Jimmy the Baptist: Carter redefined ‘evangelical,’ from campaigns to
race and women’s rights
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[January 02, 2025]
By BILL BARROW
PLAINS, Ga. (AP) — Before reaching the 1978 peace deal between Egypt’s
Anwar Sadat and Israel’s Menachem Begin, Jimmy Carter managed months of
intense preparation, high-stakes negotiations at Camp David and a field
trip to the Gettysburg battlefield to demonstrate the consequences of
war.
But looking back on his most celebrated foreign policy achievement, the
39th president said intricate diplomacy ultimately wasn’t the deciding
factor.
“We finally got an agreement because we all shared faith in the same
God,” Carter told biographer Jonathan Alter, as he traced his
Christianity, Begin’s Judaism and Sadat’s Islam to their common ancestor
in each religion’s sacred texts. “We all considered ourselves the sons
of Abraham.”
Carter, who died Sunday at 100, was widely known as a man of faith,
especially after his long post-presidency became defined by images of
the Baptist Sunday School teacher building homes for low-income people
and fighting diseases across the developing world.
Yet beyond piety and service, the Georgia Democrat stood out from his
earliest days on the national stage with unusually prolific, nuanced
explanations of his beliefs. Carter quoted Jesus and famous theologians
and connected it all to his policy pursuits, living out his own
definition of what it means to be a self-professed Christian in American
politics.
“Most people go to Washington in search of their own power,” said David
Gergen, a White House adviser to four presidents. “Carter went to
Washington in search of our national soul. That doesn’t mean those
others didn’t have good intentions, but for Jimmy Carter it just seemed
like a different purpose.”
What happened when Carter described his faith to ‘Playboy’ magazine
As a candidate in 1976, Carter described himself as a “born-again
Christian.” Based on the New Testament, the reference is routine for
many Protestants in the South who believe following Jesus means adopting
a new version of oneself. To national media and voters unfamiliar with
evangelical lexicon, it made Carter a curiosity.
“We saw ourselves as being very much cultural outcasts” as evangelicals
in the mid-1970s, said Dartmouth College professor Randall Balmer, who
has written extensively on Carter’s faith. The evangelical movement had
not yet become a political force mostly aligned with Republicans, and
“to have someone use our language to describe himself and still be taken
seriously as a presidential candidate,” Balmer said, “was startling,
really.”
Carter used the presidency to elevate human rights in U.S. foreign
policy, champion environmental conservation and resist military
conflict. He criticized American greed and consumerism. He proselytized
to other world leaders.
Carter continued the approach for decades thereafter through The Carter
Center and its global efforts on peace, democracy and public health.
Into his 90s, Carter criticized American militarism and noted one of
Jesus’s Biblical monikers: “Prince of Peace.”
“He carried his faith with him every minute of every day, and he put it
to use every single minute of every single day,” said Jill Stuckey, a
Plains resident and longtime friend of Carter and his wife, Rosalynn,
who died in November 2023 at 96.
Carter's faith insisted on public service above politics
U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg attended some of Carter’s
church lessons in Plains, Georgia, and sought the former president’s
counsel during his own campaign in 2020. He said Carter elevated faith
beyond partisan divisions.
“There are a lot of conservatives who seem to use the Bible almost as a
weapon or a cudgel, and there are a lot of liberals who seem to use
faith mostly as a way to desperately signal that they’re not bad
people,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press. “President Carter
demonstrated a third thing — faith that calls you to make yourself
useful to others.”
Carter’s unabashed evangelism was an outlier in a Democratic Party that
grew more secular and pluralistic during his public life. Yet Carter
advocated “absolute and total separation of church and state” and
opposed public money for religious schools. He admired the Rev. Billy
Graham personally, but called it “inappropriate” to invite the nation’s
leading evangelical to lead White House prayer services, as Graham did
for previous administrations.
Carter further distinguished himself from many evangelicals by
criticizing Israel’s treatment of Palestinians and taking liberal
stances on race relations, women’s rights and, as he grew older, LGBTQ
rights. He once described feeling shocked when a “high official” in the
Southern Baptist Convention told him in the Oval Office that “we are
praying, Mr. President, that you will abandon your secular humanism as
your religion.”
By his later years, Carter “was happy with the label of ‘progressive
evangelical,’” Balmer said.
How did Carter come to define his faith?
Carter grew up as the son of a deacon in the Southern Baptist
Convention, a conservative denomination founded before the Civil War as
a regional splinter group that supported slavery. He did not openly
question his father’s segregationist views or the white supremacist
origins of his denomination, and he didn’t yet consider himself an
evangelical as a young man. But he had exposure to Black evangelical
traditions by occasionally visiting St. Mark AME Church, the
congregation of the tenant farming families that worked his father’s
land.
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President Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter chat with Rev. Charles
Trentham as they leave the First Baptist Church in Washington on
March 20, 1977. (AP Photo/Charles W. Harrity, File)
“I could see spirit, sincerity and fervor in their worship services
that we lacked in our church in Plains,” Carter once wrote.
Decades later, during the Civil Rights Movement, Carter urged his
Plains congregation to allow integrated worship, but he and Rosalynn
stood virtually alone. Carter was a state senator by then, and
notably did not offer such explicit integration advocacy beyond
church walls.
After his failed bid for governor in 1966, Carter was “disillusioned
with politics and life in general,” he wrote. His sister Ruth, a
well-known evangelist and faith healer, persuaded him to go on
“pioneer missions.” The future president knocked on doors to share
the gospel in Pennsylvania and in Spanish-speaking neighborhoods of
Massachusetts. He came to see these sojourns as a catalyst to “apply
my Christian faith much more regularly to my secular life.”
Carter spread his gospel to folksingers and communist leaders
Carter even got to share his Christianity with Bob Dylan, in a
one-on-one session the iconic folksinger sought with the Georgia
governor in 1971.
In 1977, during his first foreign trip as president, Carter was
invited by Edward Gierek, Poland’s top leader under Moscow’s Soviet
control, to speak without their aides present, Carter later
recalled. Gierek was “somewhat ill at ease” while explaining that he
was an atheist in conformity with the Kremlin, but wanted to learn
about Christianity. So Carter shared some Christian principles, and
“asked him if he would consider accepting Jesus Christ as his
personal savior.”
Gierek replied that he could not make a public declaration, and “I
never knew what his decision was,” Carter later wrote. But in 1979,
Gierek rebuffed Moscow’s orders by allowing newly elected Pope John
Paul II to visit his native Poland. The Kremlin deposed Gierek in
1980, but that visit became a seminal moment in John Paul’s papacy
and his efforts to break the Soviet Union.
At a White House dinner, Carter pressed Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping
to allow freedom of worship and Bible ownership and admit American
missionaries. Xiaoping allowed the first two but not the latter.
Carter in 2018 noted projections that China, by 2025, will have more
Protestants than America.
And at Camp David, Carter prayed often and talked openly of faith
with Begin and Sadat, unpacking ancient animosities between their
religions.
Carter evolved on equal rights and gay marriage
When the Carters left the White House in 1981, having had enough of
the lingering racial tensions at Plains Baptist Church, they
transferred to nearby Maranatha Baptist Church, Balmer said.
Carter’s hometown funeral will take place there after his state
service at Washington’s National Cathedral.
Carter disaffiliated from Southern Baptists two decades later, at
the age of 76, because the denomination’s leadership, he said,
demeaned women as subservient to men in the home, church and wider
society. Carter remained at Maranatha, noting that the
congregation’s deacons were divided about evenly between the sexes.
“There is one incontrovertible act concerning the relationship
between Jesus Christ and women,” Carter explained in his final book,
“Faith,” published in 2018. “He treated them as equal to men, which
was dramatically different from the prevailing custom of the times.”
Carter had a slower shift on LGBTQ matters. In a 1976 campaign
interview with Playboy magazine, he said he considered sexual
relations outside of marriage a sin and, thus, could not easily
reconcile homosexuality. The answer did not contemplate same-sex
marriage as a legitimate civil or religious institution.
Carter asked: ‘What would Jesus do?’
As his 75th wedding anniversary approached in 2021, however, Carter
had a different view on government- and church-sanctioned marriage
for same-sex couples. “I don’t have any opposition it,” he told AP,
declaring himself “very liberal” on any issue “that relates to human
rights.” Sexuality “will continue to be divisive” within
Christianity, he predicted, “but the church is evolving.”
Buttigieg, an Episcopalian whose same-sex marriage is recognized by
his church, said Carter’s willingness to be open about his faith, in
all its complexity, provides a “tremendous example” for “a
generation of Christians who don’t believe that God belongs to any
political party.”
The Rev. Bernice King, the daughter of slain civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr., praised Carter as a “man of peace and
compassion” and argued that for all his books and expositions and
Sunday School lessons, the Baptist from Plains hewed to a simple
faith.
“He looked at the life of Jesus Christ and how Christ interfaced and
interacted with people,” King said. “He wrestled with that as a
leader. I think he took serious: ‘What would Jesus do? ... What
would somebody that is love-centered do?’”
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