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Billy
Graham and Oprah
Last year Billy Graham was being interviewed
by Oprah Winfrey on
television.
Oprah told him that in her childhood home, she use to watch him preach on
a little black and white TV while sitting on a linoleum floor. She went on
to the tell viewers that in his lifetime Billy has preached to
twenty-million people around the world, not to mention the countless
numbers who have heard him whenever his crusades are broadcast.
When she asked if he got nervous before facing a crowd, Billy replied
humbly, "No, don't get nervous before crowds, but I did today before
I was going to meet with you."
Oprah's show is broadcast to twenty million people every day. She is
comfortable with famous stars and celebrities but seemed in awe of Dr.
Billy Graham.
When the interview ended, she told the audience "You don't often see
this on my show, but we're going to pray." Then she asked Billy to
close in prayer.
The camera panned the studio audience as they bowed their heads and closed
their eyes just like in one of his crusades.
Oprah sang the first line from the song that is his hallmark "Just as
I am, without a plea, " misreading the line and singing off'-key, but
her voice was full of emotion and almost cracked.
When Billy stood up after the show, instead of hugging her guest,
Oprah's usual custom, she went over and just nestled against him. Billy
wrapped his arm around her and pulled her under his shoulder. She stood in
his fatherly embrace with a look of sheer contentment.
I once read the book Nestle, Don't Wrestle by Corrie Ten Boom. The power
of nestling was evident on the TV screen that day. Billy Graham was not
the least condemning, distant, or hesitant to embrace a public personality
who may not fit the evangelistic mold. His grace and courage are sometimes
stunning. In an interview with Hugh Downs, on the 20/20 program, the
subject turned to homosexuality. Hugh looked directly at Bill and said,
"If you
had a homosexual child, would you love him?" Billy didn't miss a
beat. He replied with sincerity and gentleness, "Why, I would love
that one even more."
The title of Billy's autobiography, Just As I Am, says it all. His
life goes before him speaking as eloquently as that charming southern
drawl for which he is known.
If, when I am eighty years old, my autobiography were to be titled
Just As I Am, I wonder how I would live now? Do I have the courage to be
me?
I'll never be a Billy Graham, the elegant man who draws people to the Lord
through a simple one-point message, but I hope to be a person who is real
and compassionate and who might draw people to nestle within God's
embrace.
Any one of us can do that. We may never win any great awards or be named
best dressed, most beautiful, most popular, or most revered, but each of
us has an arm with which to hold another person, each of us can pull
another shoulder under ours, and each of us can invite someone in need to
nestle next to our heart.
We can give a pat on the back, a simple compliment, a kiss on the cheek, a
thumbs-up sign, We can smile at a stranger, say hello when it's least
expected, send a card of congratulations, take flowers to a sick neighbor,
make a casserole for a new mother, give a high five, say "I love
you" in language your teenager will understand, or back off even when
you have a right to take the offensive.
Do you make it a point to speak to a visitor or person who shows up
alone at church, buy a hamburger for a homeless man, call your mother on
Sunday afternoons, pick daisies with a little girl, or take a fatherless
boy to a baseball game? Did anyone ever tell you how beautiful you look
when you're looking for what's beautiful in someone else?
Billy complimented Oprah when asked what he was most thankful for; he
said, "Salvation given to us in Jesus Christ" then added, and
the way you have made people all over this country aware of the power of
being grateful."
When asked his secret of love, being married fifty-four years to the same
person, he said,"Ruth and I are happily incompatible." How
unexpected. We would all live more comfortably with everybody around us if
we would find the strength in being grateful and happily incompatible.
Let's take the things that set us apart, that make us different, that
cause us to disagree, and make them an occasion to compliment each other
and be thankful for each other. Let us be big enough to be smaller than
our neighbor, spouse, friends, and strangers.
Every day, Nestle, don't wrestle!
Offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God -
this is your spiritual act of worship ROM. 12:1
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