Graham draws more than 300,000 for Korean evangelistic fest

The prayer movement in Korea is unlike the prayers that the West is used to. It is something Chad Hammond has never seen before and it is what led hundreds of thousands of people to hear the gospel message at the Busan Franklin Graham Festival.

|PIC1|Festival director Hammod was astonished as he witnessed more than 325,000 Koreans fill Busan Asiad Stadium during the October 18-21 evangelistic event.

Two years in the making, the latest Franklin Graham Festival took place in Korea's second largest city, Busan, where Christians make up less than 10 per cent of the population.

Throughout the weeks prior to the much anticipated event, more than 1,000 people gathered at sunrise every day praying that God would bring revival to the Korean peninsula like He did a century ago and even a few decades ago when Franklin's father, world renowned evangelist Billy Graham, held his largest evangelistic crusade ever.

"Do it again, Lord. Do it again," the Koreans prayed each morning.

The first night of the Franklin Graham Festival drew some 60,000 people to a stadium that had previously held audiences for the 2002 Asian Games and football matches for the World Cup. It has a capacity of 56,000 persons but the four stories of stadium decks were filled throughout the past weekend.

The final night saw more than double the initial crowd with more than 158,000 people packing the stadium on Sunday.

Preaching in the East, Graham still proclaimed the same gospel message of sin and salvation to bring thousands to Jesus Christ.

"What are the obstacles preventing you from coming to Christ?" Graham asked. "Sin is that barrier. All of us have sinned. I am a sinner. You ask, 'What do you mean by sin? This is Korea. In America it may be different. We are an Asian country, things are not the same.' But sin is sin, regardless of what country, regardless of what race or the color of our skin. Sin is the disobedience of God's standards."

Offering the forgiveness of God, Graham invited the massive crowd to accept Jesus Christ.

Thousands responded each night, streaming forward from the stands to bow their heads in prayer and to commit their lives to Christ.

Festival organisers have emphasised that this is not a one-time large-scale festival but an evangelistic gathering that has had a lot of united prayer going into it.

And it was not simply a moment in which a renowned speaker was invited to draw large crowds, but a movement to unite and strengthen churches across Busan and to grow new believers in faith.
News
Preacher fined over Bible verse display challenges abortion clinic buffer zones
Preacher fined over Bible verse display challenges abortion clinic buffer zones

The abortion buffer zones have been branded "censorship zones".

God is the remedy for grief
God is the remedy for grief

To have loved deeply and to have been loved in return is one of life’s greatest gifts. But when that love is taken away, grief follows. And grief, in many ways, never fully leaves.

What does new school trans guidance mean for Scotland?
What does new school trans guidance mean for Scotland?

Although the draft guidance applies only to schools in England, there are ramifications for Scotland too.

Why is 1 Corinthians 13 often read at weddings?
Why is 1 Corinthians 13 often read at weddings?

St Paul wrote a timeless definition of love in 1 Corinthians 13, known as the “love chapter”, which is one of the most famous chapters in the Bible and is often read at weddings. This is the story …