George Beverly Shea, whose booming baritone voice echoed
through stadiums, squares and souls during a decades-long career with
evangelist Billy Graham, died Tuesday. He was 104. Billy Graham Evangelistic Association spokesman Brent
Rinehart said Shea died in Asheville after a brief illness.
Shea's rendition of "How Great Thou Art" came to
define the faith of a Protestant generation that Graham helped bring to Jesus
Christ. He performed live before an estimated 200 million people at crusades
over the years – taking him from North Dakota to North Korea and beyond.
He joined Graham's crusade team in 1947 and stayed until
Graham's declining health ended most of the evangelist's public appearances
nearly 60 years later.
"As a young man starting my ministry, I asked Bev if he
would join me," Graham said then. "He said yes and for over 60 years
we had the privilege of ministering together across the country and around the
world. Bev was one of the most humble, gracious men I have ever known and one
of my closest friends. I loved him as a brother."
A Canadian emigrant who became one of America's
most-recognized gospel soloists, Shea himself summed up his career with one of
his inspirational trademarks: "The Wonder of It All."
"I just thought it was such a privilege," Shea
said in a January 2009 interview.
Despite several chances to perform on the secular stage,
Shea largely stuck with gospel music. He recorded dozens of albums of sacred
music and was nominated for 10 Grammys. He won in 1965 for his album
"Southland Favorites." At age 88, he recorded his first
country-and-western album.
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