Billy Graham was an influential American evangelical preacher who held large revival events in the 1940s-1950s. His preaching drew huge crowds and helped spread religious revival. He supported anti-communism and saw Christianity as aligned with capitalism. Graham's work represented a continuation of Abraham Vereide's prayer groups that politically mobilized businessmen. Graham cultivated relationships with politicians and supported Dwight Eisenhower's 1952 presidential campaign, hoping to influence national politics through his ministry.
2. Billy graham is an American evangelical Christian
evangelist. He was born in November 7, 1918. In
September 25, about five thousands individual huddled
together to listen to an evangelical preach of Graham.
Graham was thirty years old right then, gets on stage and
preaches about the city’s wicked ways of that infamous
cities- sexual promiscuity, addictions of to drink dope.
3. He also preached about communism in a time when people
just found out about the soviets atomic bomb.
Graham talked about communism and said, “communism is
not only an economic interpretation of life— communism is
a religion that is inspired, directed, and motivated by the
devil himself who has declared war against almighty god.”
4. Graham’s preaching is drawing a lot of attention. Large crowds are
formed to an estimated total of 350000 over the course of 8 weeks.
Graham is regarded as a “servant of god.” He was an active member
in helping the spiritual and religious revival of midcentury America.
There are three important movements in 40’s and 50’s:
1-the prayer breakfast meetings of Abraham Vereide
2- Graham’s evangelical revivals
3-Presidential campaign of Dwight D. Eisenhower
These three movements effectively harnessed Cold War anxieties for
an already established campaign against the New Deal.
5. Graham thought that there is a strong relationship between
Christianity and capitalism, he said” we have the suggestion from
scripture itself that faith and business, properly bended, can be a
happy, wholesome, and even profitable mixture.”
In Graham perspective, influenced by the Methodist minister ,
prayer wasn’t only a thing that we practice to get ourselves in the
save side, but a tool that gives the businessmen’s companies the
good public image.
6. As preachers like Billy Graham helped to popularize public
prayer, they thus managed to politicize it as well. They shared
the Christian libertarian sensibilities of spiritual mobilization
but were able to spread that gospel in much subtler ways than
that organization ever could.
7. Vereide found the turmoil of his professional life
mirrored. When the Methodist minister returned to the
West coast.
Also, he found businessmen and labor unions
embroiled in an epic struggle that helped give him a
new sense of purpose.
8. Union leaders from all over the west Cast descended on Seattle to
make plans for an even greater wave of strikes that summer
Vereide had an important meeting of his own with Walter Douglass, a
former Army major and a prominent local developer. The two soon
began commiserating about how entire country was in Douglass
words
9. Business and social leaders throughout the country are
recognizing that economic reconstruction must begin with an
individual recovery from within.
Vereide notes “they are beginning to realize that we cannot solve
all the problems of our present-day civilization by our wits, but
must rely on a higher power to help.
10. They hope to revive the spiritual life in commerce, to aid the
churches and to get back to a real American home life.
Accordingly, when they filed articles of incorporation, the founders
of city chapel announced their intention” to foster and promote the
advancement of Christianity and develop a Christian nation.
11. As Seattle group flourished businessmen in other communities
reached out to vereide in hopes of starting ones of their own.
The minister states that the organization followed “ a non-
political and non – denominational “
12. William penn: Men must either be governed by God or ruled
by tyrants, Vereide creates a network of prayer group across
the nation.
13. In San Francisco, a former secretary of the
navy established a network of prayer groups at
the Olympic club.
The head of wool trading business started
another at the Boston City Club
14. A set of businessmen convened at the lake Shore Club in Chicago to
begin their own group, while an oilman did likewise with associates
in Los Angeles.
In New York, Republican mayor Fiorello was so taken with the idea
he sought Vereides assistance in getting a group started there too.
15. Veriede brought together his newfound political and cooperate
supporters to serve on the board of directors for the new
national version of City Chapel, which he called the National
Council for Christian Leaderships(NCCL).
16. The consecration of chief justice in the United States was
not welcomed.
Leaders from the judicial and legislative branches get
together in order to discuss the role of prayer in political life.
17. Senator John Stennie, a Mississippi Democrat says that
America focused on material issue, so he emphasized that
people have to balance their planning to spirituality.
Justice Sherman Minton urged those gathered to work with
people of Europe for a closer brotherhood.
18. Vereide displayed a new International Council for Christian
Leadership (ICCL).
ICCL was an extension of NCCL(National Council for
Christian Leadership).
19. Vereide recognized that the tensions of the Cold War could
be exploited to win more converts to his cause.
20. Vereide urged the congressmen to standup to communism in
three ways:
a. By maintaining their personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
b. By cultivating intensive fellowship.
c. By working with like-minded Christian across the country.
21. Billy Graham’s ministry represented continuation of Abraham
Veriede’s.
22. Billy Graham’s ministry represented continuation of Abraham
Veriede’s.
He continued Veriede by leading a series of revivals that seemed
in the words of one biographer” like a long Palm Sunday
procession of celebration and arrival.
Graham ended the year with a six-week revival in Atlanta.
23. In early 1951, Graham’s travels took him to Fort Worth, Texas.
The four-week crusade there was an unqualified success, there
was a huge number of people and this considered as the largest
evangelistic campaign (seeking to convert others to the Christian
faith) in the history of the state or in the entire Southwest.
24.
25. The earthy Richardson had little use for Graham’s religion,
but the two shared a common faith in free enterprise.
- Graham has the same economic and political freedom that the National
Association of Manufactures and the United States Chamber of commerce have
when he speaks about the American way of life. ”An early biographer noted”.
During the Boston crusade , Graham told a reporter that his real
ambition was “ to get president Truman's ear for thirty minutes, to
get a little help.”
26. When Graham asked if he could offer a prayer, Truman
shrugged and said, “I don’t suppose it could do any
harm.”
27. Graham continued to send unrequited letters to Truman,
but he sensed that he had overstepped his bounds.
- Later, he was blaming himself for how the meeting went
and how they had abused the privilege of seeing the
president.
Graham chided Democrats for wasting money on the
welfare and Marshall Plan abroad.
28. In January 1952, Graham returned to Washington
determined to make better than he had two years before.
- This time, his team planned a five weeks revival in the capital.
Graham courted congressmen as well.
- When he first announced the crusade, he did so with a senator and
ten representatives standing alongside him.
29. Graham hoped to convince president Truman to attend the first
service and offer some opening marks.
As the Washington crusade began in January 1952, Graham made
his intent to convince national politics.
- Many congressmen took roles in the revival, one-third of the Senator and one-
forth of all representatives.
Graham called for congress to set aside a national day of a prayer as
a “day of confession, humiliation, and turning to God at this hour.”
30. The proposal for a national day of prayer was nothing new;
Abraham Lincoln, had called for similar observances in the past.
Graham tried to convince the president Truman of the need for a
national day of prayer during their July 1950 meeting.
Finally, Truman selected the Fourth of July as the date for the
first National Day of a prayer.
31. Finally, Truman selected the Fourth of July as the
date for the first National Day of a prayer.
32. In June 1952
• Eisenhower launched his campaign for the presidency in
Abilene.
33. • In his comments, he condemned a set of “evils which can
ultimately throttle free government,” which he identified as
labor unrest, runway inflation, “excessive taxation,” and the
“ceaseless expansion” of the federal government.
• Eisenhower encouraged the perception that his candidacy
was a religious.
34. In July 1952
• The preacher received an urgent call Senator Carlos
• The GOP, insisted, “We must clean up the mess in
Washington”; in the same time Graham asserted, “We all
seem to agree there’s a mess in Washington”.
35. In 1951
• A group of leading clergymen formed Christian Action, which is
intended “to draw together Protestance on the non-communist.
• It was, in essence, a liberal counterpart to James Fifield’s spiritual
Mobilization.
• In a response to Graham’s involvement in the Eisenhower
campaign, Niebuhr suggested that Christian Action could counter
his work by assembling “an inter-faith committee of ministers for
Stevenson.”
36. • While Graham’s support was influential, Eisenhower’s campaign
received similar endorsements from other Christian libertarian
leaders.
• Spiritual Mobilization Faith and Freedom published a manifesto,
titled “The Christian Political Responsibility,” in its September
1952 issue.
• In the end, Eisenhower’s “great crusade” for the presidency proved
to be every bit as popular as Graham’s own crusade.