Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Church with Jimmy Carter

President Carter, Mrs Carter and me
It was a hot July morning in Plains, Georgia when we pulled into Maranatha Baptist Church. The modest brick building is set back from a country road and is like many other small churches except for the bomb-sniffing dog who circled our car and the Secret Service agents who examined the contents of our pockets and scanned us with a wand before we entered.

Maranatha is former President Jimmy Carter’s church and he teaches Sunday School classes here regularly. This was his 551st class.  It started promptly at 10:00 AM when Mr. Carter walked in with a noticeable limp. He’d recently had knee replacement surgery and was scheduled for another in a few weeks.

Around 120 people attended the service, mostly people who came to see Jimmy. The previous week’s attendance was 31 – including seven guests - but it balloons when Carter teaches.

President Carter asked where the attendees were from. We answered California, Massachusetts, Idaho, Texas, Michigan, Kentucky and more. A cross-section of America attending church together in the middle of nowhere in a town so tiny you could miss it if you blinked your eyes while passing through.

Carter briefly explained his current humanitarian and political involvements, including the Carter Center’s work to eradicate tropical diseases and supervise foreign elections. I envisioned him hanging out with other locals on the seats that still set outside brother Billy’s old Phillips 66 station. After discussing the price of peanuts, a straw-chomping farmer might lean back and casually ask, “So Jimmy, what’re you up to this week?” To which Carter might reply, “I’m going to Pyongyang to free some detainees,” or “I’ll be supervising the Palestinian elections.”

He spoke about what it meant to be a Christian, taught that all of us are called to share the word of God, and advocated daily Bible reading. The Carters take turns reading out loud to each other a page or two at a time, usually in Spanish so they can practice the language.

After a break the regular parishioners arrived, including Rosalynn Carter who came in with her husband. They sat toward the front on the right side next to an aisle. The preacher was Dr. Dan Arail, a retired minister filling in for the regular pastor. He spoke about how truth is hard to come by. The sermon was entertaining because the reverend relished being irreverent. At one point he asked “What do you call 1,000 lawyers at the bottom of a lake? A good start!”

The Carters stayed for photos with visitors. Due to the President’s recent surgery, both he and the former First Lady sat in chairs at the front of the church. We lined up, gave our cameras to church members, greeted the Carters and had our pictures taken. When I shook his hand I was surprised by its size and strength. But more impressive was his gracious dedication to sharing Christian faith in a venue that others in his position would consider unbefitting.

For the 551st time.

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Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Tanya's Dilemma, Part 2

Tanya
At 24, Tanya has six children, no husband, no high school diploma, no GED, and no job.Situations like hers are common in a society that withholds moral judgment on unwed childbirths and then subsidizes them.

Single parenthood can occur because of a spouse’s death, justifiable divorce or other reasons. These people deserve love, respect and help. This article isn’t about them: it’s about those who heedlessly burden themselves and the rest of us with self-centered bad decisions. Think “Octomom.”

According to columnist Mona Charen, there are enormous ramifications to the decisions made by an army of Tanyas. These single parents are often in a bind because they “find it much more difficult to be autonomous self-supporting individuals.” This used to be a minor problem, but now over 40% of American births are to unwed mothers.

The government assists single parents at a huge cost, but the money isn’t the big issue. Any single parent can tell you how stretched they are and how they wish they could devote more time to the kids. The result is less parental love and direction while latch-key kids are “educated” by their peers. There’s also the loss of interaction with the father, denying children the chance to observe and understand the differences between the sexes.

And that’s not all. Writer Kay Hymowitz says “marriage patterns are creating a caste system in a country that had traditionally enjoyed relative equality.” The well-educated have stable marriage rates and they’re “rearing their children in orderly, supportive environments in which kids are taught to study hard, delay gratification and plan for the future. But 54% of the children of high school dropouts are illegitimate. Their parents’ lives are marked by financial distress, conflict and turmoil.”

“The outlines of a permanent caste system become visible, with the educated raising children who have the tools to become successful themselves and the poor and lower middle class continuing to give birth under circumstances that virtually condemn their children to poverty. Unless we find a way to discourage unwed childbearing and revive marriage, the chasm between the classes will continue to grow.”

As marriage becomes increasingly anachronistic the price gets higher. Kids no longer see a commitment between parents that transcends individual wants and instead learn that “looking out for number one” is the ultimate good. This isn’t healthy for either the individual or the community and it certainly isn’t Christian.

We’re in this fix because we’ve ignored God’s will, suspended common sense and encouraged reckless single parenthood. We – and Tanya – should learn that flouting biblical teaching leads to destructive consequences.

We can only right this if we discourage irresponsible behavior and stop promoting it. Manmade laws have put us on this path, it’ll take a higher authority to offer a way back, and a resurgence of Christianity may be the only way to re-weave our shredded moral fabric. The effect our faith can have in the here and now, not to mention eternity, is a powerful reason to evangelize.

Photo Credit:  Michael S. Gordon, The Republican
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