Rev. Franklin Graham. |
By Samuel Smith, CP Reporter
Graham, president of
the Christian humanitarian organization Samaritan’s Purse, spoke with Fox News’
Jeannie Pirro on Saturday for an interview that
mostly focused on the emergency field hospital Samaritan’s
Purse is operating in New York City’s Central Park.
In New York City,
there are over 67,551 confirmed cases of the virus with over 3,048 related
deaths as of Monday afternoon, according to statistics compiled by Johns
Hopkins University & Medicine. Nationally, there are over 338,995 cases of
coronavirus with over 10,000 deaths, and over 1.3 million cases and 72,638
related deaths worldwide.
“This pandemic, this
is a result of a fallen world, a world that has turned its back on God,” Graham
said in the interview. “So I would encourage people to pray and let’s ask God
for help.”
Toward the end of the
interview, Graham, the son of the late evangelist Billy Graham, was asked by
Pirro if he gets questions from a lot of people wondering: “Why would God allow
this kind of thing to happen?”
“I don’t think that
God planned for this to happen,” he responded. “It’s because of the sin that's
in the world. Man has turned his back against God. We have sinned against Him.
We need to ask for God’s forgiveness.”
“That’s what Easter is all about,” Graham, who also leads the
Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, continued: “It’s about God so loving the
world that He gave His only begotten son so that whosoever believeth in Him
shall not perish but should have everlasting life.”
He assured that
“Christ came to save sinners” and “save the world.”
“If we put our faith
and trust in Him, He’ll forgive our sins and heal our hearts and He’ll change
the course of our lives,” Graham added.
The evangelist has long warned that sin is being glorified in
American society and that God’s judgment could be coming for
embracing things like same-sex marriage or abortion. During the 2016 election
cycle, Graham held “Decision America” tour
rallies across the United States to encourage people to let
biblical values inspire their votes.
Earlier in the
interview with Pirro, Graham admitted that no one ever thought Samaritan’s
Purse would ever need to set up a field hospital in the heart of New York City.
In the past,
Samaritan’s Purse has operated field hospitals in war-torn countries like Iraq as well as in
disaster-stricken areas like the Bahamas after
Hurricane Dorian in 2019.
On April 1, the
organization opened a 14-tent, 68-bed respiratory care
unit that was designed to care for people suffering from
COVID-19 in New York City. The unit is staffed with over 70 doctors, nurses and
other medical staff. Additionally, Billy Graham Rapid Response Team chaplains
are there to minister to the sick and staff.
The unit includes 10
intensive care unit beds. Patients are coming to the field hospital from its
partner, Mount Sinai Health System.
“We never thought we
would be in New York City, that’s for sure,” Graham admitted. “These tents are
state-of-the-art mobile hospitals.”
Samaritan’s Purse also
operates a 68-bed emergency field hospital outside
of Cremona Hospital in Northern Italy, just outside of Milan.
In Italy, there have
been over 132,000 cases and over 16,523 deaths as of Monday afternoon. Graham
said that what’s happening in the U.S. is “very similar” to what is happening
in Italy.
“I believe that we are
probably about two weeks behind where Italy is,” he said. “We are hoping that
we will see it kind of plateau in Italy in the next few days. At least that is
what the predictions are.”
Graham called on
people across the globe to pray for God’s protection and that “God’s hand would
release us from this pandemic.”
“This is a very
serious situation,” he said. “We need God’s help. Of course, in Central Park,
our doctors and nurses are Christian men and women. We pray for our patients.
We have chaplains there to pray for our patients. We care for everybody that
comes in. And of course, we want people to know that God loves them and He
hasn’t forgotten them. We are there to care for them in Jesus’ name."
Dr. K. Elliott Tenpenny, the leader of the Samaritan's Purse response team in New York City, told The Christian Post in an interview last week that the coronavirus is not something to "think this is the end of the world."
Dr. K. Elliott Tenpenny, the leader of the Samaritan's Purse response team in New York City, told The Christian Post in an interview last week that the coronavirus is not something to "think this is the end of the world."
"[B]ut it is not
something that’s also to dismiss,” Tenpenny said. “It’s serious. It’s a serious
disease. It’s not the end of the world. We’re going to make it through this,
but it is serious and anyone that says differently I don’t believe they’re
speaking truthfully.”
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