Thursday, June 28, 2018

Sunday School with Jimmy Carter

What an honor and delight to hear President Carter teach Sunday school in his home church on June 24, 2018. I stayed at the Quality Inn in Americus on Saturday night (recommended). It is less than a 15 minute drive to the Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains. I had planned to leave the motel at  4:45 AM, but the receptionist at the motel said I should leave no later than 4:00. Okay, I came all this way; I was determined to do this right. Plus the tour bus parked in front of the motel was intimidating. 

I left the motel at 3:30 and got to the church at 3:40 and received ticket #17. That means I was in the 17th car, not the 17th person. There were actually about 40 people ahead of me. I tried to sleep in the car, walked a mile down the road in the starry clear night, walked in the gorgeous old pecan orchard behind the church, read and talked with people until it was time to line up at 7:45. The church ladies have this process down to a science, and while they tell jokes, they are in charge, and you'd better do as they say. 

The Secret Service personnel at the entrance make you take everything out of your pockets, and by everything, I mean phone, camera, wallet, note pad, pen and car keys. If you have anything else, even a small purse, you will be sent back to your car to lock it up. Then we were wanded with a metal detector, and we entered the church and sat where we were told. I was in a folding chair in the aisle next to the sixth row. This turned out to be a great seat, just as the usher said it was, because I had an unobstructed view of the President at his lectern 20 feet away. I later learned that the people in the front row arrived at 12:45 AM. 

Getting 450 guests into the little church and orienting us to the Secret Service rules and regulations took up the rest of the time until Sunday school began at 10:00 AM. I would guess that anyone who arrived after 4:30 AM was in the overflow room, watching the President on TV. A few people cruised up after 9:00, and if they got in, they were friends of the President or church members, or otherwise got reserved seats, which are not available to the general public. Those of us without connections need to get there early and wait. There is no leaving the parking lot once you arrive and get your number. Next to the church is a campground, behind the 13-foot-tall smiling peanut. The man behind me in line drove over to the church to get his number, left his car in the church parking lot as required, and walked back to his camper for breakfast and a nap. That's about the most civilized method of dealing with this that I heard of. 

While many people know that the Carters still spend a week every year working on a Habitat for Humanity build, alternating domestic and international sites, the church ladies filled us in on the work done by the Carter Center. Thirty years ago, 3.5 million people were afflicted with guinea worm, which causes extremely painful lesions. Last year, thanks to the Carter Center, there were 30 cases, and the disease will soon be eradicated. Carter has said he wants to be remembered for building more latrines than anyone else in the world. The Centers for Disease Control say that no one has done more for world health than Jimmy Carter. 

We learned that when Carter left the White House, his staff gave him a wood working shop at his home. He made the wooden cross you see behind me in the photo, and he also made the collection plates. On the bottom of the collection plate, he carved "J.C." Knowing that everyone will want to look at the bottom of the plates to see the initials, the ushers handed the plates around for the guests to admire before the collection. Carter also paints and makes furniture. As two of the 30 active members of the church, the Carters help with the lawn upkeep and janitorial services at the church. 

Finally at 10 AM, after some announcements, the young pastor asked us to bow our heads to pray. It was a calming and centering moment, and when we looked up, the former leader of the free world, President Jimmy Carter was sitting with his big grin at the front of the church. Some of us gasped. It was very exciting to be in the presence of this great man. 



He asked where we were from, and dozens of states and countries were called out. One person was from Washington, DC. Carter said, "We used to live there".

One of the themes of the President's class was forgiveness. He said Jerry Falwell was opposed to Carter's views on normalizing relations with China and separation of church and state. Falwell advised his followers not to vote for Carter, which Carter says is one of the reasons he was not elected to a second term. Carter is now friends with Jerry Falwell Jr, and they are considering writing a book together of the similarities in their conservative and liberal views of Christianity. Carter is not sure this is a great idea, because he only co-wrote one of his 33 books, and that was with his wife. He would give Rosalynn a draft of his writing, which she considered a very rough draft, while Rosalynn thought that her writing had come down from Mount Sinai. He claims they nearly got divorced over it, but an editor mediated to save the book and their marriage. 

Remembering that Jesus said to love your enemies, Carter decided it was time to mend fences with a Washington Post columnist who secretly obtained Carter's debate prep book and gave it to Ronald Reagan prior to their presidential debate. Carter thinks this also contributed to his loss of a second presidential term. He said if we don't tell anyone, he would tell us that the columnist was George Will. Carter has reached out to Will, and said perhaps they can be friends. Just last week Will said he can no longer be part of what the Republican party has become, and he hopes the Republicans lose the House and Senate majorities this fall. 

Carter mentioned the names of some prophets in the Old Testament, and asked whether we knew who they were. No one did. Yet these prophets were very influential, in that they spoke truth to power and averted some disasters. Carter urged us to choose peace over war, honesty over lying, generosity over stinginess, forgiveness over resentment, and we should speak up and encourage other people to do the same. Even if we aren't famous, like the prophets no one remembers, we can make a difference in the world. He said that through prayer we can ask God to help us be the kind of person we want to be, which will show us our life's purpose and bring us contentment. 

I have ordered a DVD of Carter's class, and I look forward to watching it with Steve. He is already planning to use Carter's ideas in one of his own Friday night sermons.



After the dynamic sermon by Brandon Patterson, the church's new 24 year old pastor, Rosalynn and Jimmy Carter patiently sat and smiled for about 30 minutes as all 450 guests had their pictures taken with military efficiency by the lovely church ladies. 



Carter shared this home with his parents and three siblings from age 4 until he left for the Naval Academy. The house did not have a bathroom when they moved in and the only heat was the fireplace in the master bedroom.


The railroad tracks are about 100 feet from the house. Carter's mother Lillian was a nurse who treated anyone, regardless of race or ability to pay. She also feed the hobos that traveled the country by train during the Depression. She asked one why so many men came to her door, and he showed her the marks on the mailbox post indicating "Good Food" and "Christian Home".
Lillian told her family to leave the marks on the post. 
I later toured the Carter boyhood farm and the 1976 presidential campaign headquarters in the little train station. 
I saw Billy Carter's gas station (a designated historic site because he dished to the reporters after they learned all they could at campaign HQ), the Carter peanut warehouse, and the school where the Carters attended first through eleventh grades. Georgia did not offer twelfth grade at the time the Carters grew up there, and Carter went directly to the Naval Academy with his small town education. The school is now a museum where you can see a film about the Carters' time in Plains, and learn about Miss Julia, a special teacher who inspired Carter and many other students to work hard, expand their horizons and think big. She frequently told her class, "Any boy in this classroom could grow up to be President of the United States".  


The mule barn at the Carter farm in Archery, Georgia.
Before he started school, all Carter's playmates were the children of his father's black employees.
I checked out the political memorabilia store in one of the six or seven stores of downtown Plains. They have a huge and amazing collection of pro- and anti- candidate products like original bumper stickers, books, posters and buttons for all major presidential campaigns going back to at least JFK. I also tried peanut ice cream at the peanut products store.  


The main street in Plains, Georgia has about six shops, the train station, gas station, post office, peanut warehouse and a small hotel. That's it. 
The Windsor Hotel on the main street in Americus was full of Carter fans Saturday night, but I was able to move over there on Sunday night. It is a gorgeous three story nineteenth century Richardsonian Romanesque red brick structure. Breakfast on the second floor in the Rosemary and Thyme breakfast room was a treat.  


I am so glad I made the trip to Plains.