The Rev. Billy Graham, the pastor to many of the United States' modern presidents and the nation's most noted Christian evangelist, has died.
A spokesman for Graham, whose ministry was long based in the Twin Cities, said he died Wednesday in his home state of North Carolina. He was 99.
Although Graham counseled presidents and played golf with the world's leaders, the preacher said he was the happiest when seeing ordinary people come forward to accept Christ into their lives.
He was a Southerner by birth and choice, but his ministry headquarters was based in Minneapolis for more than 50 years, starting in 1950. In 2004, he moved it to his native North Carolina, where many of his family members reside.
In his final years, Graham stayed close to home in Montreat, N.C. He suffered from Parkinson's-like symptoms and fading eyesight caused by macular degeneration. But he still met with religious leaders and other prominent figures almost daily, including President Obama in 2010. Graham's 30th book, "Nearing Home: Life, Faith and Finishing Well," was published in fall 2011.
During its Minnesota era, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association was so well known that postcards from all over the world bearing merely his picture or the words "Billy Graham" were delivered to its headquarters.
To his admirers he will be remembered as a gentle, quiet evangelist who preached with a deep passion and never changed his message — that the only way to salvation, to keep from dying in sin, he believed, was through a personal acceptance of Jesus Christ.
He took that peculiarly historic American theological concept — decision theology, honed by fire-breathing circuit-riding preachers — and made it palatable in the middle-class, suburban America of the 1950s. Once it was embedded, it grew, and Graham's reputation with it.