The “never-Trump” crowd over at the Weekly Standard, National Review and other notoriously “never-Trump” publications, continue to show conservatives their true colors. As the audiences for many of their writers have left them in droves, and their credibility with many conservatives has been called into question, many are beginning to wonder, is Trump curse a real thing?

“Billy Graham: Neither Prophet nor Theologian,” the conservative publication’s headline declared.

Todd Starnes of Fox News wrote a scathing rebuke of the snarky, never-Trump National Review and Washington Post columnist who used to be a regular guest on Fox News. In his piece, Starnes breaks down the criticisms of Graham by the never-Trump political pundit and discredits his assertions that cheapen Graham and his followers, reducing them to laughing stock Christians.

Starnes writes: I would expect to read such anti-Christian mockery in the pages of The New York Times and Washington Post, but not National Review. My, how times have changed.

“Prophets take adversarial stances toward their times, as did the 20th century’s two greatest religious leaders, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Pope John Paul II. Graham did not. Partly for that reason, his country showered him with honors,” the self-described atheist wrote.

Evangelist Billy Graham speaks during the final day of his Crusade at Flushing Meadows Park in New York June 26, 2005. REUTERS-Keith Bedford

Will went on to describe Graham as an “entrepreneurial evangelical who consciously emulated masters of secular communication.”

He also derided those who walked the aisle to accept Jesus Christ as their Lord at Graham’s crusade meetings.

“His audiences were exhorted to make a ‘decision’ for Christ, but a moment of volition might be (in theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s phrase) an exercise in ‘cheap grace.’ Graham’s preaching, to large rallies and broadcast audiences, gave comfort to many people and probably improved some,” Will wrote.

Robert Jeffress, the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas and a spiritual advisor to President Trump, delivered a blunt rebuke of the so-called conservative writer.

“George Will’s article reveals that he is neither a conservative nor a Christian,” Jeffress told the Todd Starnes Radio Show.

Some of the nation’s leading Christian leaders were also quick to condemn Will’s ugly screed.

“George Will’s snide and spiritually clueless criticisms of the incomparable Billy Graham reveal far more about Will’s ignorance and hostility to the spiritual than he perhaps intended,” Southern Evangelical Seminary President Richard Land said.

“When I read Will’s column the image that came to mind was of an ignorant Pekingese yapping at the heels of a spiritual Great Dane,” the noted seminary president remarked.

Of Graham’s theology, Will referenced an off-hand question he answered regarding his belief in miracles.

“Billy Graham answered: Yes, Jesus performed some and there are ‘many miracles around us today, including television and airplanes.’ Graham was no theologian,” Will wrote.

Emir Caner, the president of Truett McConnell University in Georgia, disputed Will’s assertion.

“Graham was a solid theologian, standing for the inerrancy of Scripture, the exclusivity of salvation in Jesus Christ and the fundamentals of the faith,” Caner told me.

In spite of the shameful smear, I doubt Billy Graham would’ve been all that bothered.

I reckon he would’ve smiled at George Will and reminded him that we are all sinners and that God loves him and wants to have a relationship with him.

 

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