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Offline Charity

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Biden and Carter
« on: June 18, 2022, 02:17:36 PM »
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  • https://www.revolver.news/2022/06/joe-biden-you-sir-are-no-jimmy-carter/
    Don’t Compare Biden to Carter: Joe’s Not Fit to Shine Jimmy’s Shoes
    June 13, 2022 ( ago)

     
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    Jimmy Carter comparisons are all the rage these days.

    Quote
    Jimmy Carter 2.0 is worried about being seen as…Jimmy Carter 2.0.https://t.co/kn6M3zXwYP
    — Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) June 6, 2022



    Quote
    Joe Biden is the new Jimmy Carter:
    -Stagflation
    -Higher taxes
    -And rising gas prices
    2021 meet 1979.
    — Rep. Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) May 11, 2021

    Even Kamala hαɾɾιs described America as being in a state of “malaise” under Joe Biden’s leadership.




    The Biden-Carter comparison is a natural one, and not just because Biden shares Carter’s gruesome approval ratings. Both had to cope with similar problems: Inflation, an energy shock, Russian assertiveness, and the implosion of an American Middle East ally. Both inspired widespread feeling that the American superpower was over-the-hill and soon to be surpassed by foreign rivals.

    And then, there’s the personal dimension: Joe Biden was the first U.S. senator to endorse Carter for president all the way back in 1975, when Carter was a longshot dark horse candidate for the Democratic nomination.
    Unfortunately for Joe Biden and the American people, however, Joe Biden isn’t half the man Jimmy Carter was, despite the hilarious optical illusion captured in this viral fish-lens photograph.

    Quote
    We’re pleased to share this wonderful photo from the @POTUS and @FLOTUS visit to see the Carters in Plains, Ga.!
    Thank you President and Mrs. Biden! pic.twitter.com/QcA33iUev4
    — The Carter Center (@CarterCenter) May 4, 2021


    Joseph Robinette Biden only wishes that he could be mentioned in the same breath as Jimmy Carter, but in reality, the comparison between the two only shows just how far the U.S. has fallen.

    Carter’s presidency was so disastrous that in 1980 he suffered the worst landslide loss of any incuмbent president in history. Only time will tell if Biden suffers the same fate—if he even lives that long. But we’re ready to say it right now: If we had to choose between Uncle Jimmy and Old Joe, we’re taking taking the peanut farmer from Georgia every day of the week. Let us explain.
    Jimmy Carter was a naval officer who heroically prevented a catastrophic nuclear meltdown. Joe Biden is a third-rate demagogue accused of graft who graduated at the bottom of Syracuse Law.

    Most people have never heard the story of Jimmy Carter lowering himself into a nuclear reactor and preventing the world’s first nuclear meltdown.

    Quote
    Do you remember the world’s very first nuclear meltdown? That time the US President, an expert in nuclear physics, heroically lowered himself into the reactor and saved Ottawa, Canada’s capital?
    Sounds like schlocky action movie, but it actually happened! pic.twitter.com/LtAQYC79QZ
    — Jeff Lundeen (@LundeenOttawa) December 15, 2021


    The New York Post has the details of the story:
    Quote
    As the story goes, the Plains, Ga., native planned his entire life to join the Navy — and did so when he received his appointment to the Naval Academy in 1942. After graduating with distinction, Carter spent two years completing his service ship duty before signing on to the Submarine Force. Following a series of relocations and promotions, the young lieutenant would request to join Captain Hyman G. Rickover’s nuclear sub program, where they were developing the world’s first atomic subs.

    Rickover then sent Carter to work for the US Atomic Energy Commission, where he served on temporary duty with the Naval Reactors Branch. Meanwhile, a few months later, an accidental power surge at Chalk River Laboratories in Ottawa caused fuel rods within a nuclear research reactor to rupture and melt — risking a full nuclear meltdown.
    It was the first such incident of its kind, and Carter’s team of 23 men was ordered to clean it up.
    In a scene straight out of modern-day blockbusters, the operation would require the brave men to descend into the core by rope and pulley so they could deconstruct the reactor bolt by bolt. The lab had set up a duplicate reactor as a training field for Carter’s team, who would get only one shot at the real thing. Each man would have to descend into the core and complete their high-flying tasks in 90-second spurts, as exposure to toxic radiation within the reactor posed a high risk to their long-term health.
    Their plan went off without a hitch. The core was shut down and then rebuilt. From there, Carter went on to become the engineering officer for the USS Seawolf, one of the first submarines to operate on atomic power. By 1961, he retired from the Navy and Reserves, and, in 1963, ran for his first political office.
    [New York Post]

    Jimmy Carter was indeed an expert in reactor technology and nuclear physics who served as a submariner in the Navy, rising to the rank of lieutenant. And Joe Biden? He’s a liar or a fabricator who claimed to finish in the top half of his class at Syracuse Law School, when actually, he finished near the bottom.
    Biden’s infamous lying meltdown went the equivalent of “viral” back in the day. The angry senator angrily snapped at a voter, claiming he had a “much higher IQ than you.”




    Combined with a plagiarism scandal, Biden’s lies and exaggerations forced him to drop out of the 1988 presidential race.



    Biden even went so far as to plagiarize an Irish politician’s speeches, even lifting his life story nearly word for word. RealClearPolitics thoroughly chronicled Joe Biden’s history of plagiarism in a report which featured this extremely egregious example (emphasis ours):
    Quote
    The most egregious example, as described by Maureen Dowd when it happened, occurred Aug. 23, 1987, during a debate at the Iowa State Fair. Biden had been lifting entire lines of his stock stump speech from Britain’s then-Labor Party leader, Neil Kinnock, who was campaigning for prime minister across the pond.
    “He [Biden] lifted Mr. Kinnock’s closing speech with phrases, gestures and lyrical Welsh syntax intact for his own closing speech,” Dowd reported for the New York Times.
    As reporters dug deeper, they found more. Biden didn’t just steal Kinnock’s political rhetoric, he appropriated his life story, including a coal mining grandfather. This was worse than it looked: Kinnock’s Welsh grandfather did work in the mines. Biden’s, although he lived in Pennsylvania coal country, sold cars. Did Biden believe that British politics was so removed from Americans’ experience that he could get away with it? Maybe, but if that were the case, Biden wouldn’t have ripped off lines almost directly from John F. Kennedy and his brother, Robert Kennedy.
    [RealClearPolitics]
    We could go on and on about Joe Biden, his brother James, his son Hunter, and their alleged corrupt business transactions and foreign dealings, but you already know all the details. Meanwhile, Jimmy Carter has always shunned chasing after riches, living modestly into old age in a small house in his Georgia hometown.
    When it comes to character, there simply is no comparison. Joseph Robinette Biden is so thoroughly outclassed by Jimmy Carter, they aren’t even in the same stratosphere.
    Carter actually had the slightest idea what was going on as president.
    Say whatever you will about Carter as president: He was actually the president. In fact, one of Carter’s chief shortcomings as chief executive was his propensity to try and micromanage every aspect of the vast federal apparatus like it was his old Georgia peanut farm. Carter notoriously pored over thick briefing books and personally double-checked the arithmetic of budgetary tables. He even, for the first few months of his presidency, personally approved requests to use the White House tennis court.
    This sort of micromanagement created all kinds of problems, but nobody ever had the sinking feeling that nobody was at the helm in the White House. Nobody ever had to endure President Carter doing something like this:

    Quote
    Biden says there's a lot of "major things" he's done, he just hasn't "been able to communicate it in a way that is, uh, um…"
    He then starts rambling about reporters getting "clicks on the nightly news" and they cut to commercial. pic.twitter.com/uTiEu495C2
    — RNC Research (@RNCResearch) June 9, 2022

    Or this:



    Carter’s energy crisis wasn’t entirely self-inflicted.
    The economic stagnation of the 1970s was caused and defined by a sharp increase in the price of oil. Before the World War II, America produced a majority of the world’s oil and was completely self-sufficient. But with dramatic growth in global demand and declining U.S. production, in the 50s and 60s America increasingly turned to imports. This left it profoundly vulnerable to the OPEC oil embargo of 1973, as well as the shock of the Shah’s overthrown in Iran six years later.
    Carter’s first response to rising energy prices? Begging Americans to put on a sweater:



    But that wasn’t actually all he did. Carter inherited a heavily-regulated oil regime from the Nixon years, with price controls on oil that suppressed production and led to shortages. Although supposedly to Nixon’s left, Carter chucked these price controls, allowing U.S. oil production to surge from newly-developed fields such as Prudhoe Bay in Alaska. From 1970 until Carter took office, U.S. daily oil production had fallen nearly 20 percent. Carter reversed that trend. When Carter looked to increase U.S. energy output, he looked everywhere. In his famous “malaise” speech, he even boasted about America’s vast reserves of coal.
    What Carter did not do was intentionally target U.S. production to placate radicals in his party who hate all the trappings of modern civilization. Carter never froze all new drilling permits in the U.S. right before instigating an embargo of Russia. He never canceled a major pipeline because self-described “water protectors” shrilly demanded it. For Carter, the energy shortage was a difficult problem to solve, not the intended byproduct of far-left policy priorities.
    Carter doomed his political future to beat inflation.
    The single biggest reason that the Biden era feels like a Carter redux is the return of inflation.

    Quote
    The Cleveland Fed trimmed mean CPI is out & it is ugly.
    It was even higher than core CPI for May. For the first time this cycle it is running higher than core for the last 12 months.
    Monthly and 12-month trimmed mean are both the largest on record (data back to '83). pic.twitter.com/m0MNLud1W6
    — Jason Furman (@jasonfurman) June 10, 2022

    Before the Biden Malaise, Americans had been able to comfortably ignore inflation for a good forty years. But in the 1970s, inflation was a relentless and oppressive force. In each year of Carter’s presidency, inflation went up; by 1980 inflation was running at a shocking 13.55%.
    But if Carter haplessly flailed against inflation for most of his presidency, by his final year he had finally set the stage for it to be fixed. One of Carter’s most consequential decisions was his appointment of Paul Volcker as Federal Reserve chair in 1979. Volcker was an inflation hawk. Carter’s aides warned him that Volcker would hike interest rates and trigger a recession to halt inflation. Volcker even told Carter he was going to do exactly that in an interview before his appointment. During confirmation hearings, Volcker said halting inflation was his number one priority. And as chairman, Volcker delivered. In 1980, the federal funds rate hit a record twenty percent.
    The result was a short but severe recession. Unemployment approached 8 percent (it would surpass 10 percent early in the Reagan administration). People protested outside the Federal Reserve. But Volcker held firm, and both Congress and the president let him execute his policy. Within a few years, the necessary pain had passed, paving the way for more than two decades of largely consistent growth.
    Carter himself later rued the Volcker choice in his memoirs. Doesn’t matter. Whether it was by accident or out of desperation, Carter made the call that ended the 70s stagflation cycle, inflicted a sharp but necessary correction, and paved the way for decades of healthier economic growth.
    Will Biden follow the same path? Indicators aren’t good. A pending inflationary crisis was obvious from the moment Biden took office, yet for the first year his administration’s reaction resembled that of incompetent Latin American socialists. First, Biden simply denied inflation was happening; in July 2021 his administration would only concede that inflation might get “as high as 3 percent” by year’s end (it was 6.7 percent for the year). When inflation became undeniable, Biden and his allies shifted to blaming “greedy corporations” for rising prices, as if corporations trying to make money is a novel idea first thought up last year. But we shouldn’t be shocked: If Kamala hαɾɾιs is any indication, “thing cost more money???” appears to be the Biden admin’s default understanding of inflation.

    Quote
    Kamala hαɾɾιs is asked about the inflation crisis and it did not go well. pic.twitter.com/rHre6FsbLu
    — The First (@TheFirstonTV) December 30, 2021

    Afghanistan v. Ukraine
    The 1980s war in Afghanistan was much like today’s war in Ukraine. In both cases, America waged a proxy war by arming the targets of a Russian invasion. In both cases, the American people valorized the recipients of their support even if they were not objectively that admirable (Ukraine’s government is a corrupt, authoritarian kleptocracy; the Mujahideen were the predecessors of the Taliban). And in both cases, the wisest response for America would have been to steer clear of the conflict entirely.
    But at least Carter’s proxy war in Afghanistan was an actual proxy conflict: A way for the U.S. to weaken an enemy without spending outrageous sums. When Carter launched Operation Cyclone, the CIA effort to support the Mujahideen, its funding was $50 million, or about $200 million in today’s terms. Currently, America is spending more than $200 million per day to support Ukraine. And we have already committed $54 billion to backing the Kiev government, but that’s only enough to last them through September. When Biden goes back to Congress hat in hand next fall to ask for even more money, he’ll already have spent more than the $50 billion America spent on the ten-year Afghan proxy war from beginning to end.
    There are differences too, and once again all of them are to Biden’s detriment. After the Soviet invasion, Carter imposed a grain export embargo, which hurt U.S. farmers while having little impact on Soviet policies. That was a waste, but fell far short of Biden’s efforts to “cancel” Russia and transform it into a continent-sized version of North Korea. Plus, some CIA provocation aside, the war in Afghanistan wasn’t substantially Carter’s fault, while the Biden Administration’s dogmatic refusal to negotiate played a central role in what is now the largest European war since 1945.
    Under Carter, America still had a border.
    Jimmy Carter is no hero on immigration. He did much to create the modern bait-and-switch on illegal immigration, where prior illegals are given amnesty in return for future border security that never materializes. Carter also dramatically increased refugee admissions into the United States.
    Nevertheless, Carter still did see illegal immigration as undesirable and wanted it to actually stop. It only became illegal for businesses to knowingly hire illegal immigrants in 1986, but the measure President Reagan signed into law was not Reagan’s  idea, it was Carter’s.
    Biden, in contrast, has knowingly created a “Camp of the Saints” calamity at the border. Migrants are flooding into the U.S. at a rate of two million a year, throwing out all the gains of the Trump administration, while DHS Secretary Mayorkas has essentially ended enforcement of the hiring laws Carter first requested forty-five years ago.
    Jimmy Carter’s immigration policy may have been disappointing, but Old Joe’s is a national ѕυιcιdє.
    Carter didn’t have the Carter Administration to look back on as a warning.
    As rough as things went for Mr. Carter, he at least had one ironclad defense: He was the first coming of Jimmy Carter, not the second. The problems facing his government were in many cases unprecedented. The energy crisis of the 1970s was the first time oil prices played such a dramatic role in the U.S. economy or foreign policy. The Islamic Revolution in Iran was the first such revolution in America’s long Middle East quagmire. 1970s stagflation was the first coming of stagflation, so novel that the major economic theories of the time couldn’t explain it.
    Biden and his team have no such limitation. Biden need only reach into his own rapidly-decaying memories to remember what Carter did, and what happened to his presidency and his party. That Biden and his team continue forward as they do show the central difference between these two disastrous presidencies: The Carter Administration was struggling and failing to save an out-of-control airplane. The Biden Administration is flying the plane straight into the ground.




    Offline Charity

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #1 on: June 18, 2022, 02:21:07 PM »
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  • Jimmy Carter hailed as ‘action’ hero for stopping nuclear meltdown at 28
    By
    Hannah Sparks
    December 16, 2021 12:20pm
    Updated


    AP
    More On: jimmy carter
    Who needs action movies when there are real-life superheroes like Jimmy Carter among us?
    A viral Twitter thread is reminding the world that the 39th US President James Earl Carter Jr., now 97, actually rescued Ottawa, Ontario, from nuclear destruction as a 28-year-old way back on Dec. 12, 1952.
    “Do you remember the world’s very first nuclear meltdown? That time the US President, an expert in nuclear physics, heroically lowered himself into the reactor and saved Ottawa, Canada’s capital?” asked Canadian physicist University of Ottawa professor Jeff Lundeen in his now-viral thread, originally posted Tuesday but officially trending two days later.
    “Sounds like schlocky action movie, but it actually happened!”
    Lundeen’s revelatory tweet to his modest 1,078 followers now boasts nearly 50,000 likes, more than 20,000 retweets and hundreds of cheerfully shocked comments. He included data from the Ottawa Historical Society and a snippet of a 2011 report docuмenting Carter’s heroics, and he followed up with several other media sources that recount the historic tale.
    As the story goes, the Plains, Ga., native planned his entire life to join the Navy — and did so when he received his appointment to the Naval Academy in 1942. After graduating with distinction, Carter spent two years completing his service ship duty before signing on to the Submarine Force. Following a series of relocations and promotions, the young lieutenant would request to join Captain Hyman G. Rickover’s nuclear sub program, where they were developing the world’s first atomic subs.

    Quote
    As President he visited Three Mile Island after the accident there. When asked by a reporter if he thought it was too dangerous he said "No, if it was too dangerous they would have sent the Vice President." True story. He has no fear & a great sense of humor.
    — Elizabeth (@Lizzabiza) December 16, 2021
    Rickover then sent Carter to work for the US Atomic Energy Commission, where he served on temporary duty with the Naval Reactors Branch. Meanwhile, a few months later, an accidental power surge at Chalk River Laboratories in Ottawa caused fuel rods within a nuclear research reactor to rupture and melt — risking a full nuclear meltdown.
    It was the first such incident of its kind, and Carter’s team of 23 men was ordered to clean it up.
     

    see also
    In this Feb. 8, 2017, file photo former President Jimmy Carter, right, and his wife Rosalynn hold hands as they arrive for a ribbon cutting ceremony for a solar panel project.
    Jimmy, Rosalynn Carter celebrate 75 years of ‘full partnership’

    In a scene straight out of modern-day blockbusters, the operation would require the brave men to descend into the core by rope and pulley so they could deconstruct the reactor bolt by bolt. The lab had set up a duplicate reactor as a training field for Carter’s team, who would get only one shot at the real thing. Each man would have to descend into the core and complete their high-flying tasks in 90-second spurts, as exposure to toxic radiation within the reactor posed a high risk to their long-term health.
    Their plan went off without a hitch. The core was shut down and then rebuilt. From there, Carter went on to become the engineering officer for the USS Seawolf, one of the first submarines to operate on atomic power. By 1961, he retired from the Navy and Reserves, and, in 1963, ran for his first political office.
    For those who admire the single-term Democratic president, Lundeen’s tweet was just another reminder of Carter’s selfless service — and good jokes.
    One top Twitter response included a quote from the president, who visited Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island power plant in 1979, during their disastrous partial meltdown.
    When asked by media if he thought it too dangerous to visit the radioactive site, he reportedly quipped, “No, if it was too dangerous they would have sent the vice president.”




    Offline SimpleMan

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #2 on: June 18, 2022, 03:38:06 PM »
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  • Jimmy Carter is the Betty White of American politics --- there aren't a whole lot of people who don't like him.

    That said, I shudder to think what the Supreme Court would have looked like, if he had been President instead of Trump.   A Republican Senate might have stonewalled all appointments, and that would have been the better outcome.  The worse would have been three pro-choice Justices.

    Please note that my support for Trump is highly mitigated, due mainly to his ability to appoint Supreme Court Justices, and I know I would be joined by millions in welcoming a Republican candidate who is not Donald Trump.

    Offline epiphany

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #3 on: June 18, 2022, 05:33:56 PM »
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  • "Joe’s Not Fit to Shine Jimmy’s Shoes"

    If you were around during the Carter administration, the statement above really slaps Joe in the face because Carter was an idiot.

    Offline Minnesota

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #4 on: June 18, 2022, 06:14:12 PM »
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  • They're both lame-duck presidents that lose second terms because they're terrible, and the economy is dreck. Comparison is apt.
    Christ is Risen! He is risen indeed


    Offline SimpleMan

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #5 on: June 18, 2022, 07:05:41 PM »
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  • "Joe’s Not Fit to Shine Jimmy’s Shoes"

    If you were around during the Carter administration, the statement above really slaps Joe in the face because Carter was an idiot.

    I wouldn't call him an idiot --- he studied nuclear physics --- but he wasn't presidential material.  He was too nice a guy.

    It's a wonder we didn't get that telephone call from the Kremlin, "surrender or else".

    The 1987 ABC mini-series Amerika probably pretty much depicts how that would have turned out, and I have that on no less an authority than someone who grew up under communism, "SimpleWife".  We watched the entire 14 hours together.


    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #6 on: June 18, 2022, 09:01:53 PM »
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  • https://answersingenesis.org/family/ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity/jimmy-carter-jesus-would-approve-gαy-marriage/

    Jimmy Carter: Jesus Would Approve of gαy Marriage
    by Ken Ham on July 16, 2018
    Featured in Ken Ham Blog



    Can we know Jesus’ thoughts on gαy “marriage”? Recently, former US President Jimmy Carter, a professing Christian and Sunday school teacher at his Baptist church in Georgia, was asked in an interview for his thoughts on gαy “marriage” and if he thought Jesus would approve of it. His answer sadly reflects the thinking of many Christians today—an uplifting of their own opinions over God’s Word.
    President Carter’s answer to the question of whether gαy “marriage” conflicts with his faith was, “That’s no problem with me. I think that everybody should have a right to get married, regardless of their sex.” He went on to claim that Jesus would agree with it, too, though he admitted it’s just his personal belief without any Scripture to back it up. He finished with, “I think Jesus would encourage any love affair if it was honest and sincere and was not damaging to anyone else, and I don’t see that gαy marriage damages anyone else.” Well, it doesn’t matter whether a person is a US president or the queen of England. We need to judge the words of fallible humans against the absolute authority of the Word of God


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    Can we know Jesus’ view on this issue, or are we just left with our own personal beliefs on what Jesus might think? Well, Scripture tells us that it is “breathed out by God” (2 Timothy 3:16), and that Jesus is God(e.g., John 1:1); therefore the Word of God is the Word of Christ. And what does Scripture say? 
    Quote
    So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. (Genesis 1:27
    Quote
    Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh. (Genesis 2:24
    When Jesus as the God-man was asked about marriage (Matthew 19 and Mark 10), he referred to his Word as recorded in Genesis1:27 and 2:24
    Quote
    “Have you not read that he who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, ‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?” (Matthew 19:4–6
    The Apostle Paul, under the inspiration of God, wrote, 
    Quote
    For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error. (Romans 1:26–27
    Quote
    Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sɛҳuąƖly immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity . . . will inherit the kingdom of God. (1 Corinthians 6:9–10
    Quote
    Marriage has very clearly been defined in Scripture as between one man and one woman for life. 
    Marriage has very clearly been defined in Scripture as between one man and one woman for life, and sɛҳuąƖ actions outside of that, thus ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖ behavior, are categorized as sinful. If there was any doubt on Jesus’ views, he defined marriage for us according to Genesis during his earthly ministry, as stated above! 
    So, yes, we can point to Scriptures to find what Jesus’ view on gαy “marriage” would be! Jesus referred to Scripture authoritatively, quoted himself therein, and chastised those who were testing him for not getting their answer from Scripture! President Carter cannot point to any Scriptures to support his view because there aren’t any—but there are verses that say the exact opposite. Instead of allowing their opinion to rule over God’s Word, President Carter and others who claim to follow Christ need to allow God’s Word to be the authority. 
    Really, the debate raging in many churchesabout gαy “marriage” is no different from the creation/evolution issue. It’s an issue of authority. Who will be your authority? Will you allow God and his perfect Word to be your authority, or will you lift your own opinions (or the opinions of our culture) over God’s Word, making yourself the authority? Ultimately the battle isn’t about marriage, abortion, evolution, racism, or the age of the earth—it’s about authority. Those in the church who are embracing gαy “marriage” (as well as evolution and millions of years) only do so because Scripture sadly is not their final authority. 
    We cannot be blown here and there by the ever-changing ideas of man (Ephesians 4:14). We need to have our feet planted firmly in God’s Word while we graciously and compassionately reach out to a lost world with the gospel message that brings everlasting hope.
    May God bless you and keep you

    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #7 on: June 18, 2022, 09:08:44 PM »
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  • JIMMY CARTER: JESUS WOULD APPROVE SAME-SEX ‘MARRIAGE’
    NEWS:
       
    by Church Militant  •  ChurchMilitant.com  •  July 8, 2015    65 Comments
    God is Love!

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    Former President Jimmy Carter, a professing Christian, sincerely believes that if Jesus were alive today he'd approve same-sex "marriage." He didn't have any Scripture or Tradition on his side to back it up, but believes intuitively the Son of God would support it.

    Speaking with leftist Marc Lamont Hill on HuffPost Live, Carter said he believed Jesus would support same-sex "marriage" so long as the relationships were "honest and sincere." 

    Quote
    HILL: Would Jesus approve gαy marriage?
    CARTER: I believe he would. I believe Jesus would. I don't have any verse in Scripture …
    HILL: No no no, just intuitively, yeah.
    CARTER: I believe that Jesus would approve gαy "marriage," but I'm not — that's just my own personal belief. I think Jesus would encourage any sort of love affair if it was honest and sincere, and was not damaging to anyone else. And I don't see that gαy marriage damages anyone else.
    In the same interview, the former president did at least state his opposition to abortion because he did not believe Jesus would approve. Like any true protestant, it all comes down to personal beliefs and personal interpretation.
    May God bless you and keep you


    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: Biden and Carter
    « Reply #8 on: June 18, 2022, 09:13:19 PM »
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  • Scary that he was teaching Sunday School because he teaching false…
    May God bless you and keep you