From the start, Billy and Ruth Graham could see that raising their son Franklin would be a challenge. When he was born in 1952, the Grahams were already raising three daughters: Gigi had been born in 1945; Anne in 1948 and Ruth (nicknamed Bunny) in 1950. One more son, Ned, would follow in 1958.
“Franklin was the first son, and a strapping one at that,” Ruth wrote in her book It’s My Turn. “I knew he would be a handful.”
She believed he would grow up to be someone who could be depended on. But there would be long years of waiting, praying and agonizing before that would come to pass.
The challenges began early.
“Franklin, at 3, managed to get into everybody’s hair,” Ruth wrote. “I never knew one small boy could be so omnipresent. He was lovable and stubborn, reserved, surprisingly tender at times, and an incorrigible tease. I have seen all three sisters in tears and Franklin still laughing gleefully.”
There’s a comical sweetness in that description—at least for those who weren’t the target of the teasing! But Ruth had one supreme desire for all the members of the family: “That we be men and women of God.” And her prayers took on increasing urgency as Franklin grew.
When he was still a young boy, she wrote in her journal: “Little Franklin has never, to my knowledge, put his trust in Christ. Nor do I believe he has rejected Him. And he will not be pushed, nor do I intend to. But my heart would rest easier if I knew that those small, rough hands were in His.”
In his teen years, Franklin’s rambunctious ways turned to outright rebellion: partying, smoking, drinking, brawling in a high school classroom, driving fast and reckless on the streets of Montreat, North Carolina.
Those examples may not seem as sordid as some people’s stories, but the situation was just as dire—Franklin’s heart was in rebellion against God. He explained to an audience years later:
“Growing up, I heard the Gospel. I knew the Gospel. But I didn’t want to surrender my life to Jesus Christ. I felt that if I surrendered my life to Jesus Christ, I would be in a spiritual straitjacket, and I wanted to be free. I wanted to party. I wanted to have fun. It’s not that I did not believe in God. I believed that God existed, but I just didn’t want God running my life. I wanted to run my life.”