Crusader: Graham ends storied career

He'll preach in N.Y., site of historic appearance

Published: Saturday, June 25 2005 12:00 a.m. MDT

A bus passes a Times Square billboard advertising the Rev. Billy Graham's crusade. He first preached in the nation's largest and, by reputation, most wicked city in '57.

Mary Altaffer, Associated Press

NEW YORK — "Finally, the Big One," blared a headline in 1957, when a dashing young evangelist named Billy Graham was poised to launch his first crusade in the largest and, by reputation, most wicked city in the nation. "Save New York!"

The buzz surrounding this famous itinerant preacher's foray into Manhattan was at times more pulp than truly epic, but that crusade still stands as one of the most momentous events in American religious history. It not only marked the first time a preacher reached a significant audience through television, but it also helped establish him as the leading spiritual figure in the country, a pivotal player in the re-emergence of U.S. evangelical Protestantism.

Now, this weekend, in likely his final crusade, the Rev. Billy Graham has returned to "the big one," New York City, at the Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens.

The octogenarian evangelist, dealing with several ailments, has proclaimed it almost certain that he will not preach in such a public venue again. If true, Sunday will mark the end of a career that, spanning six decades, has made Graham one of the most respected public figures in the nation's history.

It's a fact not without irony, since Graham came of age when evangelists were seen more as Elmer Gantry figures — traveling hucksters, hypocrites out to make a buck. Evangelical Protestants, too, bruised after decades of battles with Darwinism, liberal Christianity and academic critiques of the Bible, had mostly withdrawn from public life, retreating into a defensive "fundamentalism" that could only react to culture, not shape it.

"Billy Graham, for evangelicals, put us on the national stage in a light that reflected well on us, maybe for the first time in a long time," said Larry Lyon, professor of sociology and dean of the graduate school at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. "There was great pride in his accomplishments, especially at that time in the 1950s and '60s, when the idea of 'evangelical Protestant' was seen with a more jaundiced eye by the establishment than they are today, when they've largely become the establishment."

Even now, few Christian leaders can claim the near universal respect given to Graham. Many others have large followings and significant political clout, but none has transcended his or her particular constituencies to play a larger national role quite as he has.

Like most evangelists, Graham had the requisite charisma to be an exciting and inspiring preacher. With his James Dean good looks, his chiseled jaw and fiery blue eyes, he had a rare ability to exude both determined strength and gentle sensitivity.

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