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Former President Jimmy Carter turns 100 on Tuesday.
Here’s a look at how faith shaped his life, including his time in the White House.
Baptist roots
Carter was active in church from a young age. His parents brought him with them to their Baptist church, and he continued to serve that denomination as an adult, including by leading Sunday school classes.
“I’ve always wanted to share my faith with other people,” he told reporter Phil Scoggins in 2009. “Even when I was a midshipman at the Naval Academy, I taught Sunday School every Sunday.”
Religion and racism
In that same interview, Carter talked about leaning on his faith as he fought racism in the South.
He and Rosalynn Carter’s relationship with God gave them the strength to stay put even when their neighbors pushed back against their support for integration.
“We prayed for guidance, and I think it was God’s guidance that kept us here in Plains (in Georgia) which turned out to be very good for us in the years after that,” Jimmy Carter said in 2009.
Faith and politics
Carter built his political career around faith-based values like love and justice, but his comments on religion sometimes led to awkward moments, according to The Conversation.
For example, Carter was famously mocked for discussing his attempts to avoid the sin of lust in an interview with Playboy magazine.
“In the end, many folks agreed with well-regarded columnist Mary McGrory — the interview ‘should have been an off-the-record conversation with God, not one taped by Playboy,’” The Conversation reported.
Prayer in the White House
While serving as president from 1977 to 1981, Carter leaned on God to guide him in difficult moments.
“The most fervent and constant prayers of mine were while I was in the White House because I knew there was enormous responsibility on my shoulders, and we faced some very difficult decisions, too, concerning the lives of tens of thousands of people. So I prayed for wisdom and for God’s guidance that I wouldn’t make a mistake, that I could keep my country at peace and still preserve its integrity and security. Those are the kinds of things for which I prayed,” he told Scoggins in 2009.
Life after politics
Carter lost his reelection bid in 1980.
Once out of the White House, he spent much of his time serving people in need, including through religious engagement. He started teaching Sunday School again at his Baptist church in Georgia.
“His post-presidential commitments involved The Carter Center’s initiatives of fighting disease and seeking international peace and his private efforts of building homes for Habitat for Humanity and teaching Sunday school,” The Conversation reported.
Hospice care
In February 2023, Carter entered hospice care, which led many to believe that he was nearing the end of his life.
But more than 18 months later, the former president is still alive — and still leaning on his faith for comfort.
“He really is, I think, coming to the end. As I’ve said before, there’s a part of this faith journey that is so important to him. And there’s a part of that faith journey that you only can live at the very end, and I think he has been there in that space,” Carter’s grandson, Jason Carter, said in May, per CNN.
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I learned it last week after seeing a post on X about how a group of attorneys and professors who specialize in religious freedom were gathering for a Festschrift in honor of Douglas Laycock, a law professor I’ve worked with often over the years.
The event included a series of panel discussions about law and religion and solutions to modern culture war conflict.
Faith groups are among the organizations offering support to victims of Hurricane Helene, according to Religion News Service. The storm killed dozens of people and left extensive damage in its wake across the southeastern U.S.
A Royal Caribbean ship’s impressive nine-month journey around the globe recently ended, and NPR celebrated the occasion by reflecting on the experiences of both the people on board and the people who watched the trip closely from the comfort of their own living rooms. The article noted that the trip was not without conflict, including arguments about who travelers plan to vote for in the 2024 election.
Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year, begins Wednesday night at sundown. The holiday kicks off a period known as the High Holidays in Judaism, when Jews reflect on the past year and prepare for the next one. Check out my explainer on Rosh Hashana from last year for more information, including how to share holiday greetings.
If you watch college football, you get used to seeing inspirational phrases or Bible verses on players’ eye black. But I’m not sure anyone was prepared for the message on superstar Alabama receiver Ryan Williams’ face Saturday night: “Kill everybody.” That explains why social media was flooded with messages of amusement and horror.
Get excited — It’s time for Fat Bear Week.