Grant Wacker is Gilbert T. Rowe Professor of Christian History at Duke University Divinity School.
Wacker’s style is clear and engaging, and Graham’s story has plenty
to recommend it… What makes Wacker’s book not just readable but
engrossing, however, is what it reveals about American
evangelicalism. Many of evangelicalism’s most salient
characteristics seem to inhere in the person and career of Billy
Graham.
*Wall Street Journal*
Excellent… It is not a biography, but rather a disciplined,
admirably fair-minded effort to understand and explain how
20th-century American culture produced a figure like Billy Graham,
and how Graham in turn helped to shape that same culture.
*New York Times Book Review*
Wacker has spent the better part of his career observing the battle
over Graham’s legacy. His biography America’s Pastor is an
exhaustive and judicious effort to settle this cultural obsession
with Graham and assess his influence. Other scholars have written
doorstop-size narrative accounts of Graham’s life, tracing events
from his childhood on a North Carolina dairy farm through his
massive revival campaigns and frequent visits to the White House.
Wacker has produced a different kind of book. He has, it appears,
read every work of scholarship about Graham, from the mightiest
bestseller to the lowliest unpublished doctoral thesis. He has
combed through a mountain of archival sources. The result is not a
conventional biography, but a series of interpretive essays that
evaluate Graham’s various roles in twentieth-century America, from
‘Preacher’ and ‘Entrepreneur’ to ‘Southerner’ and evangelical
‘Patriarch.’ The result is the most comprehensive and balanced
analysis of Billy Graham ever published.
*The Nation*
This is a major book by a major historian of American religion
about a major religious figure in American history… [A]
magnificently written and meticulously researched study of what
Billy Graham meant at different times to Americans and what America
meant to an evolving Billy Graham.
*America*
It is required reading for anyone seriously interested in
evangelicalism, 20th century American history, or the sociology of
religion… For a thematic view of how Graham affected (and was
affected by) American culture, Wacker’s book is unparalleled. And
if you’re one of the many evangelicals under 40 who are only
vaguely aware of how Graham shaped your world, you need this
book.
*Christianity Today*
[Wacker’s] writing is accessible and vivid. And he takes a great
deal of care in fleshing out the nuances of Graham’s life and
sketching the ways Graham emerged out of the fundamentalist
movement and came to reshape the contours of American
evangelicalism to the degree that he became a spokesperson for an
American Protestantism committed to Jesus but tolerant and peaceful
toward others. Neither do Wacker’s insights overlook criticism of
Graham, especially in the area of race… Wacker doesn’t sugarcoat
Graham’s shortcomings, but this is, for the most part, a
sympathetic portrayal of a preacher who helped a subgroup of devout
Christians move from the sidelines to the center.
*News & Observer*
A fascinating read for all who recognize Billy Graham’s unique and
powerful ministry and wonder if we will see his like again.
*Baptist Times*
Beautifully written…[and] the best general study of the Billy
Graham Phenomenon… America’s Pastor charts a parallel evolution in
Graham’s social and political career, and with a parallel
ideological structure.
*Books & Culture*
Lively and learned… Highly readable.
*Chronicle of Higher Education*
It is a major work that gives insight not only into the achievement
of Billy Graham but into American history in the second half of the
20th Century. Graham’s flaws and his successes are fairly
recorded.
*Church of England Newspaper*
Unlike many accounts of Billy Graham’s life and ministry, Grant
Wacker’s America’s Pastor: Billy Graham and the Shaping of a Nation
does not construct a heroic fable, nor does he deconstruct the
evangelist as a lumbering proselytizer… Wacker’s analysis of
Graham’s strengths and weaknesses is thorough and fair… An iconic
life that America’s Pastor captures so well.
*First Things*
Wacker’s engaging, comprehensive, and sympathetic (although not
uncritical) study of Graham’s multifaceted career is an admirable
introduction both to Graham and to the evangelical movement he
worked so hard to build.
*Foreign Affairs*
[Wacker] adds to the voluminous Graham literature with a scholarly
yet captivating narrative that situates Graham alongside King and
John Paul II as the men most responsible under God for shaping our
current spiritual climate, especially in the United States.
*The Gospel Coalition*
Wacker’s examination of Graham’s place in U.S. politics and culture
forms one of the most interesting, and at times surprising, aspects
of his book… There is much in the book that even a reader with only
a passing interest in modern religion will find interesting.
*Irish Times*
Wacker, who admires Graham, though not uncritically so, examines
the evolution that took place from the hell fire and brimstone
preacher three-quarters of a century ago to the polished
international communicator, renowned throughout the world… This
book is an honest appraisal of the man himself and the organization
of which he was a part. It’s thoroughly researched and worth
reading.
*Methodist Recorder*
What a book. I think it is hard for those of us who have lived in
the Billy Graham era to recognize just how significant this time
has been in the history of the church… This volume traces the life
of Graham, and fits his ministry in the context of American
cultural, political, and religious history.
*Moore to the Point (blog)*
Provides a judicious assessment of Graham’s six decades as a
preacher, pastor, public figure, entrepreneur, southerner, and
icon.
*The Oregonian*
[Graham’s] legacy deserves as fine a book as this one.
*Pittsburgh Post-Gazette*
This is a fascinating book which is hard to put down. Beautifully
written, with humor and compassion as well as critical rigor…
Exploring [Graham’s] steady but dramatic transformation makes
absorbing reading and brought me hope for the rest of us.
*Reform*
America’s Pastor: Billy Graham and the Shaping of a Nation is a
timely cultural biography. One of the world authorities on the
subject of American Evangelicalism, Wacker makes a strong claim for
Graham’s historical importance.
*The Tablet*
Wacker examines not so much what Graham did as how he did it—a
matter of manners and management as much as of vision and talent…
Wacker’s procedure allows appreciation of how Graham affected the
image of the modern southerner (he desegregated his crusades in
1954); helped shape the new evangelicalism out of fundamentalist,
Pentecostal, and the older evangelical churches; and much more,
primarily through embodying at their best the middle-class American
culture and mores in which he was raised. Wacker doesn’t shrink,
however, from showing how Graham’s fascination with presidential
politics led him astray repeatedly while allowing that he was a
genuine spiritual counselor to the presidents—Lyndon Johnson, in
particular. If a great subject deserves a great book, Billy Graham
has one.
*Booklist (starred review)*
The work of a church historian in his best form, this masterpiece
presents a fine-grained study of America’s best-known preacher and
his role in the shaping of mainstream Evangelicalism in the
mid-20th century… Wacker’s close study gives readers a glimpse of
Graham’s complexity, including the paradoxes that made him both
beloved and controversial.
*Choice*
A scholarly, analytical and sympathetic biography of the evangelist
Billy Graham…We emerge with a more complete, nuanced understanding
of Graham’s personality and ministry…Also shows us a profoundly
authentic Graham, a true believer, a man who was not mercenary, who
practiced what he preached, whose principal weaknesses might have
been his name-dropping and hobnobbing with the rich and the
powerful.
*Kirkus Reviews (starred review)*
Wacker’s analysis situates the salient elements of Graham’s
remarkable success and longevity in the chaotic American social and
religious consciousness of the 20th century…In the intersection of
ego and message, Wacker excels at examining Graham’s complex
public/private persona…A valuable look at the pastor of
20th-century American religious consciousness.
*Library Journal*
In this elegantly written and compulsively readable account,
Wacker…probes the ways that Graham touched so many so deeply while
aiming to provide the moral voice for a nation. Interweaving
biography with social and intellectual history, Wacker suggests
that Graham’s brilliance shone brightly from his many
facets—preacher, pastor, Southerner, and entrepreneur, among
others—and so his hearers had many ways to see themselves reflected
in him. In the end, Wacker points out that Graham’s pragmatic
vision of an America that’s true to its ideals enabled him to adapt
trends in the wider culture for his own evangelistic and
moral-reform purposes.
*Publishers Weekly*
A striking and authoritative account of one of the most influential
Americans of recent times. Wacker writes gracefully and offers a
fund of astute insights. By exploring Graham’s background, his
character, his beliefs, and his work, he reveals how Graham could
move so comfortably among the powerful and at the same time always
be able to speak effectively to so many ordinary people. Both
Graham’s admirers and his critics will come away from America’s
Pastor with a fresh appreciation of the man and his world.
*George M. Marsden, author of The Twilight of the American
Enlightenment: The 1950s and the Crisis of Liberal Belief*
Grant Wacker has given us a superb—and richly detailed—portrait of
Billy Graham, presented in the context of a solid cultural and
historical analysis of the era in which Graham served as the kind
of religious leader we are not likely to see again. And all of this
from a marvelous storyteller. Wacker’s deeply moving epilogue can
stand alone as a model of inspiring prose!
*Richard J. Mouw, Professor of Faith and Public Life and former
President, Fuller Theological Seminary*
America’s Pastor is a masterful study of the life and influence of
Billy Graham. With power and grace, Grant Wacker explains who
Graham was, how his message and organization developed, and why he
came to exercise such extraordinary influence in America. It is the
most incisive—and accessible—study of Billy Graham that has been
written.
*Nathan O. Hatch, President, Wake Forest University*
Billy Graham has finally gotten the book he deserves. Written by
one of the finest American religious historians of our time, this
book is as captivating as Graham himself: eloquent, incisive,
witty, and empathetic. I couldn’t put it down.
*Catherine A. Brekus, author of Sarah Osborn’s World: The Rise
of Evangelical Christianity in Early America*
Grant Wacker brings his incomparable historical skills to
illuminate an icon of American Protestant life. His treatment is at
once deeply humane and extraordinarily learned, and he examines
Graham’s foundational status with a breathtaking range and savvy.
In these pages we come to know Graham, but more importantly, we
gain profound insight into the broadest contours of U.S. religious
life in the last half of the twentieth century.
*Laurie Maffly-Kipp, author of Setting Down the Sacred Past:
African-American Race Histories*
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