Son: Billy Graham's work
with presidents is ending

By Mike Baker
Associated Press
Billy Graham's work as a pastor to
presidents is coming to an end, but he is
praying for Barack Obama as the nation's
next leader begins his work, Graham's son
said Friday on the aging evangelist's
90th birthday.
Franklin Graham said in an interview that
his father's mind remains sharp even as
his body continues to fail. But the
preacher who has counseled every
president beginning with Eisenhower is
not in line to mentor Obama.
"My father feels like his time and
day for that is over," Franklin
Graham said. "But he would certainly
like to meet (Obama) and pray with
him."
Graham's views of the world are still
respected in White House circles.
Republican presidential candidate John
McCain visited Graham at his mountainside
home during the campaign, and Obama tried
to meet Graham but wasn't able to do so
because of the preacher's poor health.
Though never partisan in his preaching,
Billy Graham is a registered Democrat.
His son expressed concern about Obama's
views on abortion and gay marriage
an issue Franklin Graham raised in a
meeting with the Illinois senator
saying that he and is father are
conservatives who believe the Bible
speaks clearly on those issues.
"President-elect Obama heard our
position," Franklin Graham said.
"And I told him that this was very
difficult for us and hard for us. It's a
moral issue that we just can't back down
on."
"But he's our president-elect, and
those positions that he holds that are
contrary to Biblical teaching, I hope
that God will change his heart,"
said Graham, who now heads the
Charlotte-based Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association.
About 160 of Graham's close family and
friends celebrated his birthday with an
intimate gathering Friday at his home in
Montreat, featuring fried chicken,
barbecue and sweet tea. His ministry had
received some 100,000 greetings
including a video from President Bush
from people who told stories about
how he changed their lives. Graham's son
said they would be bound so that someone
could read a few dozen letters to him
each day.
Encouragement is partly what Graham
needs. He still struggles with the loss
of his wife, Ruth, who died last year,
and notes his father has more friends in
heaven than on earth.
An avid consumer of news, Billy Graham
still listens to television he has
macular degeneration and has can't read
more than the headlines of a newspaper
and follows the events of the day.
He spends much of his day napping and
resting, and Franklin visits on Sundays
to try and coax him to make the 100-yard
walk to the barn next to the mountainside
home in Montreat.
Graham's health is fragile. He was
hospitalized overnight last month after
falling over his dog while trying to pet
it. He had elective surgery earlier this
year to update a shunt that controls
excess fluid on his brain. The shunt was
first installed in 2000 and drains fluid
from through a small tube, relieving
excess pressure that can cause symptoms
similar to Parkinson's disease.
Graham was hospitalized last year for
nearly two weeks after experiencing
intestinal bleeding, and he has also had
prostate cancer. But Graham has still
outlived doctors' expectations and some
of the doctors themselves.
"He could catch a cold and his life
could come to an end," Franklin
Graham said. "At his age, any little
thing could be a serious event. We
realize that."
His days at 90 are a stark contrast to
Graham's days as a globe-trotting
evangelist a ministry that put him
behind the pulpit to speak with 215
million people in more than 185 countries
and placed him in the confidence of some
of the world's most powerful people.
Graham still writes and remains engaged
in the planning and direction of the
ministry he founded. This week, his
booming voice will once again cross
borders as a message dubbed in Portuguese
will be broadcast in Brazil as part of an
effort to bring some 1 million new
believes into the fold this weekend.
But privately, he has been working on a
book about aging, trying to put his
late-life lessons into context for those
soon to follow him.
"He's always been ready to
die," Franklin Graham said.
"But nobody's prepared him for
getting old."
Home
(c) 2008
Eclipse Web Designs, Inc.
|
|