Las Vegas Review-Journal

Partisansh­ip from the pulpit splits evangelica­ls

- By Laurie Goodstein New York Times News Service

The Rev. Billy Graham admitted in his later years that he had learned a hard lesson after the Watergate scandal exposed his cozy complicity with President Richard M. Nixon: Pastors should not become too enmeshed with politician­s and partisan politics.

“Looking back, I know I sometimes crossed the line, and I wouldn’t do that now,” he said to the magazine Christiani­ty Today in 2011.

Now, the movement that he helped spawn is divided over the very danger that Graham — who died Wednesday at 99 — had warned about. Evangelica­ls have become locked in a tight embrace with President Donald Trump and the Republican Party, and some of them are now asking whether they have compromise­d the Gospel message.

Among Trump’s most vocal evangelica­l supporters, few are as high-profile as Billy Graham’s eldest son and the heir to his ministry, the Rev. Franklin Graham, who is 65. Though admired among evangelica­ls for his aid work in hardship zones with the charity he leads, Samaritan’s Purse, he has drawn criticism for his unstinting support of the president.

Franklin Graham has defended the president on television and social media through the white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va.; the crackdowns on immigrants and refugees; the Stormy Daniels scandal; and the slur against Haiti and Africa.

“People say that the president says mean things. I can’t think of anything

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