Remarks By Dr. Billy Graham At Richard Nixon's Funeral
April 27, 1994
On behalf of the family of Richard
Nixon, I welcome you who have gathered to join with them in
paying final respects to the memory of Richard Milhous Nixon, the
37th President of the United States.
Today, in this service, we remember with gratitude
his life, his accomplishments, and we give thanks to God for
those things he did to make our world a better place.
Through this service, may our dedication to serving
others be deepened, and may our eyes be lifted to that which is
eternal. Let us hear the word of the Lord, our help is in the
name of the Lord who made heaven and Earth. Our God is our
refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Peace I
leave with you. My peace I give unto you, not as the world
giveth. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be
afraid. Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be
comforted.
Now, we have a program -- you all have one -- and
we're going to follow that program without any further
announcement. You may be seated. Thank you.
(Battle Hymn of the Republic)
[Later]
The great king of ancient Israel,
David, said on the death of Saul, who had been a bitter enemy:
"Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this
day in Israel." Today, we remember that with the death of
Richard Nixon, a great man has fallen. We have heard that the
world has lost a great citizen, and America has lost a great
statesman. And those of us that knew him have lost a personal
friend.
You know, few events touch the heart of every
American as profoundly as the death of a President, for the
President is our leader. And every American feels that he knows
him in a very special way because he hears his voice so often,
sees him on television, reads about him in the press. And so we
all mourn his loss and feel that our world is a bit lonelier
without him.
But to you who were close to him, this grief is an
added pain because you wept when he wept and you laughed when he
laughed. And here amidst these familiar surroundings under these
California skies, his earthly life has come full circle. It was
here that Richard Nixon was born and reared, and his life was
molded. But the Scripture teaches that there's a time to be
born, a time to live and a time to die. Richard Nixon's time to
die came last Friday evening.
Since 1990 he had a brilliant, young cardiologist as
his doctor by the name of Jeffrey Borer. And last Tuesday, the
day after the President suffered his stroke, the doctor came by
the New York Hospital to examine him. He was partially paralyzed
and could not speak, but he was still alert. And as the doctor
talked, the President reached out and grabbed his arm with an
unusual strength. Then as the doctor turned to leave, something
made him turn around and look back to the bed where Richard Nixon
was lying. And just at that moment, the President waved and gave
his trademark thumbs-up signal and smiled.
That took determination which he had and we've heard
about already today. It was an example of fighting on and never
giving up that Jeffrey Borer will never forget. President
Nixon's great voice, his warm, intelligent eyes, his generous
smile are missed as we gather here again just 10 months after we
were here when his beloved Pat went to heaven.
A few months ago, he was asked in a television
interview: "How would you like to be remembered?" He thought a
moment and then he replied: "I'd like to be remembered as one
who made a difference." And he did make a difference in our
world as we've heard so eloquently this afternoon.
There's an old saying that a tree is best measured
when it's laid down. The great events of his life have already
been widely recounted by the news media this week. And it's not
my purpose to restate what others have already said so
eloquently, including those who have spoken so movingly here
today.
I think most of us have been staggered by the many
things that he accomplished during his life. His public service
kept him at the center of the events that have shaped our
destiny. This week, Time magazine says that by sheer endurance,
he rebuilt his standing as the most important figure of the post-
war era.
During his years of public service, Richard Nixon
was on center stage during our generation. He had a great
respect for the Office of the President. I never heard him one
time criticize a living President who was in the office at that
time. There's an old Indian saying: Never criticize a man until
you've walked a mile in his shoes.
However, there was another side to him that's more
personal, more intimate, more human than we've heard referred to
several times today -- and that was his family, his neighbors and
his friends who are gathered here today. It was a side that many
people did not see, for Richard Nixon was a private person in
some ways. And some people thought there was a shyness about
him. Others sometimes found him hard to get to know.
There were hundreds of little things he did for
ordinary people that no one would have ever known about. He
always had a compassion for people who were hurting. No one
could ever understand Richard Nixon unless they understood the
family from which he came, the Quaker church that he attended,
Whittier College where he studied, and the land and the people in
this area where you are sitting today. His roots were deep in
this part of California.
But there's still another side to him that was his
strong and growing faith in God. He never wore his religious
faith on his sleeves, but was rather reticent to speak about it
in public. He could have had more reasons than most for not
attending church while he occupied the White House when there was
so many demonstrations and threats going on. But he wanted to
set an example. And he decided to have services most Sundays in
the White House -- a small congregation, a clergyman from various
denominations.
And I remember before one of the first services that
President Nixon had at the White House, Ruth and I and two of our
friends were in the private quarters with him. I'll never forget
the President sitting down on the spur of the moment of an old,
battered Steinway that they had there, playing the old hymn, He
Will Hold Me Fast, For My Saviour Loves Me. He will hold me
fast.
John Donne said that there's a democracy about
death. It comes equally to us all and makes us all equal when it
comes. And I think today, everyone of us ought to be thinking
about our own time to die, because we, too, are going to die.
And we're going to have to face Almighty God with the life that
we lived here. There comes a time when we have to realize that
life is short, and in the end, the only thing that really counts
is not how others see us here, but how God sees us and what the
recordbooks of heaven have to say. For the believer who has been
to the cross, death is no frightful leap into the dark, but is an
entrance into a glorious new life.
I believe that Richard Nixon right now is with Pat
again, because I believe that in heaven we will know each other.
The Bible says, "For to me to live is Christ and to die is gain."
There's a gaining about death. For the believer, the brutal fact
of death has been conquered by the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
For the person who has turned from sin and has received Christ as
Lord and Saviour, death is not the end. For the believer,
there's hope beyond the grave. There's a future life.
Yesterday, as his body was escorted to the plane for
its final journey here, the band played and the familiar strains
of a hymn he especially loved -- maybe the hymn that he loved the
most were played: Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound, that saved
a wretch like me. I once was lost, but now I'm found, was blind
but now I see. Through many dangers, toils and snares, I've
already come. 'Tis grace that brought me safe thus far, for
grace will take me home.
That hymn was written 200 years ago by an Englishman
named John Newton. He was a cruel man, a captain of a slave
ship. But one night in a fierce storm, he turned to God and
committed his life to Christ. Newton not only became a preacher
of the gospel, but he influenced William Wilberforce and others
in Parliament to bring an end to the slave trade. John Newton
came to know the miracle of God's amazing grace, and it changed
his life. And it changed our lives as well.
And so, we say farewell to Richard Nixon today with
hope in our hearts, for our hope is in the eternal promises of
Almighty God.
Years ago, Winston Churchill planned his own
funeral. And he did so with the hope of the resurrection and
eternal life which he firmly believed in. And he instructed
after the benediction that a bugler positioned high in the dome
of St. Paul's Cathedral would play Taps, the universal signal
that says the day is over.
But then came a very dramatic moment as Churchill
had instructed. Another bugler was placed on the other side of
the massive dome, and he played the notes of Reveille, the
universal signal that a new day has dawned and it is time to
arise. That was Churchill's testimony that at the end of
history, the last note will not be Taps, it'll be Reveille.
There is hope beyond the grave because Jesus Christ has opened
the door to heaven for us by his death and resurrection.
Richard Nixon had that hope and today that can be
our hope as well. And to the children and the grandchildren, I
would say to you, you have that hope within your hearts. I had
the privilege of knowing them when they were little girls. And
I've seen them as they've come to know Christ and to know God in
their lives. And we look forward to seeing Dick and Pat someday
in the future again. Shall we pray.
God of all comfort, in the silence of this hour, we
ask thee to sustain this family and these loved ones and to
deliver them from loneliness, despair and doubt. Fill their
desolate hearts with thy peace. And may this be a moment of
rededication to thee. Our Father, those of us who have been left
behind have the solemn responsibilities of life. Help us to live
according to thy will and provide glory so that we will be
prepared to meet thee. We offer our prayer in the name of Him
who is the Resurrection and the Life, Jesus Christ, our Lord. In
the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
(America the Beautiful)
ANNOUNCER: President Nixon and his family will now be escorted to the committal site by the celebrants, Presidents and First Ladies. We ask that you remain and listen as Dr. Graham conducts the committal service.
Please rise for the playing of the Honors and the National Anthem.
(Ruffles and Flourishes)
(National Anthem)
(America the Beautiful)
DR. GRAHAM: One of the Scripture passages that President Nixon knew so well and learned as a boy here at this place was Psalm 23:
"The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and they staff they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies. Thou anointest my head with oil. My cup runneth over. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever."
For as much as it hath pleased Almighty God in his wise providence to take out of this world the soul of our deceased father, grandfather, leader and friend, we therefore commit his body to the ground.
(21 Gun Salute)
DR. GRAHAM: Shall we pray the prayer that our Lord taught us to pray:
"Our father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespassers as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever. Amen.
(21 Gun Salute)
(Taps)
The funeral ended at 5:15 P.M. PDT
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