| NEW RELEASEBilly Graham: Preacher to the Presidents
 CBN.com  A new book by TimeMagazine  editors Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy, The Preacher and the Presidents: Billy  Graham in the White House (Center Street,  August 2007) tells the story of an extraordinary private ministry to America's  most powerful political leaders.   
 No  other man or woman was in a position to see the presidents, and the  presidency so intimately over five decades.   Presidents called Graham in for photo ops. They called for comfort. They  asked about death and salvation; about sin, and forgiveness. And they called  him for political advice, too. With that came an almost unbearable temptation:  how far could a pastor go to help a friend — and not become part of the  political game?
 
 Meticulously  researched and informed by multiple in-depth interviews with Graham, Presidents  Ford, Carter, George H. W. Bush and Clinton, and many of their aides and family  members, The Preacher and the Presidents reveals how powerful men from the  worlds of faith and politics met and courted each other. How they depended on  and trusted each other. And how they used each other, too.
 
 In many cases the friendships existed long before the presidents came to  power, the authors reveal. In 1952 Graham was already such a rising religious  star that there was talk in Hollywood of making a movie about him—starring his  friend Ronald Reagan. Over the years he spent holidays with the Johnsons at  their Texas ranch, and summer weekends in Maine with the Bush family. Eisenhower on  his deathbed asked Graham to help him reconcile with Nixon, whose daughter was  engaged to marry Ike’s grandson. The  week before Gerald Ford pardoned Nixon, he tracked Graham down to talk it  through; that conversation, he told the authors, was crucial. Nancy Reagan  called him to the hospital the day her husband was shot; 23 years later he was  the first person she called when he died. When Hillary Clinton felt no one in  the world understood how she could forgive her husband, Graham pointedly  praised her for it. “He was just very personally there for me,” Senator Clinton told the authors.
 The presidents, and the  First Ladies, could summon Graham to the White House confident that their  secrets were safe.  “I think they began  to realize that if I didn’t quote them, they could talk to me about their  feelings and problems and pray with me,’ he told the authors. “Their personal  lives, some of them, were difficult. But I loved them all. I knew that they had  burdens beyond anything I could ever know or understand.”
 The presidents’ obvious  affection for Graham did not prevent them from using him as a valuable  political ally and private American ambassador as well. Kennedy called him for  a golf game four days before his inauguration, to help reassure Protestants  about having a Catholic president; Johnson dispatched him to Alabama to help  promote civil rights; Nixon sent him to Taiwan to reassure Chiang Kai Shek  about the change in US China policy. Carter called for help with arms control.  Over the opposition of the National Security staff, Reagan encouraged Graham’s  outreach to Moscow;  George H.W. Bush asked Graham to come keep vigil at the White House the night  before the first Gulf War. Bill Clinton used him to deliver private messages to  North Korean leader Kim Il Sung.
 In the interviews,  Graham admitted that his friendships with politicians sometimes drew him too  deep into temporal affairs.  One letter  to Nixon during the 1960 campaign weighed the virtues of various possible  running mates; at the end Graham asks that Nixon destroy it after reading.  “I did give political advice, and I shouldn’t  have,” Graham told the authors, and after the crushing revelations of  Watergate, Graham resolved to try and stop diving into the political fray.  His meetings with Reagan were almost entirely  private, under the radar.   Just before Reagan’s swearing in, Graham declared that "evangelicals can't be closely identified  with any particular party or person. We have to stand in the middle, to preach  to all the people, right and left. I haven't been faithful to my own advice in  the past. I will in the future." But in the 2000 campaign, Graham would  issue a 11th hour endorsement of George W. Bush in the final 48  hours of that race. And he did it in the state of Florida.  
 At a time when the nation is increasingly split over the  place of religion in public life, The  Preacher and the Presidents reveals how the world’s most powerful men and  the world’s most famous evangelist knit faith and politics together.
   Purchase your copy of The Preacher and the Presidents: Billy Graham in the White House  Read more book excerpts and author interviews on CBN.com. 
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