Late pastor Billy Graham to lie in honor in US Capitol

The body of evangelist Billy Graham -- shown here at a press conference in New York on June 21, 2005 -- will lie in honor in the US Capitol Rotunda on February 28, a rare distinction

The body of Reverend Billy Graham, a spiritual advisor to several presidents, will lie in the US Capitol Rotunda next week so Americans can pay respect to the globally influential preacher, lawmakers said Thursday. The rare honor of placing an American's remains in the Capitol is usually reserved for US presidents, military officials and politicians. Graham, who died Wednesday at age 99, would be only the fourth private citizen so honored, and the first person since US senator Daniel Inouye in 2012. House Speaker Paul Ryan said Graham's remains will lay in the Capitol from February 28 to March 1. A ceremony featuring congressional leaders was being prepared, Ryan said. "With your approval, we will move forward with these arrangements, so that Americans have this opportunity to pay their respects to Rev Graham before he is laid to rest," Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a letter to Graham's son Franklin. Graham helped pioneer the role of television evangelist. The one-time backwoods minister -- who eventually became the world's foremost Christian evangelist -- spread a message of spiritual redemption at tent and stadium revival meetings, in a career that spanned decades. The last US president to lay in state in the Capitol Rotunda was Gerald Ford in 2007, less than three years after Ronald Reagan received the same honor.