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'Good and faithful servant' Billy Graham laid to rest in Charlotte

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Christian evangelist and Southern Baptist minister Billy Graham’s children (L-R) Franklin Graham, Gigi Graham, Ruth Graham and Anne Graham Lotz attend a ceremony…
Christian evangelist and Southern Baptist minister Billy Graham’s children (L-R) Franklin Graham, Gigi Graham, Ruth Graham and Anne Graham Lotz attend a ceremony to honor their father Christian evangelist and Southern Baptist minister Billy Graham, as he lies in honor in the Rotunda of the US Capitol in Washington, DC on Feb. 28,2018. Graham was the nation’s best know Christian evangelist, preaching to millions worldwide, as well as being an advisor to US presidents over his 6 decade career.
CHARLOTTE – The world came to Billy Graham on Friday, to say goodbye to a man billed as “America’s pastor” but more lovingly remembered by those in attendance as a humble and true servant of God.
The globe-trotting evangelist, who traveled the world for a half-century and preached to 215 million people, was laid to rest on the grounds of the Billy Graham Library, honored by a crowd of 2,000, including friends from overseas and the American president. His boyhood home and a 40-foot glass cross embedded in the barn-like library served as an apt background for the man who grew up on a dairy farm outside Charlotte and went on to become one of the world’s most famous Christians.
Graham died Feb. 21 at age 99, but his elder son, Franklin Graham, said at the service his father would be adamant that he is more alive than ever.
“My most compelling memory of my father is him standing behind this pulpit right here, in stadiums around the country and around the world, his voice booming, proclaiming the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ,” Franklin Graham said. “He often said that, ‘Someday you’ll read that I’m dead.’ He said, ‘Don’t you believe one word of it. I’ll be more alive than I am now.'”
Graham was always proud of his roots as the son of farmers outside of Charlotte, and on Friday his body lay inside a simple pine casket, within sight of his childhood home, moved to the library site years ago, brick by brick. Inmates of the penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana, made the plain wooden coffin.
Among the dignitaries attending were President Trump, his wife, Melania, and Vice President Mike Pence and his wife, Karen. Trump did not speak at the funeral, but earlier this week recounted how his father took him to a Graham crusade in New York City, an event that stuck in his memory.
After the Trumps and Pences took their seats, Graham’s grandsons carried the casket into the tent and the service began.
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Graham’s sister, Jean Graham Ford, noted how odd it was to stand again in front of her childhood home, which she shared with Billy.
“My husband and I just had an argument over which room was mine,” she joked, drawing laughter.
She also said that President Trump had mentioned to her that her family must have “good genes” because of their long lives.
“He didn’t know that my name was Jean,” she said, drawing even louder laughter.
Ford said their parents imbued a strong Christian faith in them and taught them the value of hard work and the reward of eternal life. She said heaven came down and took her brother Feb. 21.
“I know what he would want me to say: ‘Heaven is coming again, and it would like to take you also,'” she said.
Each of Graham’s five children then spoke, in birth order. They were led by Virginia “Gigi” Graham, who recounted how her mother, Ruth Graham, then a 13-year-old living in China, described in a poem her perfect future husband. Ruth Graham, who died in 2007 and is buried on the library grounds, asked for a man whose face would have character, but more importantly she craved a “ruggedness of soul.”
“The Lord answered every single one of those prayers of my mother,” Gigi Graham said. “I’m grateful that God has brought them together again for eternity.”
Anne Graham Lotz, herself a preacher, delivered an impassioned mini-sermon, recounting how her parents read the Bible to the children every day while they were growing up in the family’s log home in Montreat. As Billy Graham aged and his eyesight and hearing failed, she would read to him, Lotz said.
Sometimes he would stop her, and they would discuss theology.
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“I would always end by saying, ‘Daddy, I love you,'” Lotz said.
After reading one of Graham’s favorite verses, a passage from Thessalonians about not falling “asleep” spiritually but rather embracing salvation, Lotz ended with, “Daddy, I love you.”
After Lotz’s fiery speech, which drew “amens” from some in the crowd, youngest daughter Ruth Graham deadpanned, “I have followed her all my life.”
She then turned serious, talking about going through a bad divorce and then too quickly jumping into a second marriage, which also ended quickly. Ruth Graham said she was embarrassed and worried about what her parents would say.
“You don’t want to embarrass your father,” she said. “But you really don’t want to embarrass Billy Graham.”
Arriving at the Montreat home, her stomach in knots, she found her father standing in the driveway. “As I got out of the car, he wrapped his arms around me and said, ‘Welcome home,'” Ruth Graham recounted. “There was no blame, there was no shame — just unconditional love. My father was not God, but he showed me what God was like that day.”
Youngest child, Nelson “Ned” Graham followed, saying simply to remember his father as ‘FAT’ — faithful, available and teachable. May we all be that way.”
In a career spanning more than a half-century, Billy Graham preached the Gospel to an estimated 215 million people in more than 185 countries. In America alone, a 2005 Gallup poll found 35 million people, one in six U. S. adults, had heard him preach in person.
Several Christian leaders from overseas attended the funeral, including the Rev. Billy Kim, who recounted attending a Billy Graham crusade in Seoul, South Korea, that drew more than a million people. Kim also credited Graham with spawning the mega-church movement in Korea.
On his last visit with Graham, Kim said the preacher’s faculties were fading. But when Gigi Graham her father his “favorite Korean preacher” was in the room, the old man of God lit up.
“You said, ‘Let’s have one more crusade in Korea,'” Kim recalled, adding that Graham’s earthly mission was now complete. “You have finished the course. You have kept the faith.”
Musical artist Michael W. Smith sings “Above All” during the private funeral service for Billy Graham in a tent outside the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte, N. C. on Friday, March 2,2018.
The service was held under a huge white tent, a nod to Graham’s famous 1949 Los Angeles crusade, held under a similar “canvas cathedral” and extended for five weeks because of its popularity.
Friday’s gathering drew politicians, celebrities and church leaders of other faiths, including Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York City. Dolan said even though he grew up in a devoutly Catholic home, he and his family would watch Graham on television, spellbound by his powerful message.
Dolan said before the service that the honor of attending Graham’s funeral was “two-fold: it’s personal and communal.
“It’s personal because Billy Graham was a towering influence in my life growing up in the ’50s and ’60s,” Dolan said. “I watched him. I listened to him, and I said, ‘My, oh my, I’d like to do what he does.’ I think he had an impact on my priestly vocation.”
“Secondly, it’s important to me communally because I am so honored that his family would have invited Catholic representation,” Dolan continued. “Billy was a bridge builder.”
Pipe Major William Boetticher plays “Amazing Grace” during the private funeral service for Billy Graham in a tent outside the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte, N. C. on Friday, March 2,2018.
To embrace Catholics in the 1940s and ‘50s as Graham did was not “always blessed,” Dolan said.

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