Farewell to Falwell
Thousands of mourners, many arriving before dawn, yesterday bade farewell to the Rev. Jerry Falwell, the Baptist evangelist who became a leader in winning souls to Christ, founder of Liberty Baptist University, and a moral force in national politics.
The congregation at the Thomas Road Baptist Church included political and civic figures who came to mourn, but the 10,000 men and women in the audience were drawn to pay tribute to the Gospel that Mr. Falwell preached with fire and passion for Christ in a ministry that spanned five decades.
"No one ever had a better friend than Jerry Falwell," said the Rev. Jim Moon, a childhood friend and co-pastor of the Thomas Road Baptist Church, where the service was held. "Jerry Falwell was a man who trusted in the Lord with all his heart. He sought the wisdom of God in every decision he made."
Mr. Falwell founded the church in 1956 with just 35 parishioners in an abandoned Donald Duck Cola bottling plant. The church now enrolls 24,000 members.
The Rev. Jerry Vines, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, told the packed church of the early days of the ministry, when Mr. Falwell preached and his wife, Macel, played the piano.
Their efforts attracted 800 members by the end of the first year, he said, and the Falwells had built a megachurch "before megachurches were cool."
Mr. Falwell was remembered as a "saint," "prophet," "a dreamer who dared" and a "giant of a man" who understood the "will and work" of God, and made all he met feel like they were his best friend.
Inside the big man was a "mischievous little boy," Mr. Vines said. He gave surprise bear hugs that left people checking for rib injuries and once drove a car equipped with a horn that made a trainlike sound.
Mr. Vines said Mr. Falwell, who had carefully planned his service, once told him "I'm going to walk out" if the funeral ran longer than 45 minutes. "So I have been watching carefully," Mr. Vines said.
The Rev. Franklin Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham, said Mr. Falwell was a controversial figure because of his unwavering belief in moral standards, such as his opposition to abortion, pornography and same-sex "marriage."
Mr. Graham praised Mr. Falwell for "believing that moral decay weakened America." He said Mr. Falwell's passion changed U.S. politics, particularly when he started the Moral Majority in 1979, which helped elect Ronald Reagan president and united evangelical and fundamentalist Christians who had avoided politics.
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, head of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, said before the service that Mr. Falwell was one of the "first to build a bridge between evangelicals and Jews in America and evangelicals and Jews in Israel."