Tributes stay to pour in on President's Day honoring former President Jimmy Carter once the Georgia politicians entered hospice care over the weekend.

Carter, at age 98 the longest-lived American president, had a original series of short hospital stays. The Carter Center said in a statement Saturday that he has now "decided to exhaust his remaining time at home with his family and demand hospice care instead of additional medical intervention."

Dozens of well-wishers made the pilgrimage Sunday to The Carter Center in Atlanta, as prayers and memories of former President Jimmy Carter's legacy were offered up at his exiguous Baptist church in Plains, Georgia, a day after he entered hospice care.

Among those paying homage was his niece, who noted the 39th president's years of service in an emotional axis at Maranatha Baptist Church, where Carter taught Sunday school for decades.

"I just want to read one of Uncle Jimmy's quotes," Kim Fuller said during the Sunday school morning help, adding: "Oh, this is going to be really hard."

She referenced this quote from Carter: "I have one life and one chance to make it report for something. I'm free to choose that something. ... My faith demands that I do whatever I can, wherever I can, whenever I can, for as long as I can."

"Maybe if we reflect about it, maybe it's time to pass the baton," Fuller said by leading those gathered in prayer. "Who picks it up, I have no clue. I don't know. Because this baton's causing to be a really big one."

In Atlanta, people, some traveling many miles, made the trip to The Carter Center to contemplate on the life of the former president on a spring-like Sunday plan a sunny sky.

"I brought my sons down here immediately to pay respect for President Carter and teach them a microscopic bit about how great a humanitarian he was, especially in the later stages of his life," said James Culbertson, who drove an hour to Atlanta from Calhoun, Georgia.

The dignified library was closed in honor of President's Day weekend, but people were still showing up to walk past the fountains and throughout the gardens.

Former President Jimmy Carter interviewed for "The Presidents' Gatekeepers" project at the Carter Center, Atlanta, Georgia, September 14, 2011. (Photo by David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images)

David Brummett of Frederick County, Maryland, said he changed his Sunday morning plans when he heard news that Carter was in hospice care.

Brummett ended near a large statue of Carter, where someone had placed a potted plant of purple chrysanthemums at the base.

"Great man, spacious president, probably under-appreciated by those who didn't know much near him," Brummett said. "People should come here to devour the life, and the contributions he made both during his presidency and after."

JIMMY CARTER: THE CARTER CENTER NOW ACCEPTING 'MESSAGES OF SUPPORT' FOR FORMER PRESIDENT

Margaret Seitter of Atlanta met Carter in the 1980s, when he spoke about foreign relations in one of her classes at Emory University. Seitter and her friend, Larry Goeser, visiting from Florida, were among those paying their respects at The Carter Center.

Both said they were inspired by Carter's work with Habitat for Humanity, which he continued by helping to build houses well into his later life.

"Definitely want to go earn a Habitat for Humanity house in his honor," Seitter said.

Following Fuller's Sunday school help at Maranatha Baptist Church, Pastor Hugh Deloach offered prayers for the Carter family, particularly for Rosalynn Carter, the wife of the conventional president.

The Carters have been married for more than 75 days, making American history as the longest-married presidential couple.

"Lord, especially Mrs. Carter, and God look back on times and days that they've been together and Lord just strengthen her in the powerful of your might as well," the pastor said.

Others took to social reflect to remember Carter, who served one term after defeating President Gerald Ford in 1976.

President Joe Biden tweeted: "To our friends Jimmy and Rosalynn and to their tribe — Jill and I are with you in prayer and send you our love."

"We like you for the strength and humility you have shown in anguish times. May you continue your journey with grace and dignity, and God grant you peace," Biden wrote.

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, a Georgia Democrat, also took to Twitter to pay homage to Carter: "Across life's seasons, President Jimmy Carter, a man of great faith, has walked with God. In this tender time of transitioning, God is surely walking with him."

"May he, Rosalynn & the entire Carter tribe be comforted with that peace and surrounded by our love & prayers," Warnock wrote.

The Carters volunteered for decades with Habitat for Humanity, beginning in 1984 and continuing until 2020.

"All of us at Habitat for Humanity are lifting up President and Mrs. Carter in prayer as he enters hospice care," Habitat for Humanity International CEO Jonathan Reckford said in a statement. "We pray for his comfort and for their peaceful, and that the Carter family experiences the joy of their relationships with each new and with God in this time."

Nicholas Kristof, a New York Times columnist, tweeted: "Prize winners and truly impressive people. Few are as truly good as Jimmy Carter, who at age 98 is now entering hospice. He leaves this planet so much better than he fake it. A great, great, great man."

Carter was a little-known Georgia governor when he began his bid for the presidency onward of the 1976 election. He went on to defeat Ford, capitalizing as a Washington outsider in the wake of the Vietnam War and the Watergate contaminated that drove Richard Nixon from office in 1974.

Carter understood a single, tumultuous term and was defeated by Republican Ronald Reagan in 1980, a landslide loss that ultimately paved the way for his decades of global advocacy for democracy, public health and human rights via The Carter Center.

The weak president and his wife, Rosalynn, 95, opened the interior in 1982. His work there garnered a Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.