US News

Billy Graham to lie in honor at the Capitol

WASHINGTON — The body of evangelist Billy Graham will lie in honor under the US Capitol Rotunda next week as Congress pays tribute to a clergyman who counseled presidents and preached the Gospel to millions worldwide, House Speaker Paul Ryan said Thursday.

Graham, who died at his home near Asheville, North Carolina, on Wednesday at age 99, will arrive at the white-domed Capitol on Feb. 28 and lie in honor there until the following day, Ryan said in a statement.

“Members of the public and Capitol Hill community are invited to pay their respects to the late reverend while he lies in rest,” the speaker said.

Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will take part in a bicameral service when Graham’s casket arrives, the statement said.

A spokeswoman for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association in Charlotte, North Carolina, said by phone that the family had approved a request from McConnell and Ryan for the public tribute.

Graham preached Christianity to more people than anyone else in history during his 70-year career, reaching hundreds of millions of people either in person or via TV and satellite links, his ministry said.

Graham became the de facto White House chaplain to several US presidents, most famously Richard Nixon. He also met with scores of world leaders and was the first noted evangelist to take his message behind the so-called Iron Curtain, the term used for the Communist bloc countries of East Europe and the Soviet Union in the decades after World War II.

The US Capitol tribute will follow Graham’s remains lying in repose at the family home, which is at the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte, his organization said.

His funeral is planned for March 2 at a venue that holds about 2,300 people in front of the library. He will be buried on library premises next to his wife, Ruth, who died in 2007.

Graham will be only the fourth person to lie in honor at the Rotunda since the tribute began in 1998 for two US Capitol Police officers slain in the line of duty. Civil rights figure Rosa Parks was the last person to receive the honor following her death in 2005.

Lying in honor at the Capitol is granted for private citizens. It is distinct from lying in state, a tribute normally reserved for elected US officials or military figures.

1 of 10
President John F. Kennedy sits with Christian evangelist Billy Graham at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington DC, in February 1961.Getty Images
Graham and President Lyndon B. Johnson talk at the Annual Presidential Prayer Breakfast in Washington, DC, in February 1964.Getty Images
Advertisement
Graham appears at an event with President Ronald Reagan in February 1983 in Washington, DC.Getty Images
President George H.W. Bush stands with Graham at the White House in January 1991, shortly after Graham made a speech declaring that the Gulf War was a "fight for peace" that would result in "a new world order."Getty Images
Graham and former President Richard Nixon attend the memorial service for Patricia Nixon in June 1993 at the Richard Nixon Library.WireImage
Advertisement
Republican presidential candidate and Texas Gov. George W. Bush, with his wife, Laura Bush, stand beside Graham as Graham announces his support for Bush in November 2000 in Jacksonville, Florida.AFP/Getty Images
Former President Bill Clinton speaks along with Graham during Graham's Crusade at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in June 2005 in Queens, New York.Getty Images
Advertisement