BGEA (Dec 28, 2017)
"Our job in life is not to be successful, but to be
faithful." -Billy Graham
[BillyGraham.org] After
recently turning 99 and entering his 100th year of life, Billy Graham has been
recognized once again as one of the people Americans admire most—an honor he
has received 61 times. (Photo: Billy Graham on the porch/BGEA/via
BillyGraham.org)
Gallup just released its annual list after asking more than 1,000
Americans which man and woman in the world they admired most. The poll has two
criteria: the man or woman must be living, and the open-ended question is asked
with no prompting, meaning those whose names are in the headlines are likely
choices.
Mr. Graham has been among the top 10 most admired men every year
since 1963 (except 1976 when the survey didn't happen). He also appeared on the
list every year from 1955-1961. He was ranked fourth this year.
Although he has never placed first (a spot usually reserved for
U.S. presidents), he has been on the list more times than anyone else. Queen
Elizabeth II follows his record with 49 appearances. Mr. Graham and the Queen
have been friends for many years. Their friendship was recently portrayed in
the second season of the TV series "The Crown."
Former president Barack Obama and former secretary of state
Hillary Clinton each received recognition as 2017's most admired man and
woman—titles they've retained for the past decade. Still, the margins were more
narrow this year with President Donald Trump trailing 3 percent behind Obama,
and Clinton skimming past former first lady Michelle Obama by only 2 percent.
Others on the list for most admired men included Pope Francis (who
took third place), Sen. John McCain, Bill Gates, Vice President Mike Pence and
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.
Oprah Winfrey, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, First Lady Melania Trump and
Duchess Kate Middleton were also among the most admired women.
Decades of Influence
Billy Graham founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) in 1950 and has preached the Gospel to more people in live audiences than anyone else in history. Hundreds of millions more have been reached through television, video, film and the internet.
Billy Graham founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) in 1950 and has preached the Gospel to more people in live audiences than anyone else in history. Hundreds of millions more have been reached through television, video, film and the internet.
The evangelist has preached in remote villages
and in the heart of New York City. He's ministered to heads of state as well as
the simple-living bushmen of Australia and the wandering tribes of Africa and
the Middle East, desiring all people to have a relationship with God. (Photo:
Billy Graham preaching at Wembley Stadium in London on May 22, 1954/BGEA/via
BillyGraham.org)
Mr. Graham has also written 33 books. His recent works include
"Where I Am: Heaven, Eternity, and Our Life Beyond" (2015), "The
Reason for My Hope: Salvation" (2013), "The Heaven Answer Book"
(2012), "Nearing Home: Life, Faith and Finishing Well" (2011) and
"Storm Warning" (2010).
Despite his many accomplishments, Mr. Graham has said, "Our
job in life is not to be successful, but to be faithful."
Now in his 100th year of life, the "pastor to
presidents" continues his ministry through prayer at his Montreat, North
Carolina, home. His work is also being carried out by multiple BGEA ministries.
One of these ministries is the Decision America Tour led by his
son, Franklin Graham.
This past year, tens of thousands heard the Gospel through the
Decision America Tour in Texas and Tennessee. In 2016, Franklin traveled to all
50 states, holding prayer rallies and telling the Good News in every capital
city, while he encouraged people to pray, vote and engage in political
elections.
Franklin will be traveling to the West Coast in 2018 to continue
the Decision America Tour through one-day prayer and evangelism events in
several cities across California, Washington and Oregon.
Learn more about the Decision America Tour here.
The Gallup poll was conducted Dec. 4-11, surveying 1,049 American
adults nationwide by phone. The overall margin of error is plus or minus four
percentage points.
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