Chattanooga Times Free Press

President Jimmy Carter seeks common ground at Liberty

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It’s hard for anyone — let alone a former president — to visit Liberty University these days without mentioning President Donald Trump.

Sure enough, former President Jimmy Carter opened his recent Liberty commenceme­nt address with a quip linked to Trump’s claims that his inaugurati­on crowd was larger than that of President Barack Obama.

The set-up: Trump addressed the school’s 2017 graduates.

“This is a wonderful crowd,” said Carter, after being introduced by Liberty President Jerry Falwell Jr. “Jerry told me … that it’s even bigger — I hate to say this — than it was last year.” With a slight grin, he added: “I don’t know if President Trump would admit that or not.”

The crowd laughed, and some people cheered. Carter avoided any further Trump references — at least by name.

The key to this day was that Carter and Falwell treated each other with respect, and even affection, setting the tone for an encounter between the evangelica­l left and right. In 2015, Falwell also made headlines by inviting Sen. Bernie Sanders to speak on campus.

Calling the 93-year-old Carter the “world’s most famous Sunday School teacher,” Falwell praised his declaratio­n of born-again Christian faith while in public life and his legacy, as an ex-president, of serving others. Liberty’s leader stressed that Carter showed political courage, and paid a high price among Democrats, when he signed the Hyde Amendment banning the use of federal funds to pay for most Commentary

abortions.

“The longer I live, the more I want to know about a person and to give my political support to a person,” said Falwell. “Policies are important. But candidates lie about their policies all the time in order to get elected. The same elite establishm­ent that Jesus condemned remains the real enemy today.”

Carter’s visit, he added, was an example of Christians “uniting … on issues where they agree, rather than fighting about issues where they disagree.”

In the heart of his address, Carter listed possible areas of common moral ground, ranging from efforts to provide clean water in impoverish­ed nations to the tragedy of modern slavery in the form of human traffickin­g.

However, he placed his strongest emphasis on a topic — women’s equality — that still divides many Baptists. Clashes over the ordination of women led to his own decision in 2000 to leave the Southern Baptist Convention. At Liberty, the former president specifical­ly linked this cause to an issue — gender-selection abortion — that continues to separate him from many other Democrats.

For decades, Carter noted, he thought that the possibilit­y of nuclear war was the greatest threat facing humanity.

“Recently I changed my mind. … I think, now, that it’s a human-rights problem, and it’s discrimina­tion against women and girls in the world,” he said.

To make progress on tough issues, said Carter, religious leaders of all kinds will have to find ways to view each other as potential allies, rather than as automatic enemies. Surely it’s possible for Baptists to work together “as friends” more often, a dream he said that he discussed with Falwell while at Liberty.

Most of all, he challenged the graduates to strive for success — but success as it is judged by God, not the modern world.

“We may not be rich. We may not live to be an old person. We may not have many loyal friends. But neither did Jesus have any of those things, but he lived a perfect life,” said Carter.

“Without any interferen­ce from anybody else, all by ourselves, we have complete freedom to make a judgment. … We decide whether we tell the truth or benefit from telling lies. We’re the ones that decide: Do I hate, or am I filled with love? We’re the ones who decide: Do I think only about myself, or do I care for others?”

Terry Mattingly is the editor of GetReligio­n. org and Senior Fellow for Media and Religion at The King’s College in New York City. He lives in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

 ?? LATHAN GOUMAS/THE NEWS & ADVANCE VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Jimmy Carter spoke at the 45th Liberty University commenceme­nt at Williams Stadium last Saturday in Lynchburg, Virginia.
LATHAN GOUMAS/THE NEWS & ADVANCE VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Jimmy Carter spoke at the 45th Liberty University commenceme­nt at Williams Stadium last Saturday in Lynchburg, Virginia.
 ??  ?? Terry Mattingly
Terry Mattingly

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