December 18, 2006
Rosalynn
Carter ordained as deacon by Plains church
By John Pierce
PLAINS, Ga. — Former First
Lady Rosalynn Smith Carter was ordained as a deacon Dec. 10 by Maranatha Baptist
Church in Plains, Ga. Though raised a Methodist, Mrs. Carter, 79, has been
active in Baptist congregations since her marriage to former President Jimmy
Carter, a longtime Baptist deacon, more than 60 years ago.
“She is very shy and doesn’t
like the spotlight,” said Maranatha pastor Jeff Summers. “But people have seen
her leadership and compassion.”
Mrs. Carter is often involved in behind-the-scenes ministries such as working
with children and delivering meals to the homebound, he added.
The Carters are well known for
their involvement in the small, rural congregation that welcomes thousands of
worldwide visitors each year to attend the Sunday school class taught by
President Carter. Maranatha is among a growing number of Baptist congregations
to include women as deacons — a role noted for its service to church and
community.
Mrs. Carter is the second
woman elected as a deacon at Maranatha. The first was Sue Askerzada in 2003. In
December 2005, Jessica Summers, a graduate of Mercer University’s McAfee School
of Theology who assists her husband with the church’s ministries, became the
first woman ordained to ministry by the church.
The issue of women in church
leadership continues to be debated among many Baptists. Most churches aligned
with the Southern Baptist Convention do not ordain women as ministers or
deacons.
The SBC revised its Baptist
Faith and Message doctrinal statement in 2000 to include stated opposition
to women as pastors. Some related agencies and associations have expanded that
restriction to apply to female chaplains and, in one case, to a church’s
associate pastor.
The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and American Baptist Churches, USA, have more
affirming positions on women in church leadership. However, Baptist polity,
particularly the concept of local church autonomy, gives each congregation the
freedom to call out and ordain its ministers and deacons without interference
from any other church body.
(John Pierce is executive editor of Baptists Today, an autonomous,
national news journal based in Macon, Ga.)