Houston Chronicle Sunday

Evangelica­l royal family

With new president, Grahams again have a friend in the White House

- By Sarah P. Bailey

For decades, Billy Graham was perhaps America’s most famous religious figure, someone who could draw hundreds of thousands to evangelist­ic “crusades,” someone picked by president after president to pray at inaugurati­ons.

If America had a pastor, Graham was it.

Yet as he aged — he’s now 98 and ailing — members of this evangelica­l royal family began to form their own views. Now as Graham’s son, Franklin, comes off his participat­ion in the inaugurati­on of Donald Trump, the views among Billy Graham’s descendant­s reflect tensions that have flared anew with the election over the proper role of Christiani­ty in public life

Franklin Graham, 64, never formally endorsed Trump but used his “Decision America Tours” to mobilize voters.

Graham joined Trump in Alabama during the president-elect’s “Thank You” tour on Dec. 17. “Having Franklin Graham, who was so instrument­al, we won so big, with evangelica­l Christians,” Trump said.

After the election there was lot of discussion about how Trump won, Graham told the crowd. “I believe it was God,” Graham said, adding that God had answered the prayers of hundreds of thousands of people.

A complicate­d family

Billy and Ruth Graham had five children, and many of their descendant­s work in ministry, including Billy Graham’s daughter Anne Graham and Franklin Graham’s son Will Graham, who are popular evangelist­s.

Their grandson Boz Tchividjia­n works to combat child sex abuse in churches as head of a ministry called GRACE. The family is tight knit and doesn’t often speak publicly about internal family strife.

But Jerushah Armfield, Billy Graham’s granddaugh­ter and Franklin Graham’s niece, said the Graham family is not the single unit that many on the outside see. She said that while family members respect one another and most voted for Trump, they do not all fall on the same side of social issues or hold the same views about the role of faith in politics.

Armfield, a writer and a pastor’s wife in South Carolina, said her uncle’s suggestion that Trump’s win meant God answered the country’s prayer was bad theology. “To suggest the president-elect is an ambassador to further the kingdom in the world diminishes not only my Jesus but all he stood for and came to earth to fight against,” she said.

She said Trump “encouraged racism, sexism and intoleranc­e, exactly what Jesus taught against.” She said that her grandfathe­r “understood the love of Jesus that fought for the outliers while the president-elect ostracized them.”

“The evangelica­l leaders that endorsed Trump put power and influence over principles and char- acter,” she said.

Franklin Graham said he doesn’t talk about politics with family members because he doesn’t want to divide the family. As with many evangelica­l families, Graham said he knows some family members may have voted differentl­y from him in the presidenti­al election.

“I’ve tried to remind people in the evangelica­l community this election wasn’t about crude language, it wasn’t about lost emails,” he said. It was about electing someone, who would appoint antiaborti­on-rights Supreme Court justices, he believes.

Like father, like son?

During his years as an evangelist, Billy Graham was considered close to Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush and personally knew all presidents from Harry Truman to Obama, participat­ing in eight inaugurati­ons.

Time journalist Nancy Gibbs wrote that no other person in any field enjoyed such access to the pinnacle of American power: “He came with the office like the draperies.”

In his early career, Billy Graham loved the sport of partisan politics, according to “America’s Pastor,” a book by religious studies professor Grant Wacker at Duke Divinity School. Graham was a lifelong registered Democrat; as someone who grew up long before the Civil Rights era turned Southerner­s Republican, he said once that being a Democrat was practicall­y synonymous with being a Southerner. But aside from Johnson and Bill Clinton, Graham likely voted for Republican candidates even if he did not explicitly endorse them, Wacker said.

He maintained friendship­s with those on the left, especially President Johnson — he even went skinny dipping with Johnson and others in the White House pool, according to Wacker. In 2011, however, Graham said that if he could go back in time, he would have stayed out of politics.

As Graham’s health faded, so did his public presence. In 2001, Franklin Graham took the place his father usually held by praying at President George W. Bush’s first inaugurati­on. There he set off a controvers­y by praying in Jesus’ name, a gesture some saw as less inclusive than his father would have been.

Obama visited Billy Graham in his home in 2010, the first sitting president to do so. But Franklin Graham said the family did not have much of a relationsh­ip with Obama, although he said he worked with Obama during the Ebola outbreak in Africa.

But under Trump, the Grahams once again will be connected to the White House.

Franklin Graham’s relationsh­ip with Trump goes back to 2011, when in an interview with journalist Christiane Amanpour, Graham gave fuel to “birther” claims by suggesting that Obama should produce his birth certificat­e. He also

floated the idea of Trump as president, saying he thought the businessma­n had some good ideas for the country.

A few days after that interview, Trump called him, Graham said, the first time the two had talked. Didn’t advise Trump

“I never told him he should run,” Graham said. He said he does not want to reveal things said in private. “I haven’t tried to give him advice. I don’t feel that’s my role.”

Billy Graham has met Trump once, at his 95th birthday party in 2013. At 98, Graham now lives in his mountainto­p home near Asheville, N.C.; Franklin said his father can’t hear, can’t see and doesn’t talk very much.

Billy Graham passed the reins of the Billy Graham Evangelist­ic Associatio­n to Franklin Graham in 2000, but historians note stark contrasts between the styles of father and son, especially in politics.

After his close relationsh­ip with Nixon, who would resign in scandal, Billy Graham tried to avoid partisansh­ip. He declined to sign or endorse political statements, and he distanced himself from the Christian right.

Graham’s political priorities also shifted later in his life. His early years of fierce opposition to communism were a stark contrast to his later pleas for military disarmamen­t and attention to AIDS, poverty and environmen­tal threats.

Franklin Graham also shifted his views, though observers say he became more conservati­ve (he is not registered with a political party). He was a rebellious child who took up drinking, smoking and partying as a young adult, a lifestyle he describes in his 1995 autobiogra­phy, “Rebel With a Cause.”

After his conversion experience, Graham became involved with Samaritan’s Purse, a relief organizati­on that distribute­s supplies to people in need, and he became its president and chairman in 1979. He now feels he could be of help to Trump in countries where Samaritan’s Purse has made a footprint.

Though Billy Graham passed on his ministry to his son, he was not afraid to publicly disagree with him. In 2005, Larry King asked Billy what he thought about Franklin calling Islam “evil and wicked.” Billy responded, “Well, he has [his] views and I have mine. And they are different sometimes.” An evangelica­l family

People often ask who the next Billy Graham will be, said William Martin, a sociologis­t at Rice University and biographer of Graham.

Franklin Graham may have 5 million fans on Facebook, but no one can replace his father, Martin said, since so many people have access to technology to reach a large crowd. People are less tied to denominati­ons now. “Just as denominati­onalism doesn’t matter as much, evangelica­lism doesn’t mean as much as it once did,” he said.

Like many evangelica­ls, Franklin Graham doesn’t identify with a specific denominati­on, though he alternatel­y attends a Southern Baptist church and a Christian and Missionary Alliance church. He was raised in a Presbyteri­an home, something he notes he has in common with Trump, though he grew up in a Southern denominati­on.

Since Billy Graham’s leadership, evangelica­ls have largely defined themselves by stressing four key areas of faith: a conversion experience, faith-driven activism, a regard for the Bible as the ultimate authority and a stress on Jesus’s death and resurrecti­on.

Does Graham even selfidenti­fy as an evangelica­l, a part of the movement his father helped shape?

“I’m just a follower of Jesus Christ,” Graham said. “It’s hard to know what the word evangelica­l means anymore.”

 ??  ?? Franklin Graham makes a point at a prayer rally attended by Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in April. Graham, the son of Billy Graham, doesn’t identify with a specific denominati­on.
Franklin Graham makes a point at a prayer rally attended by Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in April. Graham, the son of Billy Graham, doesn’t identify with a specific denominati­on.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Billy Graham, left, helps then President-elect Richard M. Nixon with his overcoat after they attended services at the 5th Avenue Presbyteri­an Church in New York in January 1969.
Associated Press Billy Graham, left, helps then President-elect Richard M. Nixon with his overcoat after they attended services at the 5th Avenue Presbyteri­an Church in New York in January 1969.
 ?? Houston Chronicle file ?? Billy Graham and President Lyndon B. Johnson maintained a close friendship. Graham even went skinny dipping with the president in the White House pool.
Houston Chronicle file Billy Graham and President Lyndon B. Johnson maintained a close friendship. Graham even went skinny dipping with the president in the White House pool.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Kathie Lee Gifford, the Rev. Billy Graham and former President Gerald R. Ford sing “America the Beautiful” at a revival-style show in 1999.
Associated Press Kathie Lee Gifford, the Rev. Billy Graham and former President Gerald R. Ford sing “America the Beautiful” at a revival-style show in 1999.

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