By Rev. Dr. Ed Hird
My grandmother and mother knew that I would become an
Anglican priest. I dismissed this
expectation, being convinced that I would become an electrical engineer like my
father. In my family system, there were
no adult males that attended church. In
1965, my mother had a spiritual encounter at a Billy Graham event at the
Pacific National Exhibition. Fifty-two
years later, my mother’s family faithfulness has had a huge impact on my
life. I am a more loving, forgiving
person today, because of my mother’s faithful example and prayers.
Similarly, Billy Graham’s family faithfulness at age 98 has had
a huge impact on countless people. President
Eisenhower memorably said: “Billy Graham is one of the best ambassadors our
country has but he told me, ‘I am an ambassador of heaven.'” How has Billy Graham continued for the past
sixty years of Gallup polling as one of the ten most admired people in the
world? My hunch is that it has to do
with humility and not taking himself too seriously. Henry Kissinger commented: “To
my surprise, I found myself not only impressed but deeply moved by how he
touched some profound spiritual yearning…I have an immense regard for Billy
Graham. He is a strong but humble man, with a generous and compassionate heart
that is open to every human being of every religious faith and to those who
profess to have none.” It is not easy to finish well as a
high-profile public figure. Everything
that they say and do is constantly scrutinized.
They and their families are living in a public goldfish bowl.
Family faithfulness does not mean that a person never makes
mistakes. Faithfulness means being
willing to humbly admit one’s mistakes and being willing to grow and
change. During a Newsweek interview in
2006, Graham commented: “Much of my life has been a pilgrimage—constantly learning,
changing, growing and maturing.” Part of the way that Billy Graham has coped
with unceasing public attention has been through his self-effacing humour. In his autobiography Just as I am, Billy was always transparently telling hilarious
stories about his foibles and mistakes. He
is famous for having personal access to every American president since Harry
Truman in 1950. The opening sentence of
Billy’s autobiography is “It was July 14th 1950, and I was about to
make a fool of myself.” Unschooled in presidential protocol, the
31-year old Billy Graham innocently told the reporters the content of his
conversation with the President. Truman
was so offended that he dismissed Billy Graham as a counterfeit. Later Billy Graham visited President Truman,
apologizing profusely for his ignorance and naivete. “Don’t worry about it”, replied Truman, “I
realize that you hadn’t been properly briefed.” Billy Graham vowed that such a mistake would
never happen again if he was ever given access to a person of rank or
influence.
I have been privileged to serve on the Executive of the
Greater Vancouver Festival of Hope.
During this time, I have met both the Billy Graham family and the Billy
Graham team. Are they perfect? No. Do they make mistakes? Yes. I do sense a family faithfulness, a
willingness to humbly admit where they need to grow and learn. I am grateful that in the March 3rd to 5th
Greater Vancouver Festival of Hope, tens of thousands came to hear the Good News and that thousands experienced rising faith for themselves.
Rev. Dr. Ed Hird, Rector,
St. Simon’s North Vancouver, Anglican Mission in Canada
-author of Restoring Health: body, mind and spirit
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing this, Ed. I checked out and viewed some of the videos of the marvellous Vancouver Festival of Hope. What a massive undertaking! It was great see those thousands of young folks and a good sprinkling of older adults enthusiastically engaged in the event.
Franklin G.'s message and approach is so simple and understandable, just like his dad. Thanks also for a sharing some more about Billy Graham, himself.
(BTW: I appreciated your call, last week.)~~+~~
Thank you for your very kind comments, Peter. You truly have a charismatic gift of encouragement, which other writers need very much. :) Blessings, Ed+
p.s. Yes, the Festival of Hope with almost 100,000 watching, including 34,000 in person, was amazing. www.festivalofhope.ca
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