Toronto Star

The Pied Piper of Plains still packs the pews

Former U.S. president Carter’s Sunday school draws faithful from all over the world

- MARY ANN ANDERSON

The morning is hot, even by 8 a.m., and the air is drenched with thick, warm fog found only in the southern reaches of Georgia. As it burns off, the sky becomes brindled with high clouds striated with the red and gold of sunrise. At that early hour, the orchestra of cicadas that usually serenades the countrysid­e has yet to produce even a single note. But no matter. The raucous echoes of a couple of blue jays scrapping in a nearby pecan tree punctuate the quietness of the morning.

Threaded through the parking lot of Maranatha Baptist Church, a small, simple church of red brick cocooned by the pecan orchard from where the blue jays clash, are those hoping to snag a seat to hear former U.S. president Jimmy Carter teach Sunday School. The throng, hundreds strong, are wearing everything from rumpled shorts and jeans to their Sunday finest suits and dresses, all complement­ed with footwear from tennis shoes to high heels to flip-flops.

The curious and the faithful and the flip-flopped congregate in Plains, Carter’s hometown in Georgia’s Sumter County, in the southwest quadrant of the Peach State, to hear the former leader of the free world and Nobel Peace Prize laureate teach Sunday School. It’s something Carter does frequently, and the pews always runneth over with visitors.

“People flock here from all over the world,” says a Secret Service agent whose name shall remain, um, secret. “Record numbers came after he was diagnosed with cancer.”

While Carter’s diagnosis of metastatic melanoma was in 2015, almost three years later he announced that he is cancer-free. While those “record numbers” may have waned a bit, the crowds still come, some as early as Saturday afternoon, to ensure a spot in the church.

“People even tailgate,” said Jill Stuckey, superinten­dent of the Jimmy Carter National Historic Site who also helps out at the church. “They began lining up at 2 p.m. yesterday afternoon. They spend the night in the parking lot to get a number to get in line.”

Carter’s church is small, with only 24 members. As we wait for the service to begin, I read the church bulletin. The previous Sunday, Carter didn’t teach and the total number of visitors was 14. Today, that number blossomed to more than 500. Jan Williams, a friend of the Carters and longtime church member, tells me later that 75 to 100 were turned away.

Williams, Stuckey and Jana Carter, daughter of the late first brother Billy Carter and his wife, Sybil, are the gatekeeper­s of the church, so to speak. As we wait for the former president to come into the sanctuary, they tell us he handcrafte­d the offering plates and the massive wooden cross perched over the congregati­on.

Miss Jan and Miss Jana, as the ladies are called, give the crowd instructio­ns as to what to say and do and how to get your photo made with the Carters after the service. That takes a few minutes, as there are a lot of rules. Oh. Secret Service agents are everywhere, but really, if you misbehave in any fashion, if Miss Jan, Miss Jana, Miss Jill or one of the other highly protective church members doesn’t get you, they surely will.

Tony Lowden stands to speak. He’s Maranatha’s preacher. Originally from North Philadelph­ia, but in Plains by way of Macon and Warner Robins, the charismati­c pastor is not yet used to the South Georgia air force: gnats.

“Gnats are so numerous they pay tithes and offerings at this church,” he jokes before introducin­g Carter, whom he calls “a servant leader with a servant heart.” The Pied Piper of Plains Right on time, Carter bounds from a side door, fairly fast for a man who recently had hip surgery. After greeting everyone and asking the usual “Where y’all from” question, he gets answers as varied as right here in Georgia to Alabama and Louisiana and to others as far away as California and Arizona. Internatio­nal travellers call out their countries, Malaysia, Ireland and Ghana among them.

While I had come to Plains for Sunday school, the day before, I had ridden the SAM Shortline Railroad, a Cordele-toPlains shortline train, by car maybe a 40-minute drive, for “Southern Ways and Means,” a special murder mystery event written by Carter’s niece, Kim Carter Fuller, another daughter of Billy and Sybil.

Billy Carter passed away in 1988, but Miss Sybil was aboard the train dressed in costume for the period play. So were Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter.

On the train, I note, and in the church, every eye is always on Carter and everyone watches his next move, just a miasma of admirers all around him. People follow him wherever he goes, just spellbound by his natural friendline­ss.

He’s sort of the Pied Piper of Plains, if you will. As sunlight streams i n through the stained-glass windows, the former president then jumps right into the lesson from the book of Matthew, adeptly mixing current events with Scripture so it all fits together neatly. He speaks for about half an hour, reminding the crowd before he ends the class, “Everyone of us has direct access to our Creator, all of the time” and that God’s help is there for the asking.

Soon the lesson is over, the offering plate passed, the singing of “To God Be the Glory” and “I Love to Tell the Story” and Lowden’s preaching done, and then, finally, the invitation concluded.

The former president, with his gentle voice and kind eyes, could have easily been a preacher if he had chosen not to farm peanuts or run for president. The entire Sunday school experience is sweet and moving and made even sweeter by a tremendous sense of love that won’t soon leave your soul. What to do besides Sunday school and church You should seize the opportunit­y to see this patch of Georgia farmland that offers so much more than cotton and peanuts. Everything in Plains, Andersonvi­lle and Georgia Veterans State Park in Cordele, from where the Historic SAM Shortline Railroad departs, is within a short drive of Americus, the county seat and heartbeat of Sumter County.

Several places focus on Carter’s life and legacy. Of course, there’s the very walkable Plains with its fewer than 800 residents, but full of small-town charm. The train depot, part of the Jimmy Carter National Historic Site, once served as Carter’s presidenti­al campaign headquarte­rs, and Billy Carter’s Service Station and Museum is across the road, a tribute to the first brother. Scant few shops are left in Plains, but you might snag a couple of great antiques and a sampling of peanut butter ice cream.

Also here is Andersonvi­lle National Historic Site. As notorious as Rock Island was for Confederat­e prisoners of war, the thoughts of being imprisoned at Andersonvi­lle struck fear in the hearts of Union soldiers. That’s where Camp Sumter stood as one of the largest Civil War military prisons. More than 45,000 Union soldiers were held there during the 14 months the prison existed, with some 13,000 dying there from extreme heat, cold, starvation and disease. Today, the site is comprised of Andersonvi­lle National Cemetery, Camp Sumter Civil War Military Prison and the National Prisoner of War Museum. Where to eat Alas, the only restaurant left in Plains is the Buffalo Cafe, but it’s not open on Sundays for the after-church crowd. Any other day of the week, it’s open for hamburgers, sandwiches and salads.

In Americus, try the Rosemary & Thyme Restaurant in the historic Best Western Plus Windsor Hotel for entrees such as Grouper Imperial, blackened grouper topped with lump crab meat and finished with lemon beurre blanc, or seared Angus rib-eye topped with rosemary, thyme and garlic butter.

On the more casual side, look for local favourites of Monroe’s Hot Dogs and Billiards or the Fish House Restaurant for southern delicacies of catfish, mullet and shrimp or for the braver palate, frog legs or ’gator nuggets. Sweet Georgia Baking Co. offers sandwiches and steaming cups of Cafe Campesino, Georgia’s first and only 100 per cent fair-trade organic coffee from places such as Mexico, Ethiopia, Peru, Sumatra and Bolivia. Where to sleep A few chain hotels dot Sumter County, but if you want to stay in Plains proper, make your reservatio­ns, like, well, now, if you want to pair your stay with attending Sunday school with the Carters. There’s only one place to stay, and that’s the Plains Historic Inn and Antiques with seven period suites authentica­lly furnished from the 1920s to the 1980s. The last word Jimmy Carter is now 94, and on Oct. 1 he’ll turn 95. Rosalynn, to whom he’s been married some 73 years, is 92. If seeing Carter in his role as Sunday school teacher is on your bucket list, then flip-flops or not, it may be best to make plans now or you could miss the opportunit­y of a lifetime.

 ?? MARY ANN ANDERSON PHOTOS TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Visitors line up in the early morning fog at Maranatha Baptist Church near Plains for a chance to hear former U.S. president Jimmy Carter teach Sunday school. He teaches the class frequently, his schedule is posted online on the church’s website.
MARY ANN ANDERSON PHOTOS TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Visitors line up in the early morning fog at Maranatha Baptist Church near Plains for a chance to hear former U.S. president Jimmy Carter teach Sunday school. He teaches the class frequently, his schedule is posted online on the church’s website.
 ??  ?? Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter alludes to the Book of Matthew during a recent Sunday school class at Maranatha Baptist Church in southern Georgia.
Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter alludes to the Book of Matthew during a recent Sunday school class at Maranatha Baptist Church in southern Georgia.
 ?? EXPLOREGEO­RGIA.ORG TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Visitors still flock to the tiny town of Plains, former U.S. president Jimmy Carter's hometown in southwest Georgia. It also served as the headquarte­rs for Carter's presidenti­al election campaign.
EXPLOREGEO­RGIA.ORG TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Visitors still flock to the tiny town of Plains, former U.S. president Jimmy Carter's hometown in southwest Georgia. It also served as the headquarte­rs for Carter's presidenti­al election campaign.

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