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In 2011 the Lilly Endowment Inc. awarded the Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals (ISAE) at Wheaton College in Illinois a major grant to examine the life and influence of the American evangelist Billy Graham (b. 1918). The ISAE used the award to fund planning meetings, research grants, public lectures, course offerings, two conferences (one academic, one popular), a DVD about the history of Graham’s crusades (A Gathering of Souls: The Billy Graham Crusades, from Tim Frakes Productions), three spin-off volumes now under contract with Eerdmans Publishing Company, and the scholarly essays that appear in this book. All are published here for the first time. The editors thank the endowment for its generous support.
Many people helped bring this book to completion. First, we wish to thank Paul Ericksen and Bob Shuster of the Billy Graham Center Archives. Their knowledge of the Graham materials and eagerness to assist researchers is legendary. We also wish to thank John Akers and David Bruce of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, who helped the authors make sense of the complexity of Graham’s story, as well as offering tips about elusive resources to check out and encouragement for carrying the book to publication. At an early planning meeting in Maine, James Bratt astutely critiqued the papers that eventually formed the book’s chapters. Larry Eskridge ably handled planning details, and Joan Eskridge provided technical support. Leighton Ford, Martin Marty, and Kenneth L. Woodward participated in a lively and perceptive public discussion about the project at Wheaton College in 2013. Matthew Sutton and an anonymous reader for Oxford University Press offered valuable suggestions for improving the manuscript. Their carefulness established a gold standard for reviewers of manuscripts. As always, Mark Noll staked out a spot on the sidelines, where he brought keen perceptions about American evangelical history (and much else) to bear on our work. Katherine Wacker suggested the book’s title. Most important, we wish to thank Ingrid Finstuen for her expert management of the project, for turning gnarled manuscript pages into smooth ones, and for handling the countless details of communication with the volume’s authors and agents of Oxford University Press. Ingrid toiled with wit and grace. The dedication to Edith L. Blumhofer betokens our profound appreciation for a scholar, colleague, and friend.
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