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Showing posts with label church & state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label church & state. Show all posts

07 January 2025

Jimmy Carter, ‘Born-Again’ President, Humanitarian, Dead at 100 29DEZ24

 
Former President Jimmy Carter attends the starting day of the 24th Jimmy Carter Work Project in Los Angeles on October 29, 2007. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni 


PRES JIMMY CARTER, the first president I voted for in the first election I voted in. What an amazing man, president and Christian, and I know God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit will acknowledge him with a 'Well done, good and faithful servant.' From Sojourners .....

Jimmy Carter, ‘Born-Again’ President, Humanitarian, Dead at 100

Mitchell Atencio is senior associate news editor, sojo.net. 




Dec 29, 2024

Jimmy Carter, the 39th U.S. President, died on Sunday at the age of 100. Carter was a prominent advocate of faith and justice, regularly acting from his Baptist faith throughout his career as a politician and a humanitarian.

“Jimmy Carter’s importance to faith and public life was reintroducing into the public square the principles that animated nineteenth-century evangelicals: concern for the poor, racial equality, peacemaking, human rights and equality for women,” Randall Balmer, professor of religion at Dartmouth and author of Redeemer: The Life of Jimmy Carter, told Sojourners. “He did so as an avowed and unapologetic Baptist, which means that he respected the First Amendment and the separation of church and state.”

The former president’s death, confirmed by his son Chip Carter, was first reported by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Carter was born in 1924 and raised near Plains, Ga. His father farmed peanuts and his mother was a nurse. Carter graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and later helped develop the Navy’s first nuclear submarines. After his graduation, he married Rosalynn Smith. The couple was married 77 years, the longest-married U.S. presidential couple in history. Rosalynn Carter died in November of 2023 at the age of 96.

Following his father’s death in 1953, Carter resigned from the Navy and returned to Sumter County, Ga., where he and Rosalynn revived the family farm. He became active in Georgia politics, serving the Sumter County Board of Education as a member and eventually its chairman. While in that role, Carter gradually became outspoken against segregation in the deep South and was the only prominent white man in Plains that refused to join the local “White Citizens’ Council” that formed to uphold racial hierarchy.

Carter served two terms in the Georgia Senate before serving as governor from 1971-75.

Carter, who was term-limited to four years as Georgia governor, ran for president in 1976. The New York Times described the surprise contender, and eventually winner of the Democratic candidacy, as having a “ready smile and indefatigable energy.” His “centrist political philosophy, with its moralistic, anti‐establishment, anti‐Washington overtones” was described as the surprise of the ’76 campaign.

Carter brought his self-described “born-again” evangelical faith to the forefront of his campaign. For more than 40 years, he taught Sunday school at the church he and Rosalynn attended, Maranatha Bible Church in Plains, Ga.

“To me, Jesus Christ is not an object to be worshipped but a person and a constant companion,” Carter wrote in his 2018 book Faith: A Journey For All. “I have no doubt that Jesus is living now, not simply that Jesus once upon a time existed. I look on him as the epitome of love, and of all that is good.”

While in office, Carter attended church services over 80 times (not including house meetings or worship services at the presidential retreat center Camp David). On his second day in office, Carter pardoned all Vietnam War draft evaders. In 1979, he installed solar panels at the White House as part of his efforts for clean energy.

Carter lost reelection to Ronald Reagan in 1980. In his post-presidential career, Carter was dedicated to human rights. He and Rosalynn founded the nonpartisan Carter Center in 1982, a global organization focused on peaceful conflict resolution, strengthening global democracy, and eliminating disease. The couple often volunteered to build homes with the Habitat for Humanity. According to Habitat, the Carters personally helped build, renovate, or repair 4,390 homes.

“I have learned that our greatest blessings come when we are able to improve the lives of others, and this is especially true when those others are desperately poor or in need,” Carter said of his volunteering at Habitat.

The political writer Gary Wills once referred to Carter as the “exception” to the rule that religion and politics are “mutually debasing.”

“His politics were informed by his theological insights: a regard for the poor and despised (he was the first U.S. president to take the Third World seriously); a sense of human limit (he did not take it for granted that Americans have a right to consume a disproportionate share of the world's goods); and a recognition of the humanity of others, even of enemies,” Wills wrote for Sojourners in 1988.

Carter often utilized his status as a religious figure to bolster his advocacy in the church and political life, lending his support — and belief in Jesus’ support — to women’s ordination and gay marriage. In 2000, Carter left the Southern Baptist Convention over their refusal of women pastors. In 2015, he told HuffPost that Jesus would have supported gay marriage.

“I believe Jesus would approve gay marriage, but that's just my own personal belief,” Carter said. “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, who opposed overturning the Roe ruling as president but was personally opposed to abortion, called his opposition to abortion the “only conflict” between his faith and politics.

“I have never believed that Jesus would be in favor of abortion, unless it was the result of rape or incest, or the mother’s life was in danger,” Carter told the Times in 2015. “That’s been the only conflict I’ve had in my career between political duties and Christian faith.”

Carter campaigned on nuclear nonproliferation and continued to warn against nuclear weapons after leaving office. Carter warned against nuclear weapons and in 2006 criticized Israel’s treatment of Palestinians as apartheid.

“When Israel does occupy this territory deep within the West Bank, and connects the 200-or-so settlements with each other, with a road, and then prohibits the Palestinians from using that road, or in many cases even crossing the road, this perpetrates even worse instances of apartness, or apartheid, than we witnessed even in South Africa,” Carter said.

In 2019, after a fall that fractured his pelvis, Carter taught a Sunday school class on the book of Job. USA Today reported that Carter shared in the class his perspective on death and discussed his 2015 diagnosis of brain cancer.

“I didn’t ask God to let me live, but I just asked God to give me a proper attitude toward death. And I found that I was absolutely and completely at ease with death,” Carter said, according to USA Today. “It didn’t really matter to me whether I died or lived, except I was going to miss my family and miss the work at the Carter Center, and miss teaching Sunday school sometimes.”


02 December 2024

After the Election, How Are Organizers Resisting Christian Nationalism? 25NOV24

"christian" nationalist apostate supporters of President Donald Trump hold a crucifix and flag during a “Stop the Steal” protest after the 2020 U.S. presidential election in Phoenix on Nov. 11, 2020. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart

 I am still very disgusted that the fascist authoritarian gop / greed over people republican party won the presidency and control of congress as well as many powerful state and local political offices. I am proud the supporters of the Democratic Party have not lowered ourselves to the level of the neo-nazi fascist authoritarian "christian" nationalist since the 2020 election falsely claiming election fraud and especially their treasonous  attack on the U.S. Capital building on 6 JAN 21.  Soon enough it will become crystal clear the only election fraud committed was the trumpf / drump-vance campaign and the fascist authoritarian campaign of  the gop / greed over  people republican party with the "christian" nationalist apostates. So as those who elected this hate and greed guided regime start to reap the results of their vote I will need to remember my faith, the teachings of Jesus Christ and provide what help I can. From Sojourners....

After the Election, How Are Organizers Resisting Christian Nationalism?

Sierra is a reporter in the Fall 2024 Sojourners Journalism Cohort.



25 November 2024

For faith activists and leaders committed to continuing their work to oppose and resist Christian nationalism, President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House is disappointing but not a sign of total defeat. Ahead of Inauguration Day, many activists are continuing their coalition-building efforts and sounding the alarm on specific policies they believe Trump may sign executive orders on, day one in office.

Amanda Tyler, the executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, an organization that advocates for religious liberty, said she felt deep sadness and concern for those who will be most impacted by a second Trump administration. But she also felt a hopeful resistance.

“This is not the time to be defeated, but rather the time for people who are concerned for the well-being of all of our neighbors to join together to be sure that we are about creating the flourishing society that we all need,” Tyler said.

BJC’s work was never centered around the electoral cycle, Tyler said. She published her book, How to End Christian Nationalism, in 2024 knowing that the work would be difficult regardless of who was elected. However, BJC did spend this election season educating congregations on how they can help protect free and fair elections.

Before the results were known, Tyler and the organization were already crafting new strategies for tackling Christian nationalism, such as training people on how to speak to their school boards and testify before state legislatures about unjust education policies.

In places like Oklahoma, government officials have approved placing Bibles in public schools, which has been costly and sparked pushback from civil rights groups like the American Civil Liberties Union. Parents, teachers, and ministers in the state have banded together, filing a lawsuit last month to stop Bible lesson plans from being incorporated into public school curriculum.

As the results became clearer, Tyler said she began focusing on the looming threat of mass deportations. Trump has promised he will increase deportations by invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. Legal experts have said the president doesn’t have the authority to do so, since the law is for deporting noncitizens from a country considered an enemy of the U.S. during wartime. According to NBC, his team is planning to begin with undocumented Chinese immigrants.

“I do think that the work of on-the-ground organizing is even more urgent in preparation of a possible mass deportation strategy. I think that people of faith need to be working with their neighbors, regardless of religious affiliation, to protect the most vulnerable in our communities,” she told Sojourners. “Everywhere I go, I’m talking to people about the mass deportation policy and urging them to be working within their religious communities to discern what their place might be in providing safe harbor and resistance if members of their communities are targeted.”

Despite limitations to imposing the Alien Enemies Act, Robert P. Jones and other experts are concerned about whether Trump will sign an onslaught of far-reaching executive orders on his first day in office.

Jones is the founder and president of the Public Religion and Research Institute, which has conducted research on the intersection of religion, culture, and politics for over 15 years. Jones said PRRI has made a deeper commitment in the last five years to raising awareness about Christian nationalism and will continue to do so under this new administration.

“I think part of what a research organization does is it tries to get the best [information] and have our finger on the pulse of the population,” Jones said. “In terms of threats to democracy, that means sounding the alarm when we see things that are weakening democracy. It also means highlighting places where there’s resistance to those erosions.”

PRRI’s poll results by religious affiliation in the last three presidential elections have shown white evangelical Protestants’ steadfast commitment to Trump. Jones said that despite Trump’s campaign being the most overtly racist that he has seen in his lifetime, it wasn’t a deterrent for white Christians. “As far as we can tell from the exit polls right now, this extremist, racist, xenophobic language from a leading candidate did not move white Christian voters one millimeter.”

PRRI’s preliminary exit poll data, which can sometimes help researchers understand how population groups voted, found that 81% of white evangelical Protestants voted for Trump in 2024. By contrast, their preliminary exit polls found 86% of Black Protestants voted for Democratic candidate Vice President Kamala Harris. “I think we’re so accustomed to the great gulf between white and Black Christians in this country that we’re a little numb to what that means,” Jones said. “This ought to be a scandal.”

When asked what the steadfast support for Trump among white evangelicals means for all the work anti-Christian nationalism leaders have done for nearly a decade, Jones said that despite their continuous allegiance to Trump, white evangelical membership is shrinking. He also believes the work anti-Christian nationalists have done has influenced prominent figures like Beth Moore, David French, and Russell Moore’s decisions to leave their denominations. (French left the Presbyterian Church in America in 2024. Both Moores, who are not related, left the Southern Baptist Convention in recent years).

“I think we’ve got to face the hard facts that white supremacy has lived quite comfortably within Christianity for most of our country’s history. So I think on the face of it, people want to say, ‘Oh, well, white supremacy is antithetical to Christianity.’ But the hard truth of it is that most white Christian denominations have been quite comfortable with white supremacy up until our very recent history.”

Reverend Nathan Empsall, executive director of the digital grassroots organization Faithful America, said their focus in the coming months will be less on trying to change the minds of white evangelicals and instead ensuring that other Christians are speaking up for social justice and progressive values in Jesus’ name.

“In Jesus’ name, we will support and be for immigrants and refugees,” Empsall said. “We will support and be for LGBTQ rights, particularly employment protection and transgender rights, in Jesus’ name. We will support access to safe, legal abortion care. We will support racial equality, and we will support economic justice and prosperity for all, particularly the working class and those in poverty, as Jesus did.”

How will Empsall and others do this? “This is where there’s a lot to be figured out in the coming months, but we know that we will be grassroots, Christian-driven,” he said. Faithful America is planning to survey its 200,000 members to see what support they need to continue or begin this work.

Empsall said those resisting Christian nationalism must define what they are for, not just that they are against Christian nationalism. For Empsall, that includes racial equality, reproductive health care, and caring for the poor. Faithful America, which has always functioned as a national organization, is planning to do more on-the-ground work in local communities.

“Elections change who’s in charge, but they don’t change the country. The country changes the elections,” he said. “You’ve got to focus on the country, on its people, on the church, on spirituality, on culture.”

Empsall encouraged those who may be growing weary to not give into despair, saying, “We need to learn from past resistance movements and Christian resistance movements against fascism.”


26 September 2024

MOTHER JONES DAILY: Criminalizing Pregnancy: A Record Number of Women Were Prosecuted the Year After Dobbs, Two dead women aren't enough for the GOP to back emergency abortions, Infowars’ assets will finally be auctioned to benefit Sandy Hook families, How Democrats can win Georgia, one losing race at a time, Mark Zuckerberg isn’t done with politics. His politics have just changed., Confessions of a (former) Christian nationalist


 

September 25, 2024

Yesterday, Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) tried to get her Republican colleagues to recognize what should be a no-brainer: Abortion can be a critical, lifesaving form of health care. 

You might think this would be obvious, especially following the bombshell reports published by ProPublica last week about two women, Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller, who tragically died in Georgia in 2022 as a result of the state's abortion ban. But you would be mistaken: Those tragedies were not enough to convince Republicans to support Murray's resolution—which 40 Democrats co-sponsored—that acknowledged "that every person has the basic right to emergency health care, including abortion care." (This is also the essence of the argument Republicans were fighting against at the Supreme Court, which ultimately punted the question of whether state abortion bans violate federal law in emergencies back to the lower courts.) 

In objecting to Murray's resolution, which blocked it from moving forward, Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) made a litany of false claims, insisting the resolution wasn't needed and that abortion bans do not prohibit doctors from providing lifesaving care when needed. One of the lies that caught my attention was that abortion bans have not led to the criminalization of pregnant people who are not seeking abortions. "No state criminalizes miscarriage," Lankford said. But this is provably false. There was this story, just published by CNN, about a woman in South Carolina who was charged with homicide after losing her pregnancy; there was Brittany Watts' case; and as my colleague Nina Martin wrote in a new piece published this morning, there are several other examples, according to data the legal advocacy group Pregnancy Justice released yesterday. As Nina writes: 

The Supreme Court’s landmark 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization “open[ed] the door to government intrusion into pregnancy in unprecedented ways,” Pregnancy Justice says, “throwing suspicion on pregnancy loss, particularly outside medical settings.” In the first year after Dobbs, at least 22 women around the US faced criminal prosecution after suffering miscarriages, stillbirths, or the death of babies born prematurely, the organization reports.

The Dobbs decision didn’t just unleash a raft of laws restricting and banning abortion—it also seems to have made authorities more skeptical of women whose pregnancies end prematurely for reasons that have nothing to do with abortion. “Most of the time, we don’t know why a pregnancy or infant demise happened,” says Wendy Bach, a law professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who co-authored the report. “But in this post-Dobbs era, pregnancy loss is extremely suspicious. It can lead to criminal investigation, criminal charges, incarceration, and family separation.”

Check out Nina's full piece to read more about this bleak new data and what it reveals about pregnancy criminalization post-Roe (though keep in mind, it was also a thing even under Roe, as I wrote last year). In the meantime, there's a looming question on my mind: If two dead mothers are not enough to convince Republicans of the consequences of abortion bans, how many will it take? 

Julianne McShane