Billy Graham Wishes George Beverly Shea a Happy 100th Birthday

Posted by Kevin D. Hendricks on February 5, 2009

George Beverly Shea and Billy GrahamOn Monday longtime Billy Graham soloist George Beverly Shea celebrated his 100th birthday. More than 250 people came to The Cove retreat center in Ashville, N.C., for the private party.

“I couldn’t have had a ministry without him,” Billy Graham said, too frail to hold the microphone himself. “Thank you and God be with you. I love you.”

Shea was presented with a Rodgers organ as a gift, which he tried out for the crowd, though the organ is more of a loaner. Franklin Graham noted that Shea can keep it as long as he lives. After his death it will be donated to the Angola State Penitentiary.

Billy Graham’s public appearance might give some measure of credibility to speculation that he’ll travel to Minneapolis later this year to attend a dedication at Northwestern College, where he served as president in the 1940s.

George Beverly Shea Turns 100

Posted by Kevin D. Hendricks on January 26, 2009

George Beverly Shea and Billy GrahamGeorge Beverly Shea has been singing solos at Billy Graham crusades for nearly 60 years and on February 1, 2009 he’ll celebrate his 100th birthday. There’s a private party planned for Shea at the Billy Graham Training Center at the Cove and a concert scheduled for March 28 that will likely be televised sometime in May.

Billy Graham first recruited Shea in 1944 to appear on his new radio show “Songs in the Night.”

“Bev was the very first person I asked to join me in evangelism,” Graham said. “He was well known in the Midwest, but at the same time he was humble … It was God who brought us together. [Shea's] rich, bass baritone voice has touched the hearts of millions in our Crusades … I don’t believe I’ve ever heard him utter an unkind or critical word about anyone.”

Christian publisher Ambassador International is also collecting birthday wishes for Shea as a part of promotions for their upcoming biography, George Beverly Shea: Tell Me the Story.