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Pastor to presidents

Christian Century,  Dec 11, 2007  by Michael G. Long

The Preacher and the Presidents: Billy Graham in the White House. By Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy. Center Street, 413 pp., $26.99.

IN THIS captivating narrative, Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy, veteran reporters for Time magazine, offer details of Billy Graham's historic relationships with every U.S. president from Harry S. Truman to George W. Bush. Many of the details are reported here for the first time, and they are at once comforting and troubling, predictable and surprising, funny and tragic--everything we would expect from personalities as big as Graham's and, say, Bill Clinton's.

Graham has not granted interviews to all those who have sought access to him in recent years, but Gibbs and Duffy were able to visit with him four times at his rustic home in Montreat, North Carolina. The content of these interviews, including others with several past presidents and key presidential aides, makes The Preacher and the Presidents one of the most significant contributions to the study of religion and politics in the United States in the 21st century.

Gibbs and Duffy are sympathetic to the immensely likable Graham, and when reading their book, I could not help recalling Tom Wicker's barbed comment that William Martin had taken a "reverent approach" in his 1991 biography of the evangelist. Gibbs and Duffy are not so much reverential as deferential, but the effect is the same: Graham largely escapes the scathing critique he occasionally deserves.

It's not that the book lacks criticism. Gibbs and Duffy give the bulk of their attention to Graham's relationship with Richard Nixon, and here they find more than a few things that raise their eyebrows, including Graham's "fascination with power," his uncritical patriotism in the face of massive political dissent, his focus on Nixon's political rather than spiritual needs and, yes, his damning comments about Jews in the infamous Oval Office meeting in January 1972.

Perhaps most disappointing is the way Gibbs and Duffy treat Graham with kid gloves when recounting his stance on the Vietnam War. The authors claim that it was "fair" of Graham to tell the New York Times in 1973 that he had questioned the wisdom of the war from its beginning. Surely Graham's July 11, 1965, letter to Lyndon Johnson, for some reason not cited by Gibbs and Duffy, is evidence enough to counter Graham's revision of history. Graham wrote: "The Communists are moving fast toward the goal of world revolution. Perhaps God brought you to the kingdom for such an hour as this--to stop them. In doing so, you could be the man who helped save Christian civilization."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The post-Nixon sections of the book are by far the most compelling and groundbreaking. Especially fascinating is the account of Graham's transformation in the painful aftermath of Watergate.

The authors report that shortly before Gerald Ford took office, Graham arranged for a private meeting with Billy Zeoli, Ford's pastoral counselor, and offered a lesson he had learned the hard way: "When you get to the White House, don't play golf with him," Graham stated. "Don't go on the Sequoia with him. Don't make it a social event. Be yourself. You have to ground him in scripture." (And this from a man who swam naked in the White House pool.)

Gibbs and Duffy make much of this change, even suggesting that it helped to save Graham's public image and ministry. But Graham did not always follow his own advice in the post-Nixon years--the vacations he took with the Bush family in Kennebunkport come to mind. Perhaps what really saved Graham is that no succeeding president was quite like Nixon.

Nevertheless, Gibbs and Duffy do convincingly show that after the scorching of Watergate, Graham focused more on his role as pastor to the presidents. At no time was this more evident than during the Lewinsky scandal, when Graham publicly announced that he had forgiven Bill Clinton, a move that infuriated many conservative Christians. Offering the type of rich detail that makes this book a treasure to read, Gibbs and Duffy relate a touching story about Graham and Clinton at an event shortly after the scandal broke. The organizers of the dinner marking Time magazine's 75th anniversary did not plan for Graham and Clinton to sit together, but when baseball great Joe DiMaggio refused to sit next to the president, Graham volunteered to take his place. According to Gibbs and Duffy, "This was trademark Graham: the more trouble a president was in--Johnson over Vietnam, Nixon over Watergate, Clinton over Monica--the more prepared Graham was to stand publicly by his side."

The authors leave out an inconvenient exception: Jimmy Carter during the Iran hostage crisis. Although they were fellow Southern Baptists, Graham and Carter never became close friends, and this emboldened Graham to act in ways that were contrary to his earlier deference to sitting presidents. Bather than standing by Carter during the crisis, Graham called a private meeting of conservative religious leaders to plot their backing of the future darling of evangelical Christianity--Ronald Reagan. Perhaps this move points to the true hallmark of Graham's political ministry: no matter a president's (or presidential candidate's) political or religious affiliation, the greater a friend he was to Graham, the more prepared Graham was to stand by his side, in public and in private.