' sundayH Editor: Stephen Hersh A! ssociate Editors: Ann Marie Lipinski, Elaine Fletcher inside: page four- perspective page five-books October 31, 1976 Nurnber 8 Billy Graham Faith,Hope a and the opiate of the nd Charity in By MIKE NORTON "LORD, WE ARE YOURS with ev- ery fiber of our being!" cries the blue-suited man onstage. He is ant-like in. the shimmery distance, dwarfed by the vast em- pty space around him - but his image stares out hugely from a gigantic screen above, and the sound of his amplified voice shakes the building like a Call to Judge- ngent. The stage has been set up on the 40 yard line of the Pontiac Sta- dium field, surrounded with plas- tic palm trees and buckets of yel- low chrysanthemums. Tonight, close to 40,000 souls filter into the stadium, blinking their eyes under the hot lights and gazing down on the peaceful astroturf below. It's hardly your little church in the valley. But these people are here to get religion. They have come in their cars, pickup trucks and Win- nebagoes - they have come by the busload-to see, hear and be mov- ed by Billy Graham, The Most Fa- mous Evangelist in the World To- day. The blue - suited man onstage isn't Graham - he's J. Fran Mel- lema, Senior Vice President and Comptroller of the National Bank of Detroit. He is also treasurer of the Southeastern Michigan Billy Graham Crusade executive com- mittee, and he is warming un the audience, a.Qking the believers to look into their hearts and pockets to help finance Graham's wo* for God. Little envelopes have been pass- ed out already. As Mellema finishes his appeal and moves away from the microphone, sweet organ mu- sic fills the air. Teams of quiet, efficient ushers work the aisles, gathering in the envelones. Forty thousand people do not fill Pontiac Stadium to capacity. Sparse patches of believers cluster here and there in the stands be- hind the stage. senarated by stretches of empty seats. The envelopes are collected into large offering plates, and now the organ swells into crescendo: a choir of 500 behind the stage breaks- into "Peace Like a River." In the audience, feet begin to tap. Parents are jiggling youngsters on their knees. A few hundred people take the onportunity for a last trip un to the johns or the Elias Brothers hamburger concessions in the gallery. Graham will be speak- ing soon. It is an overwhelmingly white and middle-class audience, the kind of folks you might run into at Sears on a Saturday afternoon. Few of them are dressed in any- thing more formal than a shirt and slacks. But then, the crowd is younger than average: this is one of the nights which Graham has set aside as a special Youth Night - direct- ing his preaching at those under 25 years. George Beverly Shea - Gra- ham's Ed McMahon - steps up to the microphone. His appearance is the universal signal that Billy is almost ready to steak. The piano player sends a few gospel chords Mike Norton is a Daily staff writer. rippling out, and Shea's voice goes booming into the deep: I'd rather have Jesus than silver or gold ... When the song ends, he steps aside suddenly. And there, with an electric halo, flashing a toothy grin, stands Billy Graham. He holds a Bible in his hand, Pontiac S ting. They swing their bluej]eaned legs back and forth and smile co- quettishly at every third boy or so. Both of them are sixteen. "We came with our church group," one of them explains. Gra- ham, she admits, doesn't do much for her. "It was a chance to get out of the house, so we took it." rasses: tadium tudes, beckoning them down to the field to make their Decision for Christ. This is the climax, the mo- ment of truth: how many will be Saved? How many will turn to God? Slowly, timidly, people begin streaming down from the stands. The choir sings softly - a band of angels, a pack of sirens - "Lord, I come." Who can resist the peace that passeth all understanding? Like wayward sheep who have come home, they cross the turf and flock together at the foot of the stage. IT IS EERIE BEYOND description in that breathless huddle; some trick of acoustics distorts the sound of the PA system. Grahan is now only 20 feet away, yet his voice can only be heard in the echoes from the surrounding snace; no one here can understand him - it is as if he were speaking Serbo-Croatian or Urdu. A child begins to weep softly in terror. Its mother picks it up and whisners: "Shh! Don't you, love Jewus?" Graham is looking down on them, nleading and. exhorting them with his arms, but no one ean underst~nd a word he is say- fn The echoes rebound every- wCre. hir voice comes from all eF1.% bent into strangeness. Two old women are shaking their heads as if the trouble is in thei ears. "Can you hear him?" one asks the other. "No, I can't." "If you turn your head to the rioht, I think you can hear better." Now the evangelist has raised his arms out over the flock in benediction. People lower their fades to pray. When the sound of his voice ends, the heads are rais- ed again. A small corns of counselors has heen trained and readied for this, m'oment. and now it descends on the flock of 1,400 newly-commit- ted Christians. Small groups of peonlo form around them on the ground: they are taking names and addresses, passing out pamphlets, giving encouragement. Graham has left,the stage; the m ovie screen is blank now. Above it. an electric sign is blinking: "Goodbve! Goodbye!" And the 40,000 members of the glldience rise from their seats, one b17 one, two by two. Some talking P3"itedlv with friends, some in tho myhtful silence, they leave the ovnno11m stadium. Back out to the ears and buses, back to the sinfui world. and stretches his arm out to take in all of Pontiac Stadium - from goalpost to goalpost. When he speaks, the sound comes echoing off the walls like thunder. "I want everybody here who's under 25 years of age to stand up," he says. Almost the entire stadium gets to its feet, creating a loud rumb- ling sound. He smiles even more broadly, surveying them. His head is thrown back; the majestic mane of hair, the broad forehead, the nose and jaw are all tilted at their best an- gle. "My, my," he says. With his per- mission, the audience sits down aoain. There is more rumbling. "We may never see another mo- ment like this in southeastern Michigan," he exclaims, exhorting them to "fill the cars and come on out here to Pontiac Stadium" for the week-long crusade. "How many bibles are there out there?" he asks. "Just hold up your bibles." And 40,000 bibles are lift- ed un over 40,000 heads. "My," Graham sighs. "I don't be- lieve I've seen so many bibles in all my life." Now he tells the audience to read along with him from the gospel of Mark, and his preaching begins in earnest. He walks away from the microphone, but his voice remains miraculously undiminished; a cordless, tiny radio mike is clipped to his lapel. Graham holds the big soft bible onen across one hand, and ele- p'ntlv whins the other through the air as he speakks: "There's nothing wrong with be- ing rich." he says reassuringly. "The bible tells us there's a sac- rednees in having property." * * * CRAHAM IS 57 YEARS OLD. Born in Charlotte, N.C., he has spent nearly 30 years carrying his brand of down-to-earth reviv- alism around the world - and now heads a farflung empire that . takes in as much as $20 million a year. He fs no stranger to Michigan. Graham led his first crusade in Grand Rapids in 1947; it wasn't a red-hot success. But two years later, in Los Angeles, his luck took a sharp turn for the better. News- paper magnate William Randolph Hearst, attracted by Graham's militant attacks on "godless com- munism," gave the young revival- ist some badly-needed media cov- erage. The Los Angeles crusade marked the beginning of big things for Graham; since then, the road has only gone upward. Throughout his career, he has associated himself with the fa- mous and the powerful. A White House favorite during the Nixon years, Graham conducted the now- historical "prayer breakfasts" for Washington society, which ended when Nixon resigned. Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. Robert Dole made an appearance at the last of the Pontiac rallies. Graham earns $39,500 a year ~ plus "expenses" - for his preach- ing work. He has said he wants no more than the salary of a success- ful church pastor. The money is paid him by the Billy Graham Evangelical Association in Minne- anolis, which coordinates his worldwide activities. According to Crusade officials, the average amount of a contribu- tion at one of these events is somewhere around seven dollars. If three-fourths of the audience turns in its little envelopes, then, tonight's haul alone will be $200,- 000 or so. Since the cost in rental, services and personnel for the en- tire Southeastern Michigan Billy Graham Crusade will be an esti- mated $550,000, three good nights should take care of the whole week's overhead. All the rest, evidently, would be gravy. And that doesn't take into ac- count the sums raised in local fund drives by area churches and busi- nesses months before the Crusade arrived in Pontiac. Everyone working for the cru- sade tonight - the quiet, efficient security people in dark suits and walkie-talkies, the smiling ushers, the press officers, the choir - all gleam like the surface of a smooth, well-oiled machine. The Crusade was planned long in advance by organizational ex- perts. It is being pumped to the limit for maximum media play: in- terviews are arranged with Gra- ham, newspeonbe get the best seats in the house: film is made for later TV broadcasts. Yet, so far as anybody knows (and many have sifted through piles of ledgers to find out), the Graham organization is as clean as they come. The millions of dol- lars flowing into its coffers flow back out again just as quickly: to distribute free literature, to organ- ize new crusades, to run its radio stations, organizational centers and offices. Though Graham won't tell exactly how much profit his gospel machine pulls in, he has said the figure is well under $100,000 a year. NOT EVERYBODY IS listening to Graham in rapturous si- lence. "The young are turning to Christ by the thousands!" he shouts con- fidently - but at least 200 of them are walking aimlessly around the galleries at this very minute. Groups of teenagers cluster aronnn From the galleries you can look down into the gigantic bowl of the stadium; it is completely packed with people on the side facing the stage. Halfway down to the field a little bald man, his head shining under the lights, has raised his arms out toward the stage below him. He sits there, arms held out, as if to catch and hold some pre- cious, invisible stuff. And why not? It might be there, after all - in the air, unnoticed by the casual and insensitive report- er. Something mystical in a down home steak-and-potatoes way, beaming outward from that pile of plastic plants and bunting. Some- thing keeps them listening; some- thing, indeed, has caught up that little man in a peaceful ecstasy of his own. Graham is working himself up into a fine political lather. "It doesn't make a bit of difference who gets elected this year," he says, shaking his head. "Things aren't going to change very much." Above him, the giant Billy Gra- ham on the screen bobs'and whirls and thrusts its fingers into the crowd. And as though to lend vis- ual balance to the mammoth im- p,-e of Graham, a slogan glows brightly on the Detroit Lions scoreboard: "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life: John 14:6." The scoreboard is flanked by two giant packs of Marlboros. Now Billy is calling to the multi-