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Tag: Franklin Graham

  • ‘A very dangerous place.’ Franklin Graham on Gaza, as relief flight departs NC.

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    A resident of Gaza carries a box of relief supplies from Samaritan’s Purse after a relief flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    A resident of Gaza carries a box of relief supplies from Samaritan’s Purse after a relief flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham watched Saturday as a Samaritan’s Purse 767 departed Greensboro for Israel with relief supplies for Gaza. He prayed earlier with the flight crew.

    “It’s a very dangerous place, even though a peace agreement has been signed,” Graham told The Charlotte Observer by phone 15 minutes after the flight departed for Ben Gurion Airport.

    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham
    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham Billy Graham Evangelistic Association

    “Hamas has held 2.5 million people hostage for the past 18 years,” he said, referring to the armed Palestinian group and political movement in the Gaza Strip, and the estimated population of Gaza.

    “They are a wicked group of people,” Graham said. “They could care less about Gaza.”

    Graham is president and CEO of Samaritan’s Purse, the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    Residents of Gaza receive supplies from Samaritan’s Purse from a previous flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.
    Residents of Gaza receive supplies from Samaritan’s Purse from a previous flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization. Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    Saturday’s flight was the 13th with supplies for Gaza by Samaritan’s Purse and its disaster response specialists. Because of its size, the plane held as many supplies as the organization’s 757 and DC-8 cargo planes combined, Graham said.

    767 packed with supplies

    The flight included more than 290,000 packets of vitamin-rich, peanut-based supplementary food for women and children, 12,000 blankets, 12,000 solar lights and other relief items.

    A Samaritan’s Purse worker makes sure that relief supplies are secure on one of the organization’s planes.
    A Samaritan’s Purse worker makes sure that relief supplies are secure on one of the organization’s planes. Ron Nickel Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    “Gaza has no electricity,” Graham said, explaining the importance of the hand-held solar lanterns for families.

    The blankets are because colder temperatures arrive in Gaza, too, in winter, he said.

    The supplies will be taken to a Samaritan’s Purse warehouse in Israel before being distributed to families in Gaza, Graham said.

    Samaritan’s Purse flies relief supplies to more than 100 countries to help victims of war, disease, disaster, poverty, famine and persecution, according to the organization.
    Samaritan’s Purse flies relief supplies to more than 100 countries to help victims of war, disease, disaster, poverty, famine and persecution, according to the organization. Grace Carson Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    “We have to work very carefully,” Graham said when asked about the specter of violence in Gaza.

    In a statement announcing Saturday’s flight, Graham said Hamas also “held 251 innocent people hostage from Israel.”

    “They executed anyone who spoke out against them, as we witnessed on the streets of Gaza last week,” Graham said in the statement. “We pray this flight will bring relief to people who are suffering.”

    Armored ambulances, 223 tons of food

    Samaritan’s Purse disaster response specialists have worked in Israel and Gaza since immediately after the conflict began two years ago, he said.

    The organization has delivered more than 223 tons of supplemental food and a million food rations, and its medical teams have treated more than 1,700 patients, according to the statement.

    In Israel, Samaritan’s Purse has given 42 ambulances — 28 armored — to Magen David Adom, the country’s emergency services provider.

    Samaritan’s Purse also has 11 major construction projects in Israel, including two ambulance response stations, nine community centers with bomb shelters, and an equine therapy center for youth.

    Despite the risk of violence, his organization will continue reaching Gazans and others in need, Graham told the Observer.

    “You still have 2.5 million people who need help,” with food and other supplies, he said.

    “We’re just one of a number of organizations working there,” he said. “We’re going to do all we can to help as much as we can in Jesus’ name, to show that God hasn’t abandoned them. I ask people to pray for them.”

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  • Franklin Graham pulls ministries from accountability group his father co-founded

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    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham has pulled his two international ministries from the financial accountability group his father, Billy Graham, co-founded 45 years ago.

    The Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability has “inappropriately ventured” beyond its original mission and is “trying to become the moral police of the evangelical world,” according to a letter from Graham to council president Michael Martin.

    Graham is president, chairman and CEO of the Charlotte-based Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and the Boone-based Samaritan’s Purse disaster relief organization.

    The Virginia-based council is an accreditation agency that asks its 2,700 member churches and Christian nonprofits to adhere to standards on issues such as financial transparency and governance.

    Graham said he decided against renewing the memberships of his organizations because of the group’s new “leader care” accreditation standard.

    “At first glance, who could object to efforts to support and care for ministry leaders?” Graham said, according to a copy of his letter provided to The Charlotte Observer by spokesman Mark Barber this week.

    “However, a deeper review of the new standard poses grave concerns about the appropriateness of ECFA addressing matters clearly outside its founding mission,” Graham wrote.

    Ministry Watch first reported about the letter.

    Ministries meet highest standards, Graham says

    Graham’s ministries have no plans to belong to another financial accountability group, according to a statement to The Charlotte Observer.

    “Samaritan’s Purse and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association meet the highest financial accountability standards and will continue to do so,” according to the statement. “We will continue to report effectively, timely, and transparently to donors as we seek to be good stewards of all God has entrusted to these ministries.”

    The ministries undergo yearly audits by independent certified public accounting firms, according to the statement, “and those financial statements are available upon request.”

    The financial accountability group’s new leader care standard “seems to be a knee-jerk reaction aimed at preventing the kind of high-profile moral failures the world has witnessed in recent years in our evangelical ranks,” Graham said in his letter.

    “However, there is a common denominator in all these cases that the new Leader Care standard does not address and certainly cannot prevent – lying,” Graham wrote.

    “… This is ultimately a sin problem, with its root in the human heart, which only God can fix — not ECFA, even with a mountain of standards,” Graham said.

    Regarding leader care standards, Graham peppered Martin with questions:

    “Should a leader attend church weekly?” he asked. “More? Less?”

    “Should a leader abstain from alcohol, or consume it in moderation?”

    “Should a Christian leader have meals alone with a person of the opposite sex?” he asked. “What about riding in a car alone together?”

    Graham said he’s concerned the group could add more standards beyond its financial accountability role.

    “Might ECFA enact a standard addressing an organization’s efforts to protect the environment?” he asked. “Or a standard for enacting so-called DEI policies?”

    In a statement, Martin said he was disappointed that BGEA and Samaritan’s Purse leaders withdrew the organizations from the group.

    Still, “we honor their legacy,” he said. “Nearly 50 years ago, Rev. Billy Graham’s leadership was one of the primary catalysts for ECFA, and these two organizations have served as invaluable partners in the ministry accountability and integrity movement for many years.

    “We wish them well as they continue to pursue their missions,” Martin said.

    This story was originally published October 10, 2025 at 5:00 AM.

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    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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