Billy Graham delivers a message at the Billy Graham Crusade at Flushing Meadows Park, New York,  in 2005.

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NEW: Graham should be in the hospital for "a couple of days," his spokesman says

The influential evangelist is believed to have bronchitis, an Asheville hospital says

He's been alert and in good spirits, says the hospital and his evangelistic association

The 93-year-old has been in good overall health the past year, after getting pneumonia

CNN  — 

Evangelist Billy Graham was released from the hospital Tuesday after a two-day stay and returned to his North Carolina home, Mission Hospital said.

“Upon admission, he was alert and in good spirits,” said the statement, which was released both by Mission Hospital in Asheville and the The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

Graham was admitted to the hospital in the western North Carolina city of Asheville early Sunday morning.

The influential preacher went to the hospital for treatment for bronchitis and after developing a “slight fever overnight,” his spokesman A. Larry Ross said via Twitter.

He is being treated with oral antibiotics and improving, at one point Sunday even sitting up in bed to remotely watch his grandson Will Graham give a guest sermon at First Baptist Church in Spartanburg, South Carolina, Ross later said. Graham, who Ross said had no fever by Sunday morning, ate lunch with daughter Gigi and one of his grandchildren at the hospital, where he had been chatting up the staff, said Ross.

“Doctors are encouraged by his progress, and he’s been alert all day … taking meals (and) sitting up in bed,” Ross said Sunday night.

On Sunday, Graham was “resting comfortably” and in stable condition, Mission Hospital and the association said in their statement, citing pulmonologist David Pucci at the hospital.

Physicians expect Graham to remain in the western North Carolina medical facility for “a couple of days,” according to Ross, who earlier noted that “no date has been set for discharge.”

“He’s made farther progress than for previous hospitalizations (for pulmonary infections),” Ross said, adding that Graham is “in good hands” and “feels comfortable” at Mission Hospital, where he has previously been treated.

Graham, a resident of Montreat, about 18 miles east of Asheville, has provided counsel to generations of U.S. presidents, beginning with Harry S. Truman, and is the founder of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

The Charlotte native has preached to untold millions over six decades, beginning his missionary work in 1944 when he started speaking at rallies for the Youth for Christ/Campus Life ministry. Five years later, Graham was holding a “crusade” in tents in downtown Los Angeles.

Originally scheduled for three weeks, the crusade drew so many followers it was extended to seven. His “last crusade” in June 2005 drew 230,000 people.

Even with his advanced age and health issues, Graham remains “actively involved in ministry and writing projects,” his evangelistic association and the hospital said. That includes writing a new book, which is almost done, “summarizing his Gospel message over the past seven decades of public ministry.”

He also has weighed in on hot-button issues of late, including supporting North Carolina’s constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, which voters passed earlier this year, and last month defending the president of the Chick-fil-A restaurant chain for his opposition to same-sex marriage.

Also in July, in a letter released by his organization, Graham leveled deep criticism at the United States and “its deceived people.”

“Self-centered indulgence, pride and a lack of shame over sin are now emblems of the American lifestyle,” Graham wrote.

CNN’s Greg Botelho contributed to this report.