America’s Pastor
Billy Graham and the Shaping of a
Nation
Grant Wacker. America’s Pastor: Billy Graham and the Shaping of a Nation.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 2014. 448 pp. $27.95.
For two of the three most
influential Christian ministers of the 20th century, manner of death became
central to their legacy. Felled by an assassin’s bullet in 1968, Martin Luther
King Jr. (b. 1929) became a martyr to the cause of civil rights. Pope John Paul
II (b. 1920) suffered publicly through various ailments until death ended his
tenure in 2005. We cannot underestimate such open agony at the end of life,
considering that his successor opted to retire in 2013.
The oldest of the trio, Billy Graham
(b. 1918), recently turned 96. Unlike King, he will not likely die a martyr as
he lives out his days in the family cabin near Montreat, North Carolina. Unlike
John Paul II, he retains only nominal leadership responsibilities. Since the
end of his public ministry in 2005, Graham’s influence has waned to the point
where many 20-something evangelicals can’t identify him or else view him solely
as a figure of distant history.
I don’t know how many of these young
believers will pick up Grant Wacker’s new book, America’s Pastor: Billy
Graham and the Shaping of a Nation. But I highly recommend they do so.
Wacker, Gilbert T. Rowe Professor of Christian History at Duke University
Divinity School, adds to the voluminous Graham literature with a scholarly yet
captivating narrative that situates Graham alongside King and John Paul II as
the men most responsible under God for shaping our current spiritual climate,
especially in the United States.
Wacker covers much of the familiar
ground with Graham. But his new book should not be seen as a substitute for
William Martin’s A Prophet with Honor, the standard biography
due for imminent re-release. Wacker, an acclaimed scholar and self-described
"partisan" evangelical sharing Graham’s faith, seeks to answer two
key questions: how does Graham’s story explain the unexpected growth of
evangelical faith in America, and how does it illustrate the interplay between
religion and American culture more generally? By the second page of the book
Wacker projects his basic thesis: “[Graham] gave [Americans] tools to help them
see themselves as good Christians, good Americans, and good citizens of the
modern world at the same time.” Subsequent chapters explain how he did so as a
preacher, icon, Southerner, entrepreneur, architect, pilgrim, pastor, and
patriarch.
Long lauded for humility, Graham has
confessed to many mistakes in his remarkable career. Yet as we’ll likely see
with official tributes upon his death, nothing has tarnished his uniquely broad
appeal. I would welcome additional clarification for his infamous interview
with Robert Schuller, but his example of evangelism counters one strange
interview about the uniqueness of Christ. He confused and even angered
conservatives when he returned from his 1982 trip to the Soviet Union and noted
the surprising religious freedom in the Communist country. But no one could
object to his efforts to foster world peace and preach the gospel behind the
Iron Curtain. Given the reputation of the late President Richard Nixon, Graham
rightly regrets that he did not discern the depth of his close friend’s
conspiratorial and paranoid tendencies, illustrated by lengthy Oval Office
recordings of private meetings. Those recordings incited one of Graham’s most
recent apologies, for disparaging remarks about Jews in the media. Because of
his track record, many Jewish leaders forgave Graham for these remarks he does
not remember offering. Wacker covers all these incidents with detail I had not
previously seen in other works about Graham.
More importantly, Wacker uses these
stories to identify the essential mystery with Graham: it’s not always easy to
discern how much he shaped America and how much America shaped him. We claim to
see clearly in retrospect how he traded access to the White House with such
close friends and President Lyndon Johnson in exchange for supporting the
widely discredited Vietnam War. But Graham is not so easy to dismiss as a
sycophant. He resisted the rise of the Religious Right he unwittingly helped
create with his evangelism, institution-building, fundraising, and public
persona as chaplain to the stars, especially on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. He
became less partisan as the country sorted in red states and blue states.
Chastened by his public failures, he stepped back from politics just as many
other pastors jumped in.
So who is the real Graham? Wacker
wonders:
Which
was normative, the savvy CEO or the simple preacher? The uptown sophisticate of
the downhome country boy? The globetrotting absent father or the attentive
family man? The name-dropping partisan of the White House or the humble servant
of the church? Above all, the self-promoting entrepreneur or the self-effacing
saint? (27)
Graham himself barely hints at this
mystery with an aw-shucks tone and an unseemly penchant for name-dropping in
his autobiography, Just As I Am. But Wacker aims to solve it. He
writes, “From first to last, Graham displayed an uncanny ability to adopt
trends in the wider culture and then use them for his evangelistic and moral
reform purposes” (28).
I can’t argue with that clear,
incisive summary. If the description fits Graham then it fits the evangelical
movement he helped to carve out between fundamentalism and liberalism and led
for about 50 years. We seek access to the halls of power, sometimes for our own
glory. But we also want everyone from Wall Street to Main Street to hear the
good news that Jesus can save people from their sins. Many of us come from
humble backgrounds and preach that gospel with the hint of a Southern
accent—not too much to alarm the elites, but not too little lest we be accused
of forgetting our roots. We vote our values as responsible citizens. But we
largely work within a system that eschews radicalism and frustrates bold
efforts to address social ills.
We identify with Graham, because he
is one of us, and he shaped us. As Wacker observes, “[Graham] possessed an
uncanny ability to speak both for and to the times” (316). That’s
why we evangelicals followed him for decades and why the world’s leading
historians will continue to account for him long after we, too, have followed
him to the far side banks of Jordan.
Collin Hansen serves as editorial director for The Gospel
Coalition. He is the author of of Blind Spots:
Becoming a Courageous, Compassionate, and Commissioned Church, Young, Restless, Reformed: A Journalist’s Journey With the New Calvinists,
and co-author with John Woodbridge of A God-Sized Vision: Revival Stories That Stretch and Stir. He
earned an MDiv at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and an undergraduate degree
in journalism and history from Northwestern University. He previously worked as
an associate editor for Christianity Today magazine, co-edited Four Views on
the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, and co-edits the Cultural
Renewal series with Tim Keller. He and his wife belong to Redeemer Community Church in Birmingham,
Alabama, and he serves on the advisory board of Beeson Divinity School.
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