Jimmy Carter was born into a church that taught white supremacy

“I would say that my early life spent in the segregation of society and by serving the Navy when Harry Truman ordained that racial discrimination would not apply in any ship on the Navy or in any military forces,” Carter said, “I would say it was a slow and evolving process for me to become convinced that everybody’s equal in the eyes of God.”

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Jimmy Carter will always be one of my favorite Presidents! He served JESUS and all people! As I reflect on his life, I pray that many clean up their mouths, no more potty mouths please! No more talking mean about people, especially woman! No more threats to people, and peaceful countries! PLEASE!  OH MY GOODNESS! LORD HAVE MERCY! Trump refuses to rule out use of military force to take control of Greenland and the Panama Canal My grandchildren are watching! God is watching us all! So many harden hearts in American politics, it has become the playground of Satan. So much meanness and bad behavior. The shame is, that many Christians accept this ugly behavior! This acceptance of bad behavior is chasing many away from the American Church. Lord have mercy! America has enough problems, please President-elect Trump stop inviting trouble. The world needs the peace of JESUS. Sir, why have you backed down on the killing of God’s babies through abortion? What did you say about the Ukriane War? You would end it before you took office?

Jimmy Carter left earth with a godly legacy! What will be mine, and what will be yours?

PLAINS, Ga. (BP) – When Plains Baptist Church voted overwhelmingly in the 1950s to bar Blacks and “racial agitators” from membership, Jimmy Carter and a handful of his family members were the only ones opposed to the restriction.

Born into a church that taught white supremacy, the first Southern Baptist to serve as U.S. president had learned the truth over time, he said in two notable interviews available for reading as America lays the 39th president to rest.

Carter died the last Sunday in 2024 at 100 years old, and is being honored with a service in the Capitol Rotunda at 4:30 p.m. Eastern today (Jan. 7). His remains will lie in state before his national funeral service Jan. 9 at the Washington National Cathedral. A private service and burial will follow in Plains.

“I would say that my early life spent in the segregation of society and by serving the Navy when Harry Truman ordained that racial discrimination would not apply in any ship on the Navy or in any military forces,” Carter said, “I would say it was a slow and evolving process for me to become convinced that everybody’s equal in the eyes of God.”

Carter was speaking with Southern Baptist Theological Seminary President Albert Mohler on the March 26, 2012 episode of Mohler’s “Thinking in Public” podcast.

Carter, who established a legacy as an advocate for justice and equality, also discussed the roots that shaped him in a Sept. 17, 1991, interview with Bill Sumners, then Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives director and archivist, published in the January 1997 edition of Baptist History and Heritage. More Here

Jimmy Carter eulogized by Kamala Harris and others as 39th president returns to Washington

Dr. George Barna – The Decline of Biblical Worldview in America; This is the Crisis of Our Time!

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