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    7.4.2003







Carter applauds unity

By GORDON HOUSER
The Mennonite

Thursday, July 03, 2003

At Thursday night’s opening worship, likely for the first time in his long, distinguished career, Jimmy Carter followed a blue man group.

After an introduction from a good friend, the Mennonite architect Leroy Troyer, the former president, casually dressed, walked onto the stage to a standing ovation, took off his blue sport coat and tossed it over a chair.

One of the prerogatives of a former president, Carter said, is to turn down invitations to speak, and he turns down many. But he could not turn down Troyer’s persistent emails or ignore the affinity he feels with Mennonites. He even told the Sunday school class he teaches regularly at his Baptist congregation in Plains, Ga., “If I ever stop being a Baptist, I want to be a Mennonite.”

Carter went on to applaud the demonstration of unity exhibited in the merger of the two largest Mennonite bodies in the United States. He said that the work of the Carter Center in developing countries brings him into contact with Mennonites around the world, and he is proud of what he sees.

He affirmed Mennonites’ opposition to “the unnecessary and unjust war in Iraq.” He agreed with the resolutions coming to delegates at Atlanta this week denouncing the mistreatment of immigrants – in his words, “because of being of Arab descent or having dark skin” – and embracing the call for universal health care.

Yet the greatest problem in the world today, Carter said, “is the growing chasm between rich and poor.” As a nation, and as a people of faith, he said, we must promote peace and justice, all the more “we who worship the Prince of Peace.”

Carter read from 1 Corinthians 1 and 2 and asked, “What does it mean to be successful?” Success, he said, is “to exemplify the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.”

He told stories to illustrate such success. On an evangelistic mission he met a pastor from Brooklyn, N.Y., who convinced many Spanish-speaking people in a poor Massachusetts neighborhood to accept Christ.

When he asked Pastor Cruz how he did it, Cruz said, “You have to love God and love the person in front of you.”

“This is the essence of success,” Carter said, “yet it is so difficult.”

Carter told of giving a speech with Norman Vincent Peale at a ceremony honoring a small Georgia congregation. At the event, a woman with Down syndrome struggled to light a candle but eventually succeeded. “I’ll wager no one remembers my [or Dr. Peale’s] words,” Carter said, but no one can forget the beatific look on that woman’s face. That is true success.

“We live in a world of great challenge,” Carter said, adding that we also live in a society that measures success in ways unimportant in the eyes of God.

We glibly call ourselves Christians, he said. The word “Christian” means “little Christ,” he said. “Can we say those words without embarrassing ourselves?”

In 2 Corinthians, the Apostle Paul named as important “the things that do not change.” These “unseen” things include peace, justice, humility, service, forgiveness, compassion and sacrificial love. These, he said in a quiet voice as he closed, are the things that measure success.

And he slung his coat over his shoulder and walked off the stage to another standing ovation.


Profile: President Jimmy Carter
Born James Earl Carter Jr. on Oct. 1, 1924, in the small farming town of Plains, Ga., to James Earl Carter Sr., a farmer and businessman, and Lillian Gordy, a registered nurse.
Attended Georgia Southwestern College and the Georgia Institute of Technology; received a bachelor of science degree from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1946 and assigned as a lieutenant to the nuclear submarine program; took graduate work at Union College in reactor technology and nuclear physics.
Married Rosalynn Smith of Plains, Ga., on July 7, 1946.
Won election to Georgia Senate in 1962
Elected as Georgia’s 76th governor in 1971 after a failed campaign in 1966.
Served as Democratic National Committee campaign chairman for 1974 congressional and gubernatorial elections.
Announced candidacy for president in 1974 and won party nomination at the 1976 Democratic National Convention.
Authored first book in 1975, which is followed by 16 more, including Talking Peace: A Vision for the Next Generation, 1993; Sources of Strength: Meditations on Scripture for a Living Faith, 1997; and An Hour before Daylight: Memoirs of a Rural Boyhood, 2001.
Elected as the 39th President of the United States on Nov. 2, 1976; served as president from Jan. 20, 1977, to Jan. 20, 1981. Significant foreign policy accomplishments: Panama Canal treaties, Camp David Accords, treaty with the Soviet Union and establishment of U.S. diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China. Domestic highlights: a comprehensive energy program; deregulation in energy, transportation, communications and finance; major educational programs under a new Department of Education; and major environmental protection legislation, including Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act.
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter volunteer one week a year for Habitat for Humanity, a nonprofit organization that helps needy people in the U.S. other countries renovate and build homes for themselves.
Awarded 2002 Nobel Peace Prize.

Information from The Carter Center web site, www.cartercenter.org




Today's mPress - Include

Front page:
Carter applauds unity

Contents:
In the grain of God's will ... p4

Where will we be in 2005 ... p5
more inside ...

download mPress (pdf file)

 
7.4.2003
Carter applauds unity
'If I wasn't a Baptist, I would be a Mennonite
God's Table: A precious piece of furniture
Woodworkers and artists create a new generation of tables
Charlotte: 2005 assembly will be in North Carolina
On wings and wheels, youth raise money
Business at hand
Joy in worship
Budgets and the body of Christ
Today Show star performs
Mennonites as news pegs


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