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A little quiz

Is ignorance about one of America’s greatest evangelists a worrying sign?


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One of the more delightful aspects of my job here at WORLD Magazine and World News Group is the regular opportunity to meet those of you who are readers of our magazines or users of our various digital media. I love it especially during these summer months when you make it a point to stop by our headquarters in Asheville, N.C., and say hello.

I love that partly because it gives me a chance to invite you into my office for a 15-minute history lesson. I’m intrigued to discover how much you know about WORLD’s background—and about the religious landscape in general.

So as we get seated, I test the waters by asking: “Do you folks know who Nelson Bell was?” A positive response—which through the years I’ve gotten from perhaps two-thirds of my guests—means we can move on right away to a more advanced discussion. It helps to have a reference point.

But if I draw a blank with my Nelson Bell query, I know I’ve got a bit of work to do. So, hoping to surprise and impress my guests, I spell out the connection: “Nelson Bell, who founded this company that you’re visiting right now, was the father-in-law of Billy Graham!”

‘Who,’ my guests asked, ‘is Billy Graham?’

How do you beat that? It’s a simple fact that most people are more interested in our past if that history includes someone as famous as Billy Graham. And until just a few days ago, my little quiz never failed me. “Really!” my guests regularly responded. “Tell me more. I had no idea you had such a connection.” Which, of course, was exactly the bridge I wanted. From there, it was so much easier to bring the story back to Dr. L. Nelson Bell. (If you missed some of the details of this remarkable man’s life—and his connection to us—go back to my column in our May 27 issue this past spring.)

My point here, however, is quite different. I said that “until a few days ago, my little quiz never failed me.” Here I want to report that at least twice during these summer months my quiz failed me in a surprising way. At least twice, when I was launching into my little history lesson and drew a blank when I asked my visitors if they knew who Nelson Bell was, I noted that he was Billy Graham’s father-in-law. That’s when I was stunned to draw yet another blank. “Who,” my guests asked, “is Billy Graham?”

It had to happen, sooner or later. It has to happen to us all. But Billy Graham hasn’t even died yet. Big green signs at both ends of Asheville announce that the main interstate highway through our city is the “Billy Graham Freeway.” Although ghostwritten, Billy Graham’s advice column still appears every day in our very liberal local newspaper.

And a couple of our readers—I would guess both were in their late 20s—say they don’t know who Billy Graham is.

Ever since launching WORLD Magazine in 1986, I’ve asked hundreds of our readers who, among Christian authors, has most shaped their thinking. Until recently, I could almost predict the regularity with which I heard references to Francis Schaeffer, whose outsized influence reached around the globe. I also heard the names of C.S. Lewis (of course), Charles Colson (whose conversion grew from Lewis’ writing), Carl F.H. Henry, J.I. Packer, and—more and more—women like Joni Eareckson Tada. But as significant as those authors might have been in their leadership of the evangelical world, I’m no longer surprised not to hear their names with the consistency I found a decade or two ago.

But Billy Graham?

I’ll keep asking the question. And I may discover that these were the only folks in current Christendom who were wearing such blinders. But these two visitors to my office were not country bumpkins. They were conversant on other matters. Something tells me that the worldview these visitors demonstrated was indeed less and less a minority perspective, and more and more typical of the incredibly secular society we’ve inhabited.

It’s not as though an awareness of Billy Graham is critical. But if they can’t even identify him, how much else don’t they know?


Joel Belz

Joel Belz (1941–2024) was WORLD’s founder and a regular contributor of commentary for WORLD Magazine and WORLD Radio. He served as editor, publisher, and CEO for more than three decades at WORLD and was the author of Consider These Things. Visit WORLD’s memorial tribute page.

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