today – a leader in world affairs. Rich and prosperous, with an economy that defied collapse. Her armies were respected by the nations of the world. But Rome fell. And that can happen right here today.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: There’s only one hope for the world. And that is Jesus Christ dying on a cross. You’ll never have an hour like this again in your entire life. This is it. And if you don’t come today, you may never come. I’m asking you right now to come. Surrender your heart and your life to Jesus Christ and say today, “I want my life changed. I want my sins forgiven.”

KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: , JOURNALIST: I'd met Frank Sinatra briefly and I met Billy Graham many times. They both had animal magnetism, almost like an aura around him. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: He spoke to more than 80 million people in person and hundreds of millions others on television.

BILLY GRAHAM: You are an American. And if America is to be spared and America is to continue to be blessed and honored of God, you are going to have to become a Christian.

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham is like the Protestant pope. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: There was a war between ambition and humility. He wrestled with that throughout his life. 
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: Billy was attracted to political power like a moth is attracted to flame.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: He was drawn to politicians. It was almost like a narcotic for him.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: The closer he moved Christianity to politics, the more he opened up the opportunity for Christianity being used to polarize, to politicize.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: He opened Pandora's box the second he stepped into the Oval Office for the very first time. 

BILLY’S RELIGION

The David Frost Show / July 22, 1969

DAVID FROST: Now it's my very great joy and privilege to welcome a friend who really needs no introduction. Will you welcome, please: Billy Graham.
AUDIENCE: [Applause]
DAVID FROST: What is it that you’ve got that other preachers haven’t?
BILLY GRAHAM: Well I think, uh, David, that God gave me the gift of an Evangelist. 
DAVID FROST: What is the gift particularly you’ve got? 
BILLY GRAHAM: Well, that’s what I’m saying. I believe it's a gift of the spirit of God. And when we get to Heaven I’m going to reach over and grab David Frost -- if you’re there!... 
DAVID FROST: Thank you! Thank you! 
BILLY GRAHAM: … And I’ll take you up to the Lord and I’ll say “Now, David wants an answer to this question,” because actually, I cannot answer that. I’m as surprised as anyone else...

LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: America is a land of salespeople. We have products to sell. We have markets to exploit and Billy Graham started out as a salesman. He started out selling Fuller brushes.

FULLER BRUSH NARRATOR: The sun never sets on the Fuller Brush dealer. He is America’s most famous visitor. The real friend of the housewife.

BILLY GRAHAM: I sold brushes from door to door in the Depression period. Many times you'd go to the door and the lady would come and just crack the door. And, I knew that the door was soon going to slam, so I always put my foot in there, you see. And my technique was to always offer the lady a free brush. And of course, in those days, that appealed. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He's a kid. He was six-two. By 17, he would have been tall and lean, blue-eyed, almost blond hair, and trying to make money to go to college.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He's beginning to sense at this point that he has a special gift. He has an ability to communicate with people that is striking, and it works. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: At the end of the summer, he was the top Fuller Brush salesman in all of North or South Carolina. And what he learned, he said, was sincerity: You have to believe in the product.

JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: When we were growing up, we had Bible reading and prayer every night about eight o'clock.
 
JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: And Mother would read the scripture, and Daddy would always pray. That was a habit just like brushing our teeth. And that’s what we did. We never thought about, “Did we enjoy it?” We just did it.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham was born in 1918. His parents had a dairy farm in North Carolina. And his parents were conservative Presbyterians.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: His family life was very much like that of great many other people in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. They believed in God. And most of them believed that God wanted them to win souls, to evangelize other people, to bring them to Christ.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Young Billy Frank Graham, as he was known at the time, was in some ways a normal teenager. He was rebelling to some degree against the strict piety of his parents, although not overtly so. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: After he got a driver's license, he had the advantage of being able to borrow his father's car and spend luxurious nights with girls, parking, or going to movies. He really liked the girls, and they liked him. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Even though he had a head full of Scriptures and prayers Billy wasn't completely convinced that he was a true Christian yet.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: One night he and his friends went to hear a traveling revivalist coming through the area named Mordecai Ham.

MORDECAI HAM: If you’re not acceptable in Heaven, do you want to know it, before it’s too late? How many of you do? I do. Lift your hand right now.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: At some point during that gathering, something Ham said connected with young Billy Frank Graham. And he decided at that moment to embrace the religion of his parents.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Billy wanted to go to college at the University of North Carolina. But his mother had come to believe that the road to hell went right through the campus of state schools. So she wanted him to go, as did his father, to a serious Christian college. 
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: He was sent off to Bob Jones College, which was one of the strictest fundamentalist colleges. 

FUNDAMENTALISM

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: Prior to the late 19th century, Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians believed in the authority of scripture, they believe that Jesus died for their sins, and they believe that they needed to convert the masses. You had cultural transformation and intellectual developments that began to disrupt Protestant culture.

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: American Protestant fundamentalism is a religious movement. 

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: It's a religious response to everything we associate with modernity. Technology, urbanization, the rise of sciences.

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: All of a sudden Protestants were broken up into multiple camps. And fundamentalists were just those who dug their heels, they drew a line in the sand, they said, "The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it."

PREACHER: We maintain the glorious idea that the Gospel does not change. It isn't reinterpreted from one generation to another generation. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: In fundamentalist circles, the Bible was dictated by God directly to human agents who wrote it down without error and passed it along, and was His fully dependable word. 
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: 
And so when they're looking at the book of Genesis, and they see that God created the world in six days, and rested on the seventh, they're taking those as literal days.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Protestant fundamentalists are driven by a particular urgency, because they expect the world to come to an end very soon.
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: It's really not worth it to get involved in politics, or culture. They want to separate themselves from the world to preserve the fundamentals of the faith, to keep the faith pure. And so they're starting their own churches. They’re starting colleges, their own publications.

BOB JONES: We have just one obligation in this school, that is to run a Christian school. A thing that isn't Christian doesn't belong on this campus. No compromise, no trimming, no cutting corners. A Christian school: That's our job.

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: That would have been a very strict environment for a Presbyterian Billy Graham. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Dating at Bob Jones College had to be scheduled, was restricted to 15 minutes at a time in a dormitory parlor, chaperoned, no touching.

FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: Billy couldn't stand it. He liked playing. And so this kind of strict demeanor of his parents' house and of Bob Jones really didn't suit him at all.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: 
He did not do well academically either. He flunked math. He was there for four months, and he was extremely unhappy.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Bob Jones was unflinching in his conviction that his opinions were right and those who disagreed with him were mistaken. And he predicted that Billy, when he decided to leave Bob Jones College, was not going to amount to anything.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Graham decides to go to Florida Bible Institute. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He had a friend there who talked about sunshine and orange trees and a golf course right next door.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Florida Bible Institute was theologically conservative, but it was more relaxed.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: He's still trying to figure out who he is. And what he's beginning to learn is that the persona of a preacher suits him very well. It's well-attuned to his gifts and to his abilities.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: In the south at the time Billy Graham was growing up, being an evangelist, being a preacher, they were cultural heroes. This was about as high on the status chart as you could get.
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: He began preaching, and he'd preach in these sort of derelict missions and these scrabbly churches with dogs in the sandy front yards. And as a friend said, "He'd preached to anything that would stand still."

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: The confidence, the ambition grew when he realized that he was actually really good at preaching. It was when those first people stepped forward and converted to Christ because of his preaching that he got the recognition that was so important to keep him going. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: When Billy Graham graduated the president noted, Billy just wants to do something big for God. He's not sure what it is yet, but he wants it to be really big.
RUTH - MARRYING UP

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: After he graduates from Florida Bible Institute, he says to himself, "I still need more preparation, more training." So he heads off to Wheaton College. He’s trying, I think, at that point to accumulate a bit of theological ballast.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: But the big thing that happens for Billy Graham at Wheaton College is that he meets Ruth. 
  
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Ruth Bell was the daughter of a Presbyterian medical missionary who had led the medical mission in Qingjiang, China. As a child, she had dreamed of being a missionary and hoped to die a martyr’s death. 
 
ANNE BLUE WILLS, HISTORIAN: She wanted to be a single woman in the plain of Tibet in the thin air by herself, preaching the gospel to nomads. 

ANNE BLUE WILLS, HISTORIAN: So she wanted to be as solitary, as challenged by a kind of Christian work as she could be.

JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: Billy wrote mother a letter and told her about Ruth. And said, "Mother, I know I'm going to marry her." 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Ruth was a good student, pretty much everybody acknowledged that she was a better student than he was.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: He told her on the third date that he did not feel the call to be a missionary. She eventually surrendered her missionary vocation, but nobody who knew Ruth Bell Graham ever thought she surrendered her will.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: This was a portentous time in American life. We're coming out of the Depression and then going into war. These were years and years of troubled times. 

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Prior to World War II, what we now know as evangelical Protestantism wore the label of fundamentalism. As the nation mobilizes, many conservative Christians relabel themselves as Evangelicals.

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Youth for Chris  was a byproduct of this emerging new evangelicalism.

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Youth for Christ was a more optimistic conservative Protestantism.

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Much more forward-looking, something that is in tune with the kind of spirit of the day, one in which America is emerging from a war and rebuilding itself. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Youth for Christ events resembled a kind of a Christian vaudeville show. The preachers themselves, they would dress very flashily, with bright colored suits and bright ties, and sometimes bowties that would light up. Their slogan was "Geared to the times, but anchored to the rock.”
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: You don't have to be considered a bumpkin anymore. You don't have to be considered intellectually retrograde. Become a part of American life.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Billy is drawn in to Youth for Christ as an evangelist. He was offered a position to be a full-time evangelist working for them. 
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Youth for Christ is, for Graham, a kind of halfway house out of the kind of strict, starchy fundamentalism of his childhood into a larger arena.
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: I can still remember going to Winona Lake, Indiana, where they had the annual Youth for Christ conference and a different preacher every night. But Billy was different than the others. 
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: The power of that voice to make people just listen was very striking. I once said it was like a train whistle on a prairie. We could hear it like a sound of something in the distance, but very, very powerful.
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: He loved the stage. He liked exciting people and getting them to commit to Christ.
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: He did have that personal ability to sense, I think,  people that he spoke with who were open to the message and open to him.
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: He was incredibly energetic and in three years he went through doing revivals in some 47 states and all Canadian provinces.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: The audience was never big enough for Graham, always had this sense of reaching out, have to do more and find different ways to do it.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Graham comes to a point when he recognizes that even Youth for Christ is too confining for him and this is when he decides to strike out on his own.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: He chooses, of all places, Los Angeles, the home of Hollywood, and this is going to be his launching pad into his own career.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: He has been in this spiritual battle, both internally and with his fellow evangelist and friend Charles Templeton. Templeton's argument is, "You know, look, your really hardcore fundamentalist gospel is out of date. People don't believe that the world was literally created in six days, and you need to update your message if you're going to get through to people."

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: And it creates something of a crisis of faith for a now 30-year-old Billy Graham, who is going into what is meant to be the biggest attempt he has ever undertaken to reach a lot of people.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: To him, the choice was, "I either preach the Bible as the literal word of God, or I leave the ministry.”

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: In a sense, Templeton is the acid, eating away at Graham's self-confidence. And Graham himself begins to think that he's got to come to terms with this message that he is preaching.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He goes out into the woods and he climbs the mountain a ways. And as the story goes, he has a kind of revelation. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: He talks about having really asked God to guide him in this moment, at this crossroads, and feeling this sense of peace and conviction that, no, he is right to continue on this path, where he is not to be questioning any of the literal truths of the Bible, but to preach it as God's holy word. And then he goes into the Los Angeles Crusade a liberated man, with a conviction about what it is that he is being called to do, and he never looks back.

LOS ANGELES
 
TRUMAN: ...We hoped that the Soviet Union would cooperate in this effort to build a lasting peace. But Communist imperialism would not have it so. 

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Late September of 1949, a series of events in the outside world come together the same time that he starts his revival. So it's a perfect storm. And for his career, it is the catapult. 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I believe that tonight, we're living in the most tragic hour in the history of the entire world. Our newspapers tell us today that rockets are being ringed around Western Europe and these rockets can shoot atomic missiles 5,000 miles, that could reach American cities from the Soviet Union.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: He was conscious of the importance of relevance. So even though his message was absolutely grounded in a literal reading of the Bible, he made it a point to connect those lessons  with what was happening in the news that day.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He understands people are scared. Who's behind all this? What's behind all this? Communism! They're strong, they're disciplined, and they're atheistic. 

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: He would use those fears as a way of lending a sense of urgency to his message and to his invitation to individuals to become part of the Christian faith.
 
BILLY GRAHAM I believe this sincerely from the depths of my heart, that unless the Western world has an old-fashioned revival, we are done for. We cannot last. We cannot stand the tremendous strain and stress of future days in our battle with communism unless we have a spiritual revival.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: People are coming, but not a lot of people, and probably not people who are not already Christians.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: A Salvation Army PR man is helping get the word out and is urging reporters to come to a press conference, which they do, and no one writes anything.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: After a few weeks, they were thinking, "Well, maybe we'll bring it to a close."
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: And he had the sense that he had failed.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: That evening, Billy was driving up to the tent, and there were cars all over. And he said, "What has happened?" 

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: One of them said, “You have been kissed by William Randolph Hearst.” Now at this point Hearst is one of the most prominent newspaper men in the country.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: What Hearst saw in Graham is a man who is fervently anti-communist, a man who believed in law and order. But I think even more important, Hearst saw a way to sell papers. Graham was flamboyant, he was attractive, he made great pictures on the front page. 

NEWS ANCHOR: Things are happening inside the big tent, as thousands come from the home, the schools, offices, stores, and factories. They come from greater Los Angeles, and from cities and towns in surrounding counties, filling the tent day after day.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: There are problems of fear, problems of sex, there are problems that face us tonight that will never be solved unless we bring them to the Lord Jesus Christ and turn our life, our burdens, our problems over to Him.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: It all came together then. By that fall, that meeting and the crowds, the situation, things coalesced.
      
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: The enormous results of that meeting cemented in his mind his own mission in shaping American Christianity.
FAME
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: As he went home, other travelers spoke to him, wanted his autograph. And he was just astonished. Wherever he went, people knew who Billy Graham was. 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He soon tours the country like a rockstar. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He goes to Boston and has a huge string of revivals there, takes the city by storm.
 
NEWS ANCHOR: Mr. Graham has preached to more than two million persons in great citywide campaigns in Columbia, South Carolina; Portland, Oregon; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Atlanta, Georgia.
 
TORONTO CRUSADE 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: The Lord Jesus Christ takes the hand of God, and he takes your hand...and he brings you together in reconciliation.
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He revels in these crowds, he revels in these moments, and he revels in the attention. And he's very good at it. He has an ability to connect with individuals, with small groups, and to hold hundreds of thousands, really, in sway, as he talks. 

PORTLAND CRUSADE 

BILLY GRAHAM: The most thrilling experience to me, is to look out upon a vast sea of faces and to see thousands of men and women and boys and girls gathered under one roof, to see the mood of an audience changed during the service.
 
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: 
The Graham strategy was very much to associate crusades with influential leaders, with civic leaders, politicians, celebrities, so as to have a kind of ripple effect upon the broader populace. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: 
For fundamentalists who had been operating around the margins of public life and public communication, it was a surprising thing, to them, to see Billy Graham engaging this directly in this very secular world. 

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: 
The next logical step is to show all of his followers that he actually has the ear of the powerful. And there's no better way to do that than receiving a White House invitation. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: In early 1950 Graham  is peppering President Harry Truman with letters and telegrams begging for a visit. Truman ignores them all. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Truman was a Baptist, and in keeping with the traditions of his faith at that point in time was a firm believer in the separation of church and state. He didn't like public displays of religion. He in fact writes in his diary that he takes guidance from the book of Matthew, chapters, five, six, and seven, which are known for their injunctions against showy displays of faith.
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Finally, house majority leader John McCormick puts in a good word with President Truman and Truman relents and lets Graham come to visit.
 
July 14, 1950
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Graham came to the meeting with three of his associates. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: They went to see the president with their white suits and hand-painted ties, and they looked like hospital orderlies at the racetrack. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Toward the end of the meeting, Graham asked Truman if he could pray with Truman, and through secondhand accounts, Truman evidently said, “Well, I suppose it couldn't do any harm.”

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Graham grabs Truman by the shoulder and is calling down a prayer for the president. Truman is uncomfortable the entire time, can't handle it. Things get worse when they leave. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: When Billy and his team came out of the president's office, the reporters were all there and talking, "What did he say? What'd he say? Was it good?"
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Graham made the grievous mistake of rehearsing, as best he could remember, every word Truman had uttered in the course of that hour conversation.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: But then they went out on the White House lawn and thanked God for the privilege of having met with the president. And the next day, that was on the front page of all kinds of newspapers all over the country. 
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Truman reacted very badly to what he took to be a show. He said, "All Billy Graham is interested in is just getting his name in the paper."
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: We have a letter from Truman to his secretary in which he said, “Do not ever let that man into the Oval Office again.”
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He's very green. He's a famous preacher by then, but he's very green when it comes to understanding the ways of the world. But he has a thick skin. And when people would say no to him, he'd just come right back at ’em. 

CAPITALISM
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: It's important for Billy Graham not to be perceived as a backwater revivalist. He's not some sort of snake handler. He's trying to bring this nation to Christ with all of the most powerful, influential figures of American society.
 
HENRY LUCE: Unless this country is called back to God’s moral law, there will be a national catastrophe.                                                                         
 BILLY GRAHAM: Well, the difficulty is, I think, that we forget that while we want to do good and we want to live by high standards and there are many thousands of people that want to obey the Ten Commandments and live up to the Sermon on the Mount, but they don’t find within themselves the qualities and the power to do it. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham is an ardent supporter of capitalism. He sees capitalism and Christianity as essentially one and the same. They're both doing good in the world. 
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: For the businessman, it is great to have a revivalist preacher legitimizing capitalism, endorsing free market capitalism. In Europe we see preachers preaching in favor of the welfare state. And that is exactly what businessmen don't want in the U.S in the 1950s.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Communism says the state is to own everything, and when the state owns everything, I believe you destroy individuality and you destroy character.
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: When Graham complains about communism, it's not just Stalin. It's FDR, it's Truman, it's people who are putting new laws on the books that regulate industry. Putting new laws in the books that uphold unions, that elevate workers' rights. These he sees as a threat to the American way of life.

BILLY GRAHAM: It will be a time of world revolution and lawlessness and crime and corruption such as the world has never known!

BUILDING AN ORGANIZATION

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham himself was a salesman. He saw himself as a salesman of faith. He said, ‘I'm selling the most important thing on earth. Why shouldn't I promote it as well as soap?’
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Want your problems solved? Want that burden lifted? Right now, you want those frustrations and inner conflicts quieted and you want inner serenity in your soul? Do you want that? You really do? All right, you can, right now, if you let Christ come into your heart. He’ll bring you inner pleasure and inner joy that nothing else can bring.

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Graham surrounds himself with a team that can act very much like a sophisticated corporation to sell their message and to win over converts.

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: They start very modestly by setting up the Billy Graham Evangelist Association in 1950, just an office in Minneapolis. But over the next four years, there's already an increase to 80 full-time staff members and this tells the story of revivalism turning into a business.
 
CLIFF BARROWS: I wonder if you’d take time to write that letter this week. Remember, our mailing address is just “Billy Graham, Minneapolis, Minnesota.” That’s all you need, just “Billy Graham, Minneapolis, Minnesota.”

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Giving is a quintessential Christian duty and everyone who attended the crusade meetings knew they were expected to make an offering.

FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: When he founded the Association, he made rules for it, that they run their finances perfectly, and so he had outside auditors and so forth coming in and running through them with a fine-toothed comb.

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: There were a lot of other kinds of evangelists that preyed upon their members and people who came to the shows and took their money and were not sincere. 

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham is aware that an early scandal could destroy the mission. And that is why he's setting up his organization as a nonprofit. He proudly claimed that he only received the salary of an ordinary minister throughout his career. 

BILLY GRAHAM: Now what about the radio and the television?

COLLEAGUE: Well this radio broadcast on June 4th is...

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Graham was incredibly careful about the moral hygiene of his operation and his daily life, where his rule was about never being in a room alone with a woman other than his wife, which can sound incredibly archaic, except when they were traveling on the crusades, that his companions would have to go into his hotel room first and search it because they might find women hiding in his hotel room.

MEDIA EMPIRE

CLIFF BARROWS: This is the Hour of Decision! The Hour of Decision has come to you today from the crusade auditorium in Atlanta, Georgia. This is ABC, the American Broadcasting Company.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: In November 1950, Billy Graham launches his radio program.

BILLY GRAHAM: An Associated Press dispatch in an Atlanta paper this morning states that many feel that the third World War is just around the corner.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: It’s eventually broadcast out on three different networks, about 850 stations, and reaches an audience of about 20 million Americans a week. It's hugely influential.

BILLY GRAHAM: I believe that the heart of our society is our home... 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: When Graham starts on television, it's still a fairly new medium. Billy Graham’s media empire takes root with incredible speed. Soon after starting his radio program and his TV show, he establishes a movie studio called World Wide Pictures.

CLIFF BARROWS: Hello, welcome to World Wide Pictures. I’m glad we’re going to have a few moments together. 

ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE: CLIPS FROM WORLD WIDE PICTURES FEATURE FILMS

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: He and his team were able to use those new media technologies brilliantly to create Graham as a religious celebrity.

 “Oiltown, USA” 1953

BILLY GRAHAM: One of the most amazing things in all the universe is that God loves us. I want you to bow your head right now and let me lead you in a word of prayer, will you? Repent of your sins. Confess that you’re a sinner. You can do it right where you are, right now.

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: 
It's important to understand that there's a strand of conservative American evangelicalism that have always viewed advanced technologies as sinful. The radio. Television. Movie industries. These are all just kind of paths to hell. They'll just take us to hell in a handbasket. 

 “Wiretapper” / 1955

WIRETAPPER ACTOR: Now, please get in the car. 
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: But there was another group of evangelicals that came along and said, “It's not the technology itself. The technologies are morally neutral. It's what you do with them.” 

WIRETAPPER ACTRESS: Jim, look. Let’s go hear him.

WIRETAPPER ACTOR: What?

WIRETAPPER ACTRESS: I can’t explain it. I just have a feeling it’s something I need.

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: With these movies, he's saying we're spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ. We are fulfilling our evangelical mission by giving content to a sin-sick society where they can go to the picture show and hear a message that Christ loves them. 

FAMILY 

BILLY GRAHAM: Tonight, Cliff Barrows has a very special guest, at least to me.
 
CLIFF BARROWS: Ladies and gentlemen, tonight it’s my privilege tonight to introduce to you Mrs. Billy Graham. Ruth, we’re glad that you’ve taken time out of your busy household duties to spend a few minutes with us this evening on the program. 
 
RUTH GRAHAM: Thank you, Cliff. 
 
CLIFF BARROWS: You know, many folks have asked why you don’t take more time to be with your husband. Do you have a good reason? 
 
RUTH GRAHAM: I have four good reasons. 
 
CLIFF BARROWS: Four of them, what are they? 
 
RUTH: Virginia, Anne, Ruth and Franklin.

ANNE BLUE WILLS, HISTORIAN: While he was traveling around and his career was really starting to take off Ruth was at home having children. 

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: What Graham is exhibiting is what I would say is pristine American white masculinity. That masculinity of, ‘I'm handsome. I have a beautiful wife. I have beautiful children. My life is in control.’

ANNE BLUE WILLS, HISTORIAN:There's a glamour boost that the two of them deliver to American Protestantism that, you know, ‘Maybe I can't be quite as beautiful but I can try, I can aspire to that.’

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: Every time that he was photographed he was saying to all of his followers, ‘This is who we are, and this is how Christians should live.’

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: For fundamentalists, Billy Graham took them from the fringes of society and put them right into the center of American Protestantism. Billy Graham becomes a household name, and he ends up making American evangelicalism a household name as well.

1952 ELECTION

RADIO ANNOUNCER: For the first time in history, a revival meeting is held on the steps of the Capitol building in Washington. 40,000 braved drizzling weather to hear evangelist Billy Graham pronounce his cures for today’s evils.

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: When Billy Graham thought about a United States, he thought about it as a Christian nation fallen from grace. So a Christian nation that had to be redirected. 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: The Oval office meeting with Truman went very poorly. He quickly sets his sights on a return visit about 18 months later.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN:  There's a clear difference in these two Washington events.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I ask the United States Senate and Congress to request the President, once again in our hour of crisis, when we stand on the abyss of national destruction and catastrophe, to call our people to prayer.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: The rally on the steps of the U.S. Capitol put Graham's strength on display. And it shows political leaders how powerful and how popular he can be. 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: We have been the recipients of the choicest bounties of Heaven. We have been preserved these many years in peace and prosperity. We’ve grown in number, wealth, and power as no other nation has grown. But we have forgotten God. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He firmly believes the country needs a religious revival, and he’s now set himself up to do whatever he can to do that, to lobby political leaders, to influence them, to call on their citizens and his followers to make demands upon them.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He wants Harry Truman to come to the Washington crusade. Truman refuses. Congress is much more receptive.

BILLY GRAHAM: I have been amazed and gratified and thrilled to find that among many of our great leaders in the Congress and throughout the government are devout Christians. Two of these distinguished gentlemen are with us tonight.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Congressman, I’ve been trying to get Christian men to run for political office around the country. What do you think about that?
 
PERCY PRIEST: I firmly believe that you expressed it well when you said God is working here in the national capital. 
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: This was the first time Graham really soaked in the political dynamics of Washington whether it was with the Senate or the House, or Supreme Court justices. People were really listening to him. And these people who were themselves among the most powerful people in the country, were affirming and validating his power. It kind of went to his head. 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I was talking to a presidential candidate just the other day, you know, we have quite a few these days, and I was telling him that if I wanted to win the election, and call the people back to God and back to Christ and back to the Bible, I said I believe I’d be elected.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: He says, you know, ‘evangelicals will vote one way, and I could swing 16 million evangelicals with a single word.’ Which, whether or not there is truth to that, it was a remarkable thing to say.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Graham makes it clear that he and his followers are going to have some influence. That the nation needs to turn to God, and that that needs to be a campaign issue, and he wants the country to rally around a candidate who can deliver that.
 
ANNOUNCER: Out of the heartland of America, out of this small-frame house in Abilene, Kansas, came a man, Dwight D. Eisenhower. Through the crucial hour of historic D-Day, he brought us to the triumph and peace of VE Day.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Billy Graham had taken a real appreciation for Dwight Eisenhower, as of course had most Americans.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: A Texas oilman named Sid Richardson wanted Eisenhower to become president and he so enlisted Billy Graham. 
  
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: And so here he is, this very young man, he’s knocking on the door of the five-star general. He told Eisenhower that the fate of the Western world hinged upon Eisenhower’s decision. 
    
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Eisenhower’s astonished by this young guy. But as it happens, Eisenhower liked it.
 
ADVERTISEMENT: You like Ike, I like Ike, everybody likes Ike for president. Hang up the banner, beat the drum. We’ll take Ike to Washington.
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: 
Billy Graham serves as Eisenhower’s spiritual advisor on the campaign. And he offers Eisenhower some scriptural references he can drop into speeches, some themes he might want to hit on the campaign trail.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I want to say something to you tonight, to you church members, you people who profess Christianity. I believe it’s your duty more than any other group to go to the polls and vote. You owe your country. You owe unborn generations your vote at this election. You say, “Well, Billy, who shall we vote for?” Now, I’m not entering partisan politics. Of course, I have my own opinion, and I’m going to register my opinion next Tuesday at the poll, but nobody’ll know but myself and God.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: I think it's fair to say he feigned an impartiality, but his preferences were clear.
 
GOD AND COUNTRY
November 4, 1952
 
NEWS ANCHOR: America speaks at the polling booths from coast to coast as 55 million from all walks of life cast their votes for the 33rdman to become president of the United States. 
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Eisenhower wins a resounding victory in 1952. He calls Graham to his hotel in New York city after the election and has a meeting with him. And he says, “I think one of the reasons I was elected was that we need spiritual renewal in this country.”
 
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER: ...Preserve, protect and defend the constitution of the United States…
 
KEVEN KRUSE: Eisenhower firmly believed that religion needed to be worn on one sleeve. That faith had to be manifested in public in order to inspire people in private.

DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER: My friends, would you permit me the privilege of uttering a little private prayer of my own?

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Eisenhower  believed that national success depends on shared sacrifice and that the Cold War, at some level, was a spiritual battle. And that, in order to summon people into alliance depended on having a larger spiritual purpose that was explicit.

Billy Graham: Communism is a religion. At this moment, it appears that Communism has all the earmarks of Antichrist. It is masterminded by Satan himself. Who is greater: Marx or Christ?

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: What Billy Graham could provide to Eisenhower is a way to deploy certain kinds of ideas about nationalism, and Christianity, and pushing back against the communist threat.

BILLY GRAHAM: The communist philosophy has infiltrated into every country of the world, including America.

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham thinks that America is a special nation. He believes that it is a nation that is supposed to lead the rest of the world in terms of democracy, in terms of Christianity.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I want to tell you it’s more patriotic—more patriotic!—to be a Christian, to live for God, than it is to carry a gun in time of war.
 
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER: America is the greatest force that God has allowed to exist on his footstool.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I believe that America is the great spiritual arsenal of the world.
  
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: Eisenhower was pleased by thinking of Graham as the sort of religious leader of the country.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN:  Together, they help effect a new set of ceremonies and symbols that conflate piety and patriotism to a degree never seen before. 

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: It's during Eisenhower's presidency for instance, the prayer breakfast became an annual event, an event at which clerics and politicians of all political stripe come together to pray for the nation.

Children: I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible….
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN:  We get the addition of “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance for the first time when it previously had been secular, had  no mention of God. We get the adoption of “In God We Trust” as a nation’s first official motto in 1956. It’s added to paper currency for the first time in 1957. 
 
ANNOUNCER: President Eisenhower and Postmaster Summerfield take part in the introduction of the first stamp with a religious message. The new stamp will carry to the world America’s message of liberty and faith.

BILLY GRAHAM: Our forefathers came to this country seeking freedom, and they brought in their hands a Bible, and they said, “On this book, we shall build a nation.”
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Many Americans think of America as a Christian nation, but in the Constitution the only references to Christianity are ones that keep it as removed from the state, that there should be no religious test for office, that there should be no established state religion, that there should be, uh,  no government control over what private citizens can believe.

NEWS ANCHOR: President and Mrs. Eisenhower hear evangelist Billy Graham preach at the National Presbyterian Church in Washington…
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Eisenhower and Graham completely turn this around and make it clear that America is, if not a Christian nation, perhaps a Judaeo-Christian nation, one that has a religious faith at its core.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: This new religious nationalism is a remarkable change, a stark shift from the norms of American life before. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Eisenhower is the first genuine relationship Graham has with someone with that much power. It's the start of a learning curve that then develops with each successive president.
1954 UK CRUSADE
 
February 23, 1954
 
NEWS ANCHOR: American Billy Graham faces a battery of press cameras as, with his young wife Ruth, he comes to Britain on board the luxury liner SS United States.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham looks at London as a very secular place. He doesn’t know if revivalism will work in the UK the way it does in the U.S. But there is the ambition to change the world, to tackle this obstacle.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Church attendance in the United States is about three times that which it is in Britain. And now these British clergymen have invited us to come and use the method that, to some extent at least, they feel has been successful in the United States.
 
Reporter: You mention Harringay Arena. Now, that seats about eleven-and-a-half thousand people –
 
BILLY GRAHAM: That’s right.
 
REPORTER: -- and you’ve booked it for 12 weeks. Does that seem optimistic to you?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I think that by all indications Harringay Arena is going to be too small.
 
REPORTER: Too small?
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: The British press was surprised that an American revival preacher would be bold enough to plan a campaign which would run for 12 weeks in London. There were all these stereotypes about American revival preachers, them just being too loud, and just a little bit too much fire and brimstone for the more reserved British.

JOHN GUEST: I went with one of the other young men who was training to be an engineer as I was. So  here we’re walking up to this huge structure with the crowds pouring in. And then when we got inside, it was so crowded already we had to sit toward the back on the ground floor level. So that puts you quite a long way away from the podium.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: We are diseased. The Bible teaches that we have a spiritual disease. Every person in this audience tonight is infected with this disease. What’s wrong? The whole world, you, you here tonight, are searching for peace.
 
JOHN GUEST: He immediately had my attention. I ran with a pretty hardheaded group of young lads. Done some shoplifting, had one idea about what a girl was for. I was ashamed of myself, if you really wanted to know.

BILLY GRAHAM: You thought that perhaps prosperity would bring it. You think perhaps a sex experience will bring it. You think that getting drunk may bring it. You try a thousand ways. Why? Because sin has gradually dulled your conscience until now, sin no longer bothers you. Sin has become your master.
 
JOHN GUEST: So when Billy Graham spoke about Jesus dying for our sins, if you ask Christ to come into your life, you could be forgiven. Begin again.

Billy Graham: Jesus went to the cross for you. He hung openly in front of a crowd for you. Certainly you can come a few feet for him. You come, we’re going to wait on you. Every head bow while we wait. Just get up right now, quickly, hundreds of you, from all over the place, come. Men, women, young people, whole families...
 
JOHN GUEST: To myself I’m thinking, “That’s what I’m looking for! That’s what I want!” To put it plainly, it was the first time in my whole human experience that I felt clean on the inside. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: This large arena was entirely packed for weeks and weeks and weeks.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: So many people wanted to come that couldn’t get into it, they established what they called landline relays, where his voice was carried over telephone lines to theaters and churches all over.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Both the American ambassador and the British home secretary said that Billy Graham had done more for Anglo-American relationships than any other person had done since the end of World War II.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Our destinies as two nations are linked together, and I sincerely believe that this is a demonstration on the moral and spiritual level that our two nations are one.
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: As the crusade came to a close, Billy Graham realized that his life had changed. He was not only now the most famous preacher in the United States, he was now the most famous in London. And if you’re famous in London, you’re famous all over the world.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: There’s a point sometime in the 1950s when it’s arguable that Billy Graham becomes the most famous person in the world. And the kind of global celebrity that he had shapes everything that followed.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: New York is the big place. Billy Graham specifically likened New York to Sodom and Gomorrah from the Hebrew Bible. This in many ways was the last frontier for him.
 
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: New York City symbolized many things that fundamentalism was not, from its religious diversity, to its racial diversity, to its comparative secularism.
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: In the late summer of 1956, Billy said, “Next year, we’re going to Madison Square Garden.”
 
 
JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: Billy asked us to go to New York. We were 23, 24 years old. 
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: Billy said, “I want you to go and work with the churches up there and tell them what this is about, and recruit them and encourage them to be part of it.”
 
JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: We had a pretty big office down near Times Square. And I ran the switchboard some of the time.

JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: : Just a moment, please. Judson two-one-seven-nine-oh. Yes, it is. Thank you, I’ll connect you.
 
JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: I guess there were about a dozen people or more that worked there.

LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: I went to Baptists and Lutherans and Pentecostals and the Seventh Day Adventists and Hispanic churches. Took the buses, took the subway, drove around.
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: I was supposed to go to the churches and say, “This is your crusade, not Billy Graham’s. This is God’s work, and we’re here to serve.”
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: He refused to be sponsored by the fundamentalists there. He insisted on being sponsored by the mainline denominations.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: He reached out to the Catholic churches, he even reached out to the Jewish community in New York, and he invited all these people of faith to come together.
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: Let’s get everybody together because everybody needs Jesus, and some of these divisions that we’ve created are preventing the gospel of Jesus from going out to the largest possible audience.
 
ARCHIVAL STILL: REINHOLD NIEBUHR AND COLLEAGUES
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: It was very controversial, I’d say both theologically on the left and on the right.
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: Reinhold Niebuhr, the great ethicist and theologian, was one of Billy Graham’s most consistent and caustic critics. Niebuhr believed that the message that Graham was giving was that society was nothing more than a collection of individuals. And Niebuhr believed that the techniques of revivalism, the very message itself, oversimplified the dynamics of a modern society.

REINHOLD NIEBUHR: I criticize the revival wherever it gives petty and trivial answers to very great ultimate questions about the meaning of our life.

NEW YORK SUCCESS
May 15, 1957
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: I can remember standing in Madison Square Garden. I stood there looking at that cavernous stadium, the day before it all started, and looking up at those empty seats and saying, “What is this going to be like?”
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: There was a contract to start with for three or four weeks. It could be extended, it was extended a week and another week and another week. Went on sixteen-and-a-half weeks.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Coming from a small town in Missouri, I had never seen that many people in one place. Madison Square Garden seated 18,000. And I remember the lines. The lines of people outside trying to get in. It was like a sporting event. 
 
ANNOUNCER: Tonight, we’re delighted to have from Montgomery, Alabama, Dr. Martin Luther King, the minister of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.

ARCHIVAL STILL: Martin Luther King, Jr.

JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: Billy Graham invites this young up and coming minister, Martin Luther King Jr., to be part of the program as a way of reaching across racial and ethnic lines.
 
MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.: Heavenly Father, we thank thee this evening for the marvelous things that have been done in this city through the dynamic preaching of this great evangelist. We ask thee, O God, to continue blessing him. Give him continued power and authority.
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: Billy Graham  knows, to his credit, that this tall, white, blue-eyed preacher is not going to bring in Black people or Latinos and Latinas. He needs other folks to help bridge that gap.

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: He’s also making a statement about civil rights in the Southern region. He’s trying to expand his audience to include people of color, saying that you are actually welcome as part of this campaign. 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: We are praying that God is going to give a new soul and new spirit to this great city that leads the world in so many ways, and we’re praying that in the next few weeks it will at least have started on its way to world leadership in moral and spiritual values. 
 
GRAHAM’S RALLY IN TIMES SQUARE
 
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: The New York crusade was a critical turning point. It was really the final straw for a generation of fundamentalists, who then, you know, pretty much publicly divorced themselves from Billy Graham. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Bob Jones declared that Billy had made a serious mistake for preaching with the support of a whole range of unsound churches.
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham himself is aware he is close to politics, he is close to celebrity culture, he is close to so many things that Protestant fundamentalists despise. And Bob Jones is pushing Billy Graham to make a decision.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: However much he wanted the support of fundamentalists for both strategic and emotional reasons, he realized he could do without them. 
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: At that moment, he turned in his card to the card-carrying fundamentalists and he said, ‘I’m not one of you anymore.’

MLK vs. BILLY
 
KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: One of the major developments of the 1950s is the emergence of the modern civil rights movement. And it becomes the real test of what American democracy is all about.

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham was born into a South that was heavily segregated. Graham’s evangelical circles were overtly white. Evangelicalism was defined by its whiteness.

MINISTER: God is the greatest of all segregationists. He made the white man white, and he made the Black man Black, and I for one will honor God’s creative act. 

DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: By the early ’50s, Billy Graham has become more progressive in his racial views, so that by 1953, he begins desegregating his revivals.

ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham wants everybody to know that they are the same in the eyes of God. 
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: But he wants people to obey the laws of the land. And that’s where things get sticky. Because it’s one thing to say you believe that all men and women are created in God’s image and in the sight of God, but at the same time, tell them they can’t use the water fountain and they can’t go to the same bathroom as a white person.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: You cannot legislate morals. You cannot make people love each other. That can only come from within. And whether you are of the white race or the Negro race in the United States, you have an obligation as a Christian to love your fellow man no matter who he may be.

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: After the New York campaign, Martin Luther King Jr. sees an opportunity with Billy Graham, to press him on civil rights. 
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: Billy Graham is doing a crusade in San Antonio, Texas, and as is his common practice, he’s going to partner with prominent political officials to be part of it. And in this case, he has the governor of Texas, Price Daniel, on the program to introduce him.
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: The problem is Price Daniel is a noted segregationist.
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Martin Luther King hears about this. And so he writes to Graham and asks Graham, would he please not appear on stage with Governor Price Daniel? Martin Luther King believes that if Billy Graham would rescind that appearance, that it would mean that Billy Graham was supportive of the civil rights movement and would not support an open segregationist.
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham refuses. 
 
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: One of Graham’s associates, Grady Wilson, wrote a letter saying, you know, essentially, ‘Billy loves Price Daniel as a Christian brother. And frankly, Dr. King, you should have a similar perspective as well.’

“EYES OF TEXAS” SINGER: The eyes of Texas are upon you, ‘til Gabriel blows his horn.
1960 ELECTION

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: The eight years of the Eisenhower administration were crucially important for Billy Graham. It opened the world up to him in a way that would not have been done otherwise, and he enjoyed that.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham sees the 1960 election as his opportunity to become intimately engaged in political machinations which would lead to the election of his friend Richard Nixon over the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Billy had met Nixon all the way back to 1952 in the U.S. Senate dining room, and they immediately hit it off. They simply liked each other. Their views largely synchronized, political views. They were both moderately conservative Republicans.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Nixon’s more of a peer and they sort of grew up together, in a sense, that Nixon’s arrival as a famous public person, as a senator, and as a vice president corresponds with Graham’s. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: There’s this extraordinary moment during the New York crusade where Nixon now, as vice president, comes to the crusade, and it’s one of the gatherings at Yankee Stadium. And Graham and Nixon walk out onto the field together and the crowd just roars. And I think it not only was a visceral encounter with the power that Graham had over people, but it was an encounter with something that Nixon himself had never experienced in his public life. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Billy Graham knew what it was to be loved, knew what it was to experience public adulation, enormous respect. And Nixon’s respect for it, maybe his envy of it, his understanding of that that was the way Graham was seen, I think had a real impact on Nixon. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: So there is all this background with Nixon, but now Nixon becomes the alternative to this Catholic candidate. 
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: For John Kennedy to be the democratic nominee and a Roman Catholic was for many American Protestants almost a kind of existential threat. 
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: Protestants thought of Catholics as being ruled by the pope, having no sense of separation of church and state. All those Catholic monarchies in Europe convinced them of that.

BILLY GRAHAM: I think there are definite problems for the American people in a Roman Catholic running for president. However, I do not believe this should be a time for religious bigotry.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Graham says one thing publicly, and he does something else privately. This is one of Graham’s ongoing traits when it came to politics.
 
MONTREUX, SWITZERLAND
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: He convened a meeting of prominent American evangelicals at a chateau in Montreux, Switzerland. Very influential evangelicals: L. Nelson Bell, who was Billy Graham’s father-in-law, and then Norman Vincent Peale.
 
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: Norman Vincent Peale was a celebrity minister. He was famous for a book called The Power of Positive Thinking.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: It’s not clear exactly what was said, but at some point in this meeting, they decided that they would work to derail Kennedy. 

KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: He wrote to Nixon and told him everything he was doing.

REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: There was a meeting at the Mayflower Hotel, one of the hotels in Washington, and they came out with a statement questioning whether a Catholic should be president.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: When Norman Vincent Peale spoke to the press, it was widely taken as an overt manifesto of anti-Catholicism. 
 
FRANCES FITZGERALD, WRITER: Peale was widely criticized. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Billy wasn’t there, he was in Europe. He clearly was instrumental in setting it up. But he doesn’t say anything publicly after the meeting goes awry.
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: At that point, Peale was left out hanging to dry.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Peale was mortified.
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: Jack Kennedy picks up the Washington Post, sees the story. He has an invitation to speak to the Houston Ministerial Association. When he read the story, he says, ‘I got to go.’
 
JOHN F. KENNEDY: I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic, Protestant, nor Jewish, where no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials… But if this election is decided on the basis that 40 million Americans lost their chance of being president on the day they were baptized, then it is the whole nation that will be the loser.
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: He gave that speech on religious freedom, and without that he would never have won.
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: Now I was only 20 years old at that time, but very politically active, and I watched carefully. Billy, I know, was for Nixon, but he right away goes and plays golf with Kennedy.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I have great sympathy for the need in this country for racial understanding, racial justice, but I don’t believe it’s going to be settled in the streets. I think it’s going to be settled in the hearts of people.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham sees racial equality as an important issue. At the same time, he looks upon the activism of civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr. as troubling. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: He believed in order. Graham's really is a gospel of obedience. The whole fundamental principle of civil disobedience, I think, is a hard one for him to really understand.

JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: Martin Luther King and others are really trying to provoke a response from segregationists in order to bring attention to these injustices. And so to that end, they go to the hotspots. And in 1963, Birmingham, Alabama was one of the hottest of the hotspots. 

DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: The Southern Christian Leadership Conference under the leadership of Dr. King plan a mass campaign to hold city leaders accountable for desegregating the city.

STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: Graham urged King and other civil rights activists to, quote: “put the brakes on it a little bit” in Birmingham, to kind of slow down, wait for things to get better.

DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: I was there for CBS News. Dr. King was arrested. He was put in jail. While in jail, he wrote the now-famous Letter from a Birmingham Jail.

MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.: My dear Fellow Clergymen…  I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice...who constantly says, “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action.” 
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: Even though he’s speaking to those clergy members from the city of Birmingham, he’s articulating a larger critique of the white evangelical movement, namely, it’s moderates, of which Billy Graham is at the forefront.
 
MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.: ...I have been disappointed with the church... In the midst of blatant injustices inflicted upon the Negro, I have watched white churchmen stand on the sideline and mouth pious irrelevancies and sanctimonious trivialities.
  
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: I asked myself, “Where is Billy Graham?” He could make a big difference.

BILLY GRAHAM: I am not a right winger. I’m not a left winger. And I have tried to stay away from being extremist on either side. And sometimes this is difficult because I feel the pressure from both right and left constantly.
 
JEMAR TISBY, WRITER: When it really came to expressing solidarity with Black people and their allies, it just didn’t fit with the larger project of white evangelicalism.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I’m afraid that people are getting a distorted idea about American democracy, when they see, for example, rubber hoses and police dogs and all these things being used. Because I think these are isolated incidents that do not really reflect the mood of the entire country.  
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: This moment captures the ways that Billy Graham often obscured his hunger, thirst and quest for popularity and mass acclaim. This was a moment where he would have just had to lose a critical mass of his followers if he had taken a definitive stand on the side of civil rights protesters.
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: King is advocating for rights for African Americans and for all people. 
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Graham advocated for power. Graham advocates for power for himself.
NIXON
 
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: The 1960s were a tumultuous time, climaxing in 1968. The assassinations. Tremendous divisions over the war in Vietnam. Literal race riots in the streets. The chaos surrounding the presidential nominating conventions. 
 
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: So there was a sense of fatigue. Gosh, we just can’t keep going this way as a country. We’d had Democratic control of the White House and both houses of Congress for eight years. Now we’re going to try something new.

ANNOUNCER: Tonight, from Atlanta, The Nixon Answer!
 
RICHARD NIXON: Hi, how are you? Thank you, thank you very much, thank you! 
 
RICHARD NIXON: We have some other visitors to Atlanta today. An old friend, one who is visiting his crusade office today, Billy Graham and Mrs. Graham, right next to him.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: When Richard Nixon is finally elected in 1968, Graham was euphoric. 

STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: By that point, Nixon had a close relationship with Graham for almost a generation. And so if Graham’s desire going back with Truman was to have that voice in the White House, why then he really had it.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Nixon made it a point that if he didn't talk to Graham regularly that one of his closest aides would. And when Graham called, his calls went through. 
 
ARCHIVAL AUDIO: PHONE CALL BETWEEN BILLY GRAHAM AND RICHARD NIXON

ASSISTANT: Reverend Billy Graham on the line, sir.
BILLY GRAHAM: Hello?
RICHARD NIXON: Hello.
BILLY GRAHAM: Mr. President?
RICHARD NIXON: Is this Billy?
BILLY GRAHAM: This is Billy Graham.
RICHARD NIXON: How are you?
BILLY GRAHAM: I wanted to tell you that’s by far the best anybody...


December 1968

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Graham goes to Vietnam, partly as a goodwill ambassador, in a semi-official way. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Graham’s position on the Vietnam War evolved. At the beginning he was a hawk. In the late ‘60s, early ‘70s, he’s not as hawkish as he had been.

REPORTER: You’re a close friend of President Nixon. What is your feeling he’ll do about the war in the first year or two of his office?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Well, he – I saw him last Monday night, and the last thing he said to me as I went out the elevator, he said, “Tell those men over there that we’re pulling for them and that we’re going to try to bring peace as quick as we can.”
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Soon after Nixon’s inauguration, Graham sends a letter to the president. The main thrust of it is that the United States military needs to withdraw and let the Vietnamese take over the prosecution of the war. 
 
REPORTER: Did President Nixon offer you a position in his administration?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I couldn’t answer that. I will- My position in his administration will be that of just a friend.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Without question, Graham not only had a close working relationship with Nixon. They did talk about policy, and this contradicts Graham’s frequent statement that they did not talk about policy, that the relationship was purely pastoral. 
 
ARCHIVAL AUDIO: PHONE CONVERSATION BETWEEN BILLY GRAHAM AND RICHARD NIXON

BILLY GRAHAM: I’ve got an editorial in The New York Times on Friday, which I wrote this morning.
 
RICHARD NIXON: Good for you. Good.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: And I’m putting all the blame for this whole thing on Kennedy.
 
RICHARD NIXON: That’s right! He started the damn thing!
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Yeah, and I got all that in there. And they’ve taken it. They’re going to print it Friday morning.
 
RICHARD NIXON: Good. Well, believe me, Billy, it means an awful lot. And you keep the faith, huh?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: You betcha. 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: In May of 1970, Nixon reveals to the public that America has actually widened the war in Vietnam. He promised to draw it down instead he’d actually expanded it, and he expanded it by invading Cambodia. 

Kent State University / May 4, 1970
 
NEWS ANCHOR: The town of Kent and the Kent State campus erupted in violent demonstrations against America’s involvement in Cambodia and Vietnam, demonstrations that lasted four days and ended when four students died in a volley of National Guard gunfire.
 
REPORTER: What’s your reaction to the killings at Kent State?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I felt like somebody kicked me in the stomach. I just hoped and prayed this would not happen in America. Because it could be the beginning of more violence.
 
May 28, 1970

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Just a few weeks after the Kent State Killings, Billy Graham held a crusade in Knoxville, Tennessee. 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: The entire country is in turmoil and Nixon is looking for a way to counter-balance these protests. And Billy Graham offers the way out by inviting him to come down to the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Nixon had strong support in the region, especially in east Tennessee where Knoxville is located. 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Graham steps forward to offer a very public vindication of the president at the moment he’s being vilified by everyone else.

BILLY GRAHAM: All Americans may not agree with the decision a president makes. But he is our president.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Graham's primary loyalty was to Nixon. And that trumped Graham's judgment about the morality of the expansion of the war in Southeast Asia. Graham was willing to set that aside and say, ‘Nixon's the guy, Nixon's my person. And I'm going to rescue him, at this moment of real political danger.’

CROWD: One, two, three, four, we don’t want no stinkin’ war.

CROWD: [Boos and yelling]

RICHARD NIXON: Billy Graham, when he invited me to come here, he told me that there would be youth from the university, from other parts of the state, representing different points of view. I’m just glad that there seems to be a rather solid majority on one side rather than the other side tonight.

Crowd: [Cheering]

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: There was a celebration within the White House of these visuals of Richard Nixon side by side with Billy Graham in the face of these lawless heathen protesters. You couldn't have possibly packaged it more neatly for their purposes.

NARRATOR: Dr. Billy Graham. 

BILLY GRAHAM: As a Southerner, and I’m very proud to be a Southerner, public schools have been a way of life in the south for many years.

BILLY GRAHAM: A lot of Southerners may be frustrated and angry right now, and many don’t agree with all the changes that have been taking place in the schools, especially this bussing for racial balance.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: 
The gist of these ads was to try to persuade white Southerners, to abandon the Democratic Party for Nixon's Republican Party. And Graham is willing to go on record in a very, very graphic way, to make that happen.

Billy Graham: I really believe that the South will set an example of respect for law that will be a model for others to follow.

RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: The Nixon White House was really using Graham for their political ends. Graham certainly played along with that. He was happy to help Nixon, in any way he could.

Billy Graham Day / October 15, 1971

REPORTER: President Nixon went to Charlotte, North Carolina, today for a special local tribute to his old friend the Reverend Billy Graham.
 

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: At Billy Graham Day in 1971, the city of Charlotte shut down for the event. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Schools were closed, businesses were closed, and the entire city just turned out to welcome home and celebrate their favorite son.

STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham Day was essentially a contrived event to celebrate Graham, and to give Nixon exposure in the region as well. Graham and Nixon were basically making a campaign appearance together. Almost as if they were president and vice president.
 
DARREN DOCHUK, HISTORIAN: This is an apex in his career, a moment when he and Richard Nixon are tightly bound together in the political and cultural project of making American values.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: Billy Graham Day was not about honoring God, it was about honoring Billy Graham, and so now he is the subject of all the adulation, and that had to be a very different kind of experience for him. And arguably, a dangerous one.
 
OVAL OFFICE CONVERSATION / FEBRUARY 1, 1972

ON-SCREEN CAPTIONING: [BILLY GRAHAM]: I would like to say that, if we come right down to the wire...
 
[RICHARD NIXON]: Right.
 
[BILLY GRAHAM]: And it looks like that I could help in a public way, even if I had to come out and say, “I’m voting for Richard Nixon because…,” I’m ready to put that on the line, even though it would hurt my ministry for years. 

But I’m 53, I don’t know how long I have anyway, so I don’t care.

WATERGATE 

Washington, DC / June 17, 1972
 
NEWS ACNHOR: What’s beginning to turn into a nightmare for the Republicans all began on June 17th when, according to police, five men were caught with bugging equipment inside the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate. 

GRAHAM AND NIXON AT A NATIONAL PRAYER BREAKFAST

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: When the Watergate story begins to surface, Graham is incredulous. He does not believe that Richard Nixon could have been involved in something this wrong.
  
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Nixon had always presented himself to Graham as a devout fellow Christian, not an Evangelical, exactly, but as a devout fellow Christian. And Graham took that as evidence of Nixon’s character.
 
NEWS REPORT ON WATERGATE; DAN RATHER NEWS REPORT
 
NEWS ANCHOR: It was learned this week that another suspect received a 25,000 dollar cashier’s check, which had been intended for the president’s campaign. 
 
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: The question is, if any or all of what is alleged to have been going on is true, how high up in the White House does it go, and is the president himself involved?
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: Increasingly, Graham cannot deny that something illegal had taken place, but he didn’t think that Nixon had orchestrated it. He’s saying, ‘Nixon could not be involved. He’s too moral.’
 
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS ON WATERGATE; NEWS REPORT
 
SENATOR: Are you aware of the installation of any listening devices in the Oval Office of the president?
 
ALEXANDER BUTTERFIELD: I was aware of listening devices, yes, sir.
 
NEWS ANCHOR: The tapes are crucial. For example, they could show whether John Dean was telling the truth when he said that President Nixon indicated knowledge of the Watergate coverup in a number of conversations at the White House. 
 
TOM BROKAW, JOURNALIST: Watergate was not on the official agenda of the Southern Baptist convention, which ended in Dallas today, but as George Lewis reports, the subject was on the minds of many delegates. 
 
BILLY GRAHAM: There’s a little bit of Watergate in all of us, just don’t go around all self-righteous, talking about all those bad people. I know some bad people in both parties. 

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: In private, Billy Graham was working with Nixon’s staff and telling them, “Try to do some things to divert attention from this crisis. Maybe get people thinking about something else. Concentrate on meeting famous people, having your picture taken with them.
 
NEWS ANCHOR: President Nixon has not yet responded to the sledgehammer decision by the Supreme Court today, which ruled that he must immediately turn over tapes of 64 presidential conversations. In a unanimous decision written by Chief Justice Warren Burger, the court rejected eight to nothing Mr. Nixon’s claim of absolute privilege on those tapes.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: When the White House tapes are released in April of ‘74, and the text is reprinted, Graham at first refuses to read them. He doesn’t want to know the truth, all right? But by early May, he knows he has no choice. 
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: The phone rings. My secretary says, “A man claiming to be Billy Graham’s on the line.” I said, “Put him through,” and it was Billy. And he said, “John,” he said, “I just now have read the transcripts. I’m only halfway through and I just vomited.”
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: And he said, “You know, and I know that the president had to use some sleeping pills to counter jet lag and things like that. I just wonder if something’s happened to him?”
 
JOHN CHANCELLOR: The Reverend Billy Graham, who's been a friend of the President's for a long time, spoke out today on the moral tone of the President's edited White House transcripts. Graham said reading the tapes was a profoundly disturbing and disappointing experience. He said he could not but deplore the moral tone implied. 
 
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: My impression at the time was that Billy Graham felt it was best to say as little as possible, keep his head down and let the worst of it pass.
 
REPORTER: Why are you refusing to discuss it here for a moment or two? It’s a rather serious...
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Because this is a golf tournament, and I came out here to enjoy a day of golf.
 
REPORTER: And your statement was a very serious thing towards the president of the United States, too, which is perhaps more important than a golf tournament.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Well, that is up for me to judge.
 
REPORTER: You don’t think it is?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: I am not making any comment.
 
REPORTER: Dr. Graham, what do you think the transcripts show about the moral tone in the White House?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: No comment. I’m very sorry, but on another time, another occasion, I’d be happy to talk about it.

REPORTER: Well you’ve stood here for ten minutes to talk to us about it without talking to us about it, doesn’t save you much time…

BILLY GRAHAM: Well, this is a golf game and I don’t think it’s the proper place to discuss...
 
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: Billy Graham was worried. He knew how close he had become with Richard Nixon. In that phrase, ‘he was flying very close to the sun.’
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Jim, thank you very much.
 
REPORTER: Have a good golf day, anyway.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Yes, sir. Thank you.

August 8, 1974
 
WALTER CRONKITE, JOURNALIST: In the White House, in just a few moments now, President Nixon will be appearing before the people perhaps for the last time as president of the United States. He had asked for this television time at 9 o’clock to make an announcement. 
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: On the night Nixon finally is persuaded to resign, Billy Graham comes to Washington hoping to provide comfort in what was certainly Nixon’s darkest hour.

WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: He told me that he wanted to be with Nixon to pray with him, but he couldn’t get to him. He couldn't even get the operator to put him through.
 
RICHARD NIXON: I shall resign the presidency effective at noon tomorrow. 
 
REPORTER: Here he is on the South Lawn already. Mr. Nixon as he leaves the White House here to board the helicopter for the flight to California. 
 
REPORTER: And there’s the president waving goodbye. Can you hear the applause?
 
WILLIAM MARTIN, BIOGRAPHER: Right after Nixon resigned, Billy Graham went back to his home in the mountains near Asheville, just to consider and absorb what had happened, what he’d been through.
 
ANTHEA BUTLER, HISTORIAN: Billy Graham’s friendship with Richard Nixon had tainted the very work of his life. This is the first time that he’s had a huge moral misstep.
 
REV. DR. JOHN HUFFMAN: He was desolate. He was just beside himself with anguish.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: His faith in this man turned out to be misplaced, and his faith in Nixon's goodness, and in his own judgment of Nixon's goodness. That's a crushing experience. 
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: You hitch your gospel wagon to a star. When that star falls, so does the wagon.
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: After Watergate, Billy Graham begins to focus more on international efforts. Just a recognition that he needed to repair his own reputation after it had been, without any question, sullied.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: God loves you so much that he decided to save you.
 
INTERPRETER: [speaks in French]
 
BILLY GRAHAM: He was getting ready to die. He was getting ready to leave. And the last word he said to the people was, “Love each other.”
 
INTERPRETER: [speaks in Korean]
 
BILLY GRAHAM: How many of you here today are dissatisfied?
 
INTERPRETER: [speaks in Polish]
 
BILLY GRAHAM: You’re searching for something, and you don’t know what it is. 
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: He started going to Europe more often, especially Eastern Europe. Not only do the Protestant churches support him, but the Catholic churches do. Catholic Poland welcomes him. He never expected that.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: How can I get that righteousness? How can I get this holiness? Through the cross.
 
INTERPRETER: [speaks in Polish]
 
UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: The picture of world Christianity is changing, and Billy Graham is now going where Christianity is growing.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: It broadens him. He becomes less adamant in many ways, not about the truth of the gospel, but because he gets exposed to so many different ways of life and so many different kinds of people.
 
 
New York City / September 1977
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: McCall's magazine asked me to interview him. We met in a mid-Manhattan hotel, a nice one, but the room was not big, and he's tall. And he's trying to find a place to put his legs. 
  
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: He was tired. He'd been gone for months and months. He missed his wife. That was part of the mood. And so we're talking, and he said, "You know,” he said, “I used to think that all those Chinese babies who never had the gospel preached to them were all going to hell." He said, "I don't believe that anymore.” He said, “My job is to do the preaching, and God's job is to do the savings."
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: That's just not what you say if you're an evangelist. You need this, and you need it today because tomorrow you may die and you're going to be burning in hell. 
 
KENNETH L. WOODWARD, JOURNALIST: Billy finally said he would let God be God, let Him be the judge. It's an extraordinary change.
  
NEWS ANCHOR: Nobody knows for sure how many conservative Christians there are in the United States. One estimate is from 30 to 65 million.
 
REPORTER: These people are born again Christians, millions of them are political conservatives who traditionally have not voted, but this year they’re being mobilized for Ronald Reagan.

JERRY FALWELL: We’ve got to raise up an army of men and women in America, who’ll call this nation back to moral sanity and sensibility. I call that the Moral Majority.

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: Jerry Falwell came in to pick up the reigns of what Graham had created and took it to the next level.
 
JERRY FALWELL: We have a threefold primary responsibility. Number one, get people saved; number two, get them baptized; number three, get them registered to vote.
   
DAN RATHER, JOURNALIST: This year, millions of evangelical Christians appear to be coming together to form a new and powerful force, one that could change the face of American politics.  
 
JAMES ROBINSON: You stay home, you don’t get informed, you don’t get involved, you don’t get active, you don’t vote, you don’t care, you know who runs the country? The godless, wicked forces that are gonna sell you down the river.
 
JERRY FALWELL: Good Christians make good citizens, and it’s a sin not to vote.

LOBBYIST: We as Christians are simply not going to sit back any longer and watch our families being destroyed.
  
JERRY FALWELL: Maybe God’s calling you to be a political leader for Christ. Why not?
 
JERRY FALWELL: I would say that just about every church in America, evangelical fundamentalist churches, follow the cue of their pastor.
 
REPORTER: That’s an extraordinary amount of power.
 
JERRY FALWELL: Yes.
  
BILLY GRAHAM: Jerry Falwell has a right to do what he’s doing. The only thing I’m saying is I’m not going to join that and I’m not going to get involved in politics.   

TOM BROKAW, JOURNALIST: But they’re -- but they’re giving us a real litmus test about who is acceptable to the Moral Majority and then if they don’t meet this various check off on this list - candidates or other people in public life - then the Moral Majority brings its considerable resources to bear against that candidate.

BILLY GRAHAM: Yes, and I’m not going to be a part of that. 

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: I don't think that the rise of the religious right could have happened in the way that it did, had he not opened those doors, but the people who came flooding through those doors did so as he was going the other way. 
 
HUMBLED SERVANT
 
RANDALL BALMER, HISTORIAN: Graham comes out early in the 1980s against nuclear proliferation and in favor of nuclear disarmament. 

BILLY GRAHAM: ...our time ought to be spent talking about how we’re gonna eliminate these weapons entirely.

REPORTER: Why?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Because we can destroy the whole world in less than an hour. Let’s say the Soviet Union were attacked, or the United States were attacked, the head of the Soviet Union, the head of the United States would only have about fifteen minutes to react.

GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER:  In 1982, he went to  Moscow. Graham's trip took place in the face of ardent opposition on the home front. President Ronald Reagan was dubious. The vice president, George Bush, actively opposed it.

ANNE BLUE WILLS, HISTORIAN:
The stakes were so high, not just for Billy and his reputation and his future work, but for the safety of the planet.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: There’s no doubt the world is facing the most critical moment since the beginning of human history. We live in a time which is without parallel because never before has humanity held in its hands such awesome weapons of mass destruction. But it is now time for us to urge the world to turn to a spiritual solution to this great problem.

NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: If you go back to the boy wonder preacher of 1949, where there was just no question about America as being the most righteous nation on earth. He just became more aware of difference and of nuance and of complexity. He became less American and more global.

February 28, 2002
 
NEWS ANCHOR: Just when we think we've heard it all, more arises from the dark side of the only President to resign in disgrace. Today's tapes include discomforting remarks as well by the Reverend Billy Graham.
 
REPORTER: The 500 hours of tapes released today, showing what one historian calls Nixon's own dark view of how the world works, where the enemy is not just the communists, it's also the media.
 
RICHARD NIXON: ...Newsweek is totally, it's all run by Jews and dominated by them in their editorial pages. The New York Times, The Washington Post, totally Jewish too…
 
REPORTER: Listening in agreement is the Reverend Billy Graham.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: This stranglehold has got to be broken or this country is going to go down the drain.
 
RICHARD NIXON: Do you believe that?
 
BILLY GRAHAM: Yes, sir.
 
RICHARD NIXON: I can't ever say it, but I believe it.
  
STEVEN P. MILLER, HISTORIAN: Even as he emerged as this kind of iconic figure in the '80s, '90s, and into the 21st century, the Nixon-Graham conversations more than anything were the kind of albatross that Graham had to deal with.
 
GRANT WACKER, BIOGRAPHER: The first thing he did was apologize. He traveled to Cincinnati and to a group of rabbis. And, as the story goes, when he entered the room, he said, "I'm the one who should be kneeling and begging your forgiveness."

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: As we reckon with Billy Graham’s life, I think we have to pay attention not just to the quarter century in which he was very politically active, but the slightly longer period that came after it in which he spent his time atoning for those actions.

GRAHAM’S FINAL CRUSADE
June 26, 2005 / Queens, NY

KEVIN KRUSE, HISTORIAN: He truly comes to be thought of as “America’s Pastor.” He can speak to not just presidents of both parties, but
Americans from all walks of life. And I think his retreat from partisan politics is what enabled him to do that.
 
BILLY GRAHAM: You’ve come to this crusade expecting to live many more years, but you don’t know. This may be the last day of your life. We never know. 
 
DR. JONATHAN LEE WALTON, THEOLOGIAN: 
Billy Graham put a face on everyday people who had been much ostracized and maligned, and he made them part of the establishment, he made them part of the mainstream. 

UTA A. BALBIER, HISTORIAN: What is so interesting in Billy Graham's ministry is that someone who wanted to be so inclusive paved the ground for one of the most exclusive religious movements in the United States, the Religious Right. 

BILLY GRAHAM: This may be the last opportunity you’ll ever have. This is the moment.  I’m going to ask you to come out of your seat and come in front of this platform, and say tonight ‘I want Jesus in my heart.’
 
BILLY GRAHAM: You must say to him: I will receive him. And I’m going to ask you to do that this afternoon.
 
NANCY GIBBS, JOURNALIST: That last crusade was just on a perfect continuous thread to Los Angeles, where at its core, it is about delivering a message to a world in need.
 
BILLY GRAHAM:. ..Your sin and turning to Jesus Christ in sin. Shall we pray?
 
LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: Before he died, Jeannie and I were in his little room up there, and I said, “Billy, when the time comes that the Lord calls you home, would you want your sister to say anything at your service?”

JEAN FORD, BILLY GRAHAM’S SISTER: And he said, “I would be honored.” And Leighton said, “What would you want her to say?”

LEIGHTON FORD, EVANGELIST: Long pause. He said, “He tried to do what he thought he should.”

Billy Graham died on February 21, 2018. 
He was 99 years old.

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