I am writing this just before the inauguration of a new American president, in which Joe Biden will be sworn in as the new incumbent of the White House. I’m praying that day will pass smoothly. Some of the nations’s former presidents will be on-hand to witness the ceremony. However the oldest living ex-president will be absent.
Jimmy Carter, who was in office from 1977-1981, is now 96 years old. After some recent falls he is too frail to travel to Washington. A committed Christian, the thing for which Carter is most proud about his time in office is that, during those four years, the USA never fired a single shot in conflict. But it is out of office that I think he has really shone.
Determined that he would never use his status as a former president to enrich himself, he instead moved back to his home in Plains, Georgia, to resume a down-to-earth life: including teaching a regular Bible Class at his church and volunteering a week each year to build homes for those who needed them.
The Carter Centre, which he and his wife Rosalynn set up, has worked across the globe to resolve conflicts and eliminate disease. They have been instrumental in dramatically reducing the incidence of Guinea worm disease, which now looks set to become the first disease since smallpox to be eradicated globally. I do hope Jimmy Carter lives to see that happen.
For me, he stands as a great example of Christian values put into practice for the benefit of others, for which the words of the master in Jesus’ parable of the talents seem apt: “Well done, good and faithful servant. Enter thou into the joy of thy lord.”
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