The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography
An updated account of the inspiring and influential life of Dr. Billy GrahamWhen the hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, President Bush immediately proclaimed a National Day of Prayer and Remembrance. For the interfaith, interdenominational service at the Washington National Cathedral he chose Billy Graham to give the address. At that terrible hour no other clergyman, whatever his office, could so aptly bring the Word of God to America—and a watching world.At eighty-four, Billy Graham remains one of the most respected people in the world today. He has addressed over eighty-two million people face to face and at least one billion people through television, radio, and satellite. Yet he is far more than an evangelist of integrity and vision; he is a Christian statesman whose profound influence on the growth and depth of Christianity across the world cannot be overestimated. This official biography of Dr. Graham is based on his private files, correspondence, and interviews, as well as the author’s widespread research.• Written by John Pollock, Dr. Graham’s official biographer• Parts one and two (1918 to 1978), based on Pollock’s authorized biographies, have been abridged and contain new material• Part three (1978 to 1983) deals at length with Dr. Graham’s controversial visit to Moscow, which can now be seen as a factor in the fall of communism• Part four (1984 to 2003) updates the story to recent events, including the horrors of September 11 and the honorary knighthood Dr. Graham received from the Queen of England in December 2001• 8-page section of black-and-white photos new to this book
"1113634505"
The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography
An updated account of the inspiring and influential life of Dr. Billy GrahamWhen the hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, President Bush immediately proclaimed a National Day of Prayer and Remembrance. For the interfaith, interdenominational service at the Washington National Cathedral he chose Billy Graham to give the address. At that terrible hour no other clergyman, whatever his office, could so aptly bring the Word of God to America—and a watching world.At eighty-four, Billy Graham remains one of the most respected people in the world today. He has addressed over eighty-two million people face to face and at least one billion people through television, radio, and satellite. Yet he is far more than an evangelist of integrity and vision; he is a Christian statesman whose profound influence on the growth and depth of Christianity across the world cannot be overestimated. This official biography of Dr. Graham is based on his private files, correspondence, and interviews, as well as the author’s widespread research.• Written by John Pollock, Dr. Graham’s official biographer• Parts one and two (1918 to 1978), based on Pollock’s authorized biographies, have been abridged and contain new material• Part three (1978 to 1983) deals at length with Dr. Graham’s controversial visit to Moscow, which can now be seen as a factor in the fall of communism• Part four (1984 to 2003) updates the story to recent events, including the horrors of September 11 and the honorary knighthood Dr. Graham received from the Queen of England in December 2001• 8-page section of black-and-white photos new to this book
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The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography

The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography

by John Pollock
The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography

The Billy Graham Story: The Authorized Biography

by John Pollock

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Overview

An updated account of the inspiring and influential life of Dr. Billy GrahamWhen the hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, President Bush immediately proclaimed a National Day of Prayer and Remembrance. For the interfaith, interdenominational service at the Washington National Cathedral he chose Billy Graham to give the address. At that terrible hour no other clergyman, whatever his office, could so aptly bring the Word of God to America—and a watching world.At eighty-four, Billy Graham remains one of the most respected people in the world today. He has addressed over eighty-two million people face to face and at least one billion people through television, radio, and satellite. Yet he is far more than an evangelist of integrity and vision; he is a Christian statesman whose profound influence on the growth and depth of Christianity across the world cannot be overestimated. This official biography of Dr. Graham is based on his private files, correspondence, and interviews, as well as the author’s widespread research.• Written by John Pollock, Dr. Graham’s official biographer• Parts one and two (1918 to 1978), based on Pollock’s authorized biographies, have been abridged and contain new material• Part three (1978 to 1983) deals at length with Dr. Graham’s controversial visit to Moscow, which can now be seen as a factor in the fall of communism• Part four (1984 to 2003) updates the story to recent events, including the horrors of September 11 and the honorary knighthood Dr. Graham received from the Queen of England in December 2001• 8-page section of black-and-white photos new to this book

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780310861171
Publisher: HarperCollins Christian Publishing
Publication date: 12/19/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
File size: 6 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John Charles Pollock is the author of countless biographies and the official biographer of Billy Graham. He has written accounts of Wesley, Shaftesbury, Whitefield, Kitchener, Hudson Taylor, Wilberforce, John Newton, Moody, and others. He lives with his wife in Devon, England.

Read an Excerpt

The Billy Graham Story

The Authorized Biography
By John Pollock

Zondervan

Copyright © 2003 Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-310-25126-5


Chapter One

Sunshine in the South

William Crook Graham, a Confederate veteran with a bullet in his leg, died in 1910 at the age of sixty. He had a patriarchal beard and a large family, but nothing else biblical about him. He drank, he swore, and he neglected his farm and would not pay his debts.

He was born at Fort Mill in York District and after the Civil War bought the land a few miles away near Charlotte, North Carolina, which he left to two of his sons, William Franklin and Clyde. Together the sons built up a three-hundred-acre dairy farm of rich red soil, with woods and streams and gently rolling contours, and delivered milk in the city.

William Franklin Graham married Morrow Coffey of Steele Creek near Charlotte in 1916. Their eldest son, William Franklin Graham Jr., Billy Frank to his family, was born in the frame farmhouse on November 7, 1918, three days before his father's thirtieth birthday and four before the Armistice.

All four of Billy Graham's grandparents were descended from the Scots-Irish pioneers who settled in the Carolinas before the Revolution. His mother's father, Ben Coffey, had fair hair and blue eyes (like his grandson) and the tall, clean-limbed, strong-jawed physique immortalized in the North Carolina monument at Gettysburg, where he fell badly wounded. A one-legged, one-eyed veteran, he was a farmer of intelligence, spirit, and sterling honesty, with a tenacious memory and a love for Scripture and literature, which he imparted to his daughters.

In the frame farmhouse and then in the red brick home nearby, which the Grahams built when Billy was ten, with its pillared porch, paved paths, and shade of oaks and cedars, Morrow Coffey Graham kept the books, did the cooking and housework, and chopped the wood with the aid of Suzie, her black maid. A blend of determination with gentleness and affection won for Morrow the complete devotion of her two sons and two daughters: Billy Frank, Catherine, Melvin, and Jean, who was fourteen years younger than Billy.

Frank Graham was an equally strong character. At six foot two, with dark hair and a fine bass voice, he was a farmer through and through. In early manhood he had experienced a religious conversion, but his faith had lost urgency though it remained the foundation of his integrity. Straight as his back in business dealings, he was adored and a little feared by the farm hands and his children. His scanty education was offset by shrewdness and a lively curiosity. He had a dry wit and a warm and generous nature, kept in close control because agricultural bankruptcies were frequent in the Carolinas. His one indulgence was the smoking of large cigars. He scorned relaxation and hated travel. His world was the South - placid, sunny, but smarting from the Civil War and the economic depression and poverty that it had left.

The Graham farm was comparatively prosperous. Billy Frank's hero was the black foreman, Reese Brown, an army sergeant in World War I. He was a splendid person who could hold down a bull to be dehorned, had a wide range of skills, and was tireless, efficient, and trustworthy. Billy crammed down Mrs. Brown's delicious buttermilk bread, the Brown children were his playmates, and Reese taught him to milk and herd.

Billy was a bit too prankish to be of much use at first. High spirits and a love of adventure frequently cost him a taste of his father's belt or his mother's long hickory switch - such discipline was normal and expected. "Billy was rowdy, mischievous," recalls an older cousin, "but on the other hand - he was soft and gentle and loving and understanding. He was a very sweet, likeable person." His parents were strict but fair, and the house was full of laughter.

Billy Graham's early education was almost as poor as Abraham Lincoln's, a primary reason being the low level of teaching. Yet even if the teaching had been better, he would have made little use of it. By the age of eleven, he thought "horse sense" was enough education for a farmer, an attitude slightly encouraged by his father and stoutly resisted by his mother.

Billy's main interest was baseball. He had been taught the game early by the McMakins, three sons of the sharecropper on his father's farm. Mr. McMakins was a redheaded man of high temper but strict Christian principles, who had once been a southern champion bicycle racer. Billy's fondness for baseball was not matched by his skill. He barely made the Sharon High School team as a first baseman, and though he dreamed of being a professional, the dream died before he left high school. Baseball influenced him most by interfering with his studies. The one redeeming feature of Billy's early intellectual life was an exceptional love of reading history books. By the time he was fourteen, he had read about a hundred.

When Billy was young, Sunday was rather like an old Scottish Sabbath. Its highlights included the five-mile drive by car to the small Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, which sang only metrical psalms, in Charlotte, a city then rated the most church-going in America.

Billy never thought of his parents as particularly religious. Then, when he was about fifteen, his mother joined a Bible class at the urging of her sister. Her husband remained indifferent. His energies were absorbed by the farm, especially since he had recently lost his savings in the bank failures of 1933.

Three weeks after she joined the Bible class, Frank Graham's head was smashed by a piece of wood that shot out from the mechanical saw. The surgeons believed he would die. Mrs. Graham, after calling her Christian friends to pray, went up to her bedroom to pray. When she finished, she had the assurance that God heard her prayer. Both the Grahams believed that the Lord really spoke to them in Frank's accident and full recovery. They spent more time in Bible study and prayer, and Mrs. Graham read devotional books to the children.

The adolescent Billy Frank thought it was all "hogwash." He was in a mild rebellion, though his chief wildness was to borrow his father's car and drive it as fast as it could go, turning curves on two wheels, and racing other boys on the near-empty roads of North Carolina. As Billy recalls, "Once I got the car stuck in the mud, and I had to call my father. He was more angry than I had ever seen him. He had to get mules to come and pull it out."

Physically Billy Graham developed fast, like most southern country boys. At high school he was much the ladies' man, with his height, wavy blond hair, blue eyes, tanned skin, neat clothes, and fancy ties. He was in and out of love, sometimes dating two girls successively in the same night. But Billy remembers, "[Our parents expected us] to be clean and never doubted that we would be. They trusted us and made us want to live up to their confidence."

Farm labor gave Billy the needed release of physical energy. Every day he was milking before dawn, fast and smoothly; then he helped pour the Holstein, Guernsey, and Jersey milk into the big mixer before bottling. From school he hurried back to the afternoon milking. He reveled in sweat and exertion, whether cleaning out cow stalls, forking manure, or pitching hay.

In May 1934, Frank Graham lent a pasture to some thirty local businessmen who wanted to devote a day of prayer for Charlotte, having planned an evangelistic campaign despite the indifference of the ministers. During that day of prayer on the Graham land, their leader prayed - as Frank Graham would often recall between Billy's rise to fame in 1949 and his own death in 1962 - that "out of Charlotte the Lord would raise up someone to preach the Gospel to the ends of the earth."

The businessmen next erected in the city a large "tabernacle" of raw pine on a steel frame, where for eleven weeks from September 1934 a renowned, fiery southern evangelist named Mordecai Fowler Ham, and his song leader, Walter Ramsay, shattered the complacency of church-going Charlotte.

Ham, who was then pastor of First Baptist Church in Oklahoma City, charged scandals and prejudices and was a mighty protagonist for Prohibition. Despite his old southern courtesy, he tended to "skin the ministers," as his phrase was, and cared not at all that Charlotte's most powerful clergy opposed, or that newspapers attacked him. His passionate preaching left hearers with an overwhelming realization that Christ was alive.

The Grahams did not attend Ham's campaign for at least the first week - possibly because of the tabernacle's distance and their minister's guarded neutrality toward Ham. Some neighbors then took them. After that they claimed they couldn't stay away.

Billy, too old to be ordered to attend, was "definitely antagonistic," until the Ham-Ramsey campaign exploded new controversy when Ham flung at his audience a charge of fornication among the students at Central High School. Infuriated students marched on the tabernacle, the newspapers featured the sensation, and Billy was intrigued.

Albert McMakin, the second of the sharecropper's sons, now twenty-four and newly married, had been attending the campaign regularly because a few months earlier, at one of the small preparatory meetings, he had discovered that an upright life was not enough. He filled his old truck with people from the neighborhood, both whites and blacks, and telling Billy that Ham was no "sissy" but a fighting preacher, he invited him to drive it to the meetings.

Albert's party sat at the back of the largest crowd Billy had ever seen. Far away up the "sawdust trail" of wood shavings sat the choir, and when vigorous, white-haired Mordecai Ham began to preach, Billy was "spellbound," as he wrote thirty years later. "Each listener became deeply involved with the evangelist, who had an almost embarrassing way of describing your sins and shortcomings and of demanding, on pain of divine judgment, that you mend your ways. As I listened, I began to have thoughts I had never known before."

That night in the room he shared with Melvin, Billy gazed at the full moon. As he recalls, I felt "a kind of stirring in my breast that was both pleasant and scary. Next night all my father's mules and horses could not have kept me away from the meetings."

Billy's sixteenth birthday passed. Albert McMakin detected that Billy's self-righteousness was crumbling. Ham had a habit of pointing his finger. His analysis cut so close to the bone that once Billy ducked behind the hat of the woman in front, and to escape the accusing finger applied for a place in the choir, though he could not carry a tune and his vocal efforts in the bath were a merriment to all the Grahams. He was accepted and found himself next to Grady Wilson, a casual acquaintance from another school.

The maneuver was futile. By now, as Billy remembers, "[I had] a tremendous conviction that I must commit myself. I'm sure the Lord did speak to me about certain things in my life. I'm certain of that. But I cannot remember what they were. But I do remember a great sense of burden that I was a sinner before God and had a great fear of hell and judgment."

The more he struggled to assert his own goodness, the heavier his burden grew. He now had no doubt in his mind that Christ had died on the cross to bear Billy's sins, and each night the conviction grew that Christ, whose resurrection Billy had never doubted in theory, was actually alive, wanting to take away that burden. If only Billy would commit himself unreservedly, Christ would be his Savior and Friend. Billy was far less conscious of Mordecai Ham than of Christ. Yet the price of Christ's friendship would be total surrender for a lifelong discipleship - Billy would no longer be his own master. A price he was not yet prepared to pay. When Ham invited those who would accept Christ to move toward the pulpit in an act of witness and definition, Billy Graham stayed in his seat.

The inward struggle continued, at school in his desk, in the gym playing basketball, in the barn milking. He did not tell his parents (who suspected and were hoping and praying), but talked with his cousin Crook Stafford, who encouraged him to go forward although Crook had not yet done so himself. Billy moved again the next night and sat near the front. Ham's smile seemed consciously directed. Billy, quite wrongly, was certain Ham knew about him and quoted specially for him, "God commendeth his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us."

Ham made the appeal. Billy heard the choir sing, "Just As I Am, Without One Plea," verse by verse, as people gathered round the pulpit. Billy stayed in his seat, his conscience wrestling with his will. The choir began, "Almost persuaded, Christ to believe." Billy could stand it no longer and went forward.

As Billy recalls, "It was not just the technique of walking forward in a Southern revival meeting. It was Christ. I was conscious of him."

A short man with dark hair and dark eyes, an English-born tailor whom Billy knew and liked, approached him and they talked and prayed. Billy had a "deep sense of peace and joy," but around him many were in tears, and he worried a bit because he felt so matter-of-fact. His father came across, threw his arms round him, and thanked God for his decision.

That night Billy Graham walked upstairs past the old family clock ticking loudly the time, day, and month, and undressed in the dark because Melvin was already asleep. The moon rode high again and Billy looked out across his father's land, then laid for hours unemotionally checking over in the context of his adolescent world what should be the attitudes of a fellow who belonged to Christ. He drifted into sleep content and at peace, with just a grain of doubt: "I wonder if this will last."

(Continues...)



Excerpted from The Billy Graham Story by John Pollock Copyright © 2003 by Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface7
Part 11918-1959
1.Sunshine in the South13
2.The Eighteenth Green20
3.The Girl from China28
4.Geared to the Times36
5.Los Angeles 194941
6.An Hour of Decision52
7.Harringay 195462
8.Ripe for Harvest76
9.New York 195786
10.Under the Southern Cross96
Part 21960-1976
11.Reaching Out107
12.The Reconciler112
13.Scenes from West and East118
14.True Friendship124
15.Lausanne132
Part 31977-1983
16.Billy at Sixty139
17.Into Eastern Europe148
18.Tidal Wave156
19.Sydney 1979160
20.Great Steps Forward167
21.Moscow 1982 and After173
22.New England192
23.Amsterdam 1983199
Part 41984-present
24.The Queen's Guests207
25.Mission England214
26.Romania Awakes223
27.Reaching Out to Washington232
28.Sidelight on Amsterdam II237
29.China 1988244
30.Mission New York State252
31.Moscow 1992: A Dream Come True259
32.Millennium Harvest269
33."Light a Fire"279
34."A Day of Victory"285
35."Toward the Future"294
Notes311
Index312
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