This sermon addresses the common trials and temptations faced by individuals, emphasizing God's faithfulness in providing a way to escape such challenges. It delves into the struggles of young people today, particularly with peer pressure, emptiness, and uncertainty, highlighting the importance of making disciplined choices and saying 'no' to harmful influences. The narrative of Joseph's resistance to temptation is used as an example of standing firm in faith despite difficult circumstances.

Just Say No!

Billy Graham
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Billy Graham

Billy Graham (November 7, 1918 – February 21, 2018) was an American preacher and evangelist whose global ministry transformed 20th-century Christianity, reaching millions with his message of salvation through Jesus Christ. Born William Franklin Graham Jr. on a dairy farm near Charlotte, North Carolina, to Frank and Morrow Graham, he grew up in a devout Presbyterian family. Converted at 16 during a 1934 revival led by Mordecai Ham, he attended Bob Jones College briefly before transferring to Florida Bible Institute (1937–1940) and graduating from Wheaton College (B.A. in Anthropology, 1943), where he met his wife, Ruth Bell. Ordained a Southern Baptist minister in 1939, he began preaching on radio and at youth rallies with Youth for Christ, gaining early fame. Graham’s preaching career skyrocketed after his 1949 Los Angeles Crusade, a tent revival extended from three to eight weeks due to massive crowds and media attention, launching the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA). Over six decades, he preached to over 210 million people in 185 countries, holding crusades—often broadcast on TV and radio—featuring sermons like “The Hour of Decision” and hits like “Just As I Am.” Advising U.S. presidents from Truman to Obama, he championed civil rights, notably integrating his rallies post-1954, and authored 33 books, including Peace with God (1953). Married to Ruth in 1943, with whom he had five children—Gigi, Anne, Ruth, Franklin, and Ned—he lived modestly in Montreat, North Carolina, until his death at 99 from pneumonia and Parkinson’s disease, buried beside Ruth at the Billy Graham Library.