NORTON META TAG

Showing posts with label LGBTQ+. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LGBTQ+. Show all posts

16 January 2025

Jimmy Carter Applied His Faith to the Messiness of Politics. We Should Too 9JAN25


Jimmy Carter greets a young Nepali boy with the customary namaste gesture during the Carter Center’s observation of Nepal’s constituent assembly elections in November 2013. (Photo courtesy of The Carter Center)

ANOTHER well written tribute honoring Pres Jimmy Carter for the example he set for us as he lived his Christian faith and depended on it to guide his politics too. Thank you God for President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter. This from Sojourners .....

Jimmy Carter Applied His Faith to the Messiness of Politics. We Should Too


Rev. Adam Russell Taylor is president of Sojourners and author of A More Perfect Union: A New Vision for Building the Beloved CommunityFollow him on X @revadamtaylor.

 


Jan 9, 2025

I came into this world the same year Jimmy Carter was elected the 39th president of the United States. Roughly 18 years later, I had the honor of meeting Carter as a first-year college student at Emory University, where he served as a professor. Today, I said my heartfelt farewells to Carter at his state funeral, where I was moved to tears by many of the eulogies, including one written by Gerald Ford before his death and delivered today by Ford’s son. Though they were political rivals in the 1976 election, Carter and Ford later became deep friends — a beacon of hope in our hyperpartisan politics. “Jimmy, I’m looking forward to our reunion,” Ford wrote. “We have much to catch up on.”

When I first met Carter, he was well into his distinguished post-presidential career as a diplomat, humanitarian, and champion of public health, human rights, and global democracy. He and his wife, Rosalynn, had founded the Carter Center in partnership with Emory more than a decade earlier. But despite the other demands on his time, Carter held an annual town hall forum with first-year students and I was deeply impressed by how he responded to our barrage of questions with great humility, candor, intelligence, and often humor. While I don’t recall his specific answers, I still have a vivid memory of walking away from the event convinced that Carter was a person of deep moral character and tireless commitment to justice and peace. 

I was so inspired by Carter’s remarks that I decided to apply for an internship in the conflict resolution program at the Carter Center. I was an intern there for two years and while my interactions with Carter as an intern were rare, I was humbled to contribute to a weekly update about conflicts around the world that was not only shared with Carter himself, but also (I was told) shared with an esteemed group of peace and human rights elders from around the world that Carter helped convene.

Since his death, Carter’s remarkable life and numerous accomplishments have been rightly celebrated, including the Camp David Accords, a historic nuclear weapons treaty, major environmental protection legislation, the release of political prisoners, the near-eradication of  the Guinea worm, aid in conducting free and fair elections in dozens of countries around the world, and decades of volunteer service with Habitat for Humanity. But despite this impressive legacy, what most inspires me about Carter was how he applied his faith to the messiness of politics, both during his time in the White House and in his many years after — a model that we desperately need today in our increasingly polarized and vitriolic politics.

During his campaigns and presidency, Carter was extraordinarily open about how his born-again faith informed his public life. In his 1977 inaugural address, he quoted Micah 6:8 at the outset: “He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God.” He made it clear in that moment that his faith was inseparable from his perspective on political issues and how that would lead him to govern as president. According to the Washington Post, he “once told an interviewer that on eventful days he might pray up to 25 times.” Despite the crushing demands of being president, Carter not only attended church regularly, but also found time to teach Sunday School — something that still amazes me. In a 1978 audio recording, Carter told a Sunday School class: “God will supply all your needs from his unlimited riches and glory through Christ Jesus. That’s a good promise. That’s a good campaign slogan. And it’s so good that a lot of people don’t believe it. But we know it’s true.”

I admire these and other ways that Carter authentically communicated how his faith shaped his values and worldview, all while also upholding a firm commitment to religious pluralism and religious freedom. While no party has a monopoly on faith, today’s Democratic party — which has often been reticent to talk about faith — as well as today’s Republican party — which often acts as though they own faith — could learn a great deal from Carter’s example.

But while Carter’s image as a born-again, Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher who promised never to lie to the American people endeared him to many evangelical voters in 1976, that same faith also inspired Carter to take bold — and sometimes unpopular — stands. His understanding of his faith also led him to stand up to his fellow evangelicals when he disagreed with their theological conclusions. For example, in 2000, he severed his affiliation with the Southern Baptist Convention over its positions on gender equality, saying their ban on female deacons and other policies “violate the basic premises of my Christian faith … I personally feel the Bible says all people are equal in the eyes of God. I personally feel that women should play an absolutely equal role in service of Christ in the church.” He also told the Huffington Post in 2015: “I think Jesus would encourage any love affair if it was honest and sincere and was not damaging to anyone else, and I don’t see that gay marriage damages anyone else.” 

Carter also applied his faith to the politics within the Baptist tradition he and I share. Carter was dismayed by the deep racial and ideological divisions that embroiled the Baptist world, undermining Christian unity and the ability of the church to serve others, particularly the disinherited. In response, Carter used his public profile to convene Baptist leaders and foster unity across Baptist denominations through the New Baptist Covenant, an initiative which brought together 30 organizations representing 20 million Baptists from across the racial and political spectrums. While the initiative made significant inroads in building relationship and unity across the Baptist community, the largest Baptist denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, largely criticized or kept the initiative at arm’s length.

Jimmy Carter’s presidency marked a key turning point in the political allegiances of many white evangelicals in the United States. Carter won the presidency in 1976 with 51 percent of the evangelical vote, only to lose it decisively just four years later to Ronald Reagan. Several factors within Carter’s presidency impacted this shift among voters, including an IRS ruling denying tax exemptions to private religious schools that weren’t racially integrated and foreign policy crises that some voters felt showed Carter to be ineffective at protecting American power in the midst of the Cold War.

But the shift among evangelical voters was also bigger than Carter: After Carter’s presidency, most white evangelicals seemingly left behind the commitment to social justice and peace that infused Carter’s lifelong faith. They elected instead to fuse their faith with a narrow conservative agenda and allegiance to the Republican Party, a shift that intersected with Republicans’ Southern strategy and the then-ascendant Religious Right. Today, these strategies to unite white, Christian voters behind the Republican party have morphed into the current Christian nationalist movement that helped propel President-elect Donald Trump back to the White House. We can only imagine what the trajectory of the country and the evangelical movement would have looked like if white evangelicals had embraced more of Carter’s faith and priorities rooted in Matthew 25.

In Faith: A Journey for All, Carter writes: “Most church members are more self-satisfied, more committed to the status quo and more excluding of dissimilar people than are the political officeholders I have known.” Carter demonstrated throughout his life and career how our faith should be an active one that impacts and even transforms our community and world. He showed how our faith should influence and inspire our politics, rather than the other way around. As our nation and the world honor Carter’s legacy, I hope his steadfast faith will serve as an inspiration for everyone on how we can be salt and light, advancing and protecting dignity and human rights in our broken and hurting world.

22 October 2024

THE DEBRIEF FROM THE ACLU: Project 2025 Promises To Harm Our Communities and Turn Presidents Into Kings. We Won't Stand for It., Ohio Judge Blocks Unconstitutional Medication Abortion Restrictions, Anti-Trans Laws May Complicate Access to the Ballot for Trans Voters, Civil Rights Groups Challenge Racially Discriminatory Electoral Map in Mississippi, The Supreme Court Case on Trans Health Care, Explained., How Border Policing Harms Undocumented People Seeking Abortion Care, What Pennsylvania's Failure To Fund Public Defenders Means Across the Commonwealth, At Liberty Live With W. Kamau Bell: Know Your Rights Bus Tour Philly, ACLU and SisterSong Statement on Petition to Georgia Supreme Court to Reinstate Abortion Ban, Defend Our Voting Rights 12OKT24

 

With just a few weeks until Election Day, the urgency to protect our democracy has never been greater. The dangerous policies outlined in Project 2025 threaten to upend the very foundation of our nation, undermine the integrity of our elections, and attack our most fundamental rights. The ACLU is steadfast in its commitment to safeguarding every election and every vote – all while pressing forward on our fights for abortion access, trans rights, and criminal law reform.

Your support fuels our efforts as we respond to these attacks on our rights and democracy wherever and whenever they occur. See how your support powers real change in this month's Debrief.

 


ACLU DEBRIEF
Project 2025 Promises To
Harm Our Communities and Turn Presidents Into Kings. We Won't Stand for It.
Project 2025 Promises To Harm Our Communities and Turn Presidents Into Kings. We Won't Stand for It.
 

Project 2025 would wreak havoc on our democracy and undermine our most fundamental freedoms. The ACLU is prepared to use the full weight of our organization to stop Project 2025 in its tracks. Read more about what Project 2025 would mean for our nation here.

FROM THE FRONT LINES
 
Ohio Judge Blocks Unconstitutional Medication Abortion Restrictions
 

Last December, Ohio passed an unconstitutional law restricting abortion access. Now, thanks to a preliminary injunction won by the ACLU and others, Ohioans can access essential reproductive care, blocking the enforcement of these harmful, unnecessary restrictions.



Anti-Trans Laws May Complicate Access to the Ballot for Trans Voters
Anti-Trans Laws May Complicate Access to the Ballot for Trans Voters
 

Republican politicians are pushing anti-transgender rhetoric and laws ahead of the 2024 election. Advocacy groups are fighting back – including the ACLU of Tennessee – mobilizing communities and organizing resources to safeguard the civil rights of all transgender people.

(This link brings you to a third-party website, 19thnews.org)



Civil Rights Groups Challenge Racially Discriminatory Electoral Map in Mississippi
 

Black voters in DeSoto County, Mississippi, have less voting power following the racially discriminatory redistricting process that took place in 2022. The ACLU and our partners are fighting back, suing in court to give Black DeSoto County Mississippians the right to elect representatives of their choice.



The Supreme Court Case on Trans Health Care, Explained.
The Supreme Court Case on Trans Health Care, Explained.
 

This year, the Supreme Court has U.S. v. Skrmetti on their docket – a landmark legal challenge brought by the ACLU against a ban on hormone therapies for transgender youth. The court's ruling could serve as a stepping stone toward further limiting access to abortion, IVF, and birth control.



How Border Policing Harms Undocumented People Seeking Abortion Care
How Border Policing Harms Undocumented People Seeking Abortion Care
 

At checkpoints along Texas' border, mixed-status families are isolated from essential services and medical care, including abortion. A new ACLU report reveals how these checkpoints and anti-immigrant policing put border communities at critical risk.



What Pennsylvania's Failure To Fund Public Defenders Means Across the Commonwealth
What Pennsylvania's Failure To Fund Public Defenders Means Across the Commonwealth
 

Pennsylvania public defenders offices are struggling to provide proper representation due to limited time and resources. The ACLU of PA is suing to fix that, stabilizing the offices' work and calling on the governor and legislature of the Commonwealth to address any remaining shortfalls.

TUNE IN
 
At Liberty Live With W. Kamau Bell: Know Your Rights Bus Tour Philly
At Liberty Live With W. Kamau Bell: Know Your Rights Bus Tour Philly

W. Kamau Bell, ACLU Artist Ambassador and interim host for our At Liberty podcast, sat down with Mike Lee, executive director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania, from one of the stops of our Know Your Rights Bus Tour. Hear more about Mike's drive to champion criminal justice reform and challenge discrimination.

WHAT'S NEXT
 
ACLU and SisterSong Statement on Petition to Georgia Supreme Court to Reinstate Abortion Ban
ACLU and SisterSong Statement on Petition to Georgia Supreme Court to Reinstate Abortion Ban

Georgia politicians are now attempting to reinstate a six-week abortion ban after Judge McBurney blocked the ban in court. Judge McBurney's decision affirms what we have long known: Abortion is a right. People in Georgia should not be denied essential health care. Read more.

TAKE ACTION
 
Defend Our Voting Rights
Defend Our Voting Rights

With so much hinging on the outcome of the November election, the need for federal action to defend the fundamental right to vote has never been more urgent – and there's a very real way you can take action on that right now. Tell Congress to protect our right to vote by swiftly and decisively passing crucial voting legislation at the first opportunity!

Donate Now
Facebook     Twitter     Instagram


We respect your right to privacy – view our policy.

This email was sent by:
American Civil Liberties Union
125 Broad Street, 18th Floor
New York, NY 10004, USA