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Home > Articles > Continuous Voltage
Continuous Voltage
Spiritual strength, as Billy Graham experienced it, means remaining connected to your power Source.


Topics:Crusade evangelism, Graham, Billy, Prayer, Prayer, need for, Preaching, Pursuit of God
Filters:Outreach, Pastor, Pastoral care, Prayer, Preaching, Shepherd, Spiritual director
Purpose:Evangelism
References:Isaiah 40:31, 2 Corinthians 12:9-10, Philippians 4:6-7
Date Added:July 11, 2007

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Posted: August 07, 2008
A.S.Mathew  (Guest)
It is my greatest wish and prayer that the modern mega-preachers and Pastors of prosperity gospel may learn from the the greatest preacher of the 20th century; his prayer life, humility, passion for souls, ethics, integrity, strength of character and a whole lot of goodness. Let everybody learn from him. The first time I have heard him preach was in India, in February 1956. He was 36 years old, preached from John 3:16, and I was a young boy of 12 studying in the 7th grade. My family and friends got into a 27 seater studebaker bus, but when the count was taken, it was 125 people jam packed to make a trip of 40 miles, which took over 2 hours. God gave me the blessings to hear him many times, and the message is the same, giving hope to a hopleless world, that Jesus is the only hope of the world. We need to pray to raise many Billy Grahams because the need is very urgent for a world revival.


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Billy Graham's colleagues often speak of the constant pressure Billy has always felt. It's easy to see why. Imagine the pressure of conducting the funeral for the disgraced former President Richard Nixon while the nation skeptically watched and listened for every nuance. Imagine the emotional demands on him when he conducted the memorial service after the Oklahoma City bombing.

The service at the National Cathedral right after the September 11 attacks presented perhaps the greatest pressure of all. The nation was in deep shock; the entire world would be watching on television. Billy's words and tone, both for Americans and for people of all other nations, had to be just right.

That would be challenge enough for a person at the height of his strength. But it was a frail octogenarian with serious health problems who mounted the platform with steady purpose and told the nation, "God is our refuge and strength; an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way, and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea."

With inner strength, Billy declared, "You may be angry at God. I want to assure you that God understands these feelings you have. But God can be trusted, even when life seems at its darkest. From the cross, God declares, 'I love you. I know the heartaches and the sorrows and the pains you feel, but I love you.'

"This has been a terrible week with many tears. But also it's been a week of great faith. … And [remember] the words of that familiar hymn that Andrew Young quoted, 'Fear not, I am with thee. Oh, be not dismayed, for I am thy God and will still give thee aid.'"

Despite his frailty, Billy's presence, poise, and message touched the sorrows and fears and brought hope and a deeply Christian response to his nation and to the world. He found the inner resources to rise to that momentous occasion.

Even in the latter years of his eventful ministry, Billy continued in the nitty-gritty of leading his organization; continued to sweat over the funding of three events in Amsterdam that brought together 10,000 itinerant evangelists, 70 percent of them from poor, developing countries; continued to appear on news shows to represent the gospel; continued to minister to every U.S. president of his era. In the phrase voiced by President George W. Bush when Billy was hospitalized and unable to attend the funeral of Ronald Reagan, Billy was "the nation's pastor"—but he was also the leader of an organization and of a vast movement.

How could he maintain the strength and sense of commitment to do all that for more than sixty years?

Billy has not been impervious to the pressures; his body and psyche have paid a steep price. But he has taken his own advice, so often expressed in his newspaper columns, books, and articles. He has continually plugged himself into the spiritual and psychological voltage that has made this half-century saga possible.