From Selma to This MomentBeloved, this weekend is when many of us will honor the work and memory of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Sadly, society often reduces his legacy to the “I Have a Dream” speech, with some hijacking it to benefit unrelated causes. One of Dr. King’s most significant sermons came on March 25, 1965, in Montgomery, Alabama, after the brutal march from Selma to Montgomery. The entire world was watching after the killing of protestors and the violent resistance to Black voter registration and the freedom struggle. This speech told the history of racism in America, framing the march as part of a long struggle for freedom, from enslavement to Reconstruction to Jim Crow. It’s important to remember whence we came. It’s important to remember how God has acted on our behalf in the past. Dr. King knew this, walking listeners through each moment, leading them to celebration. He didn’t skip over the hard times. He didn’t sugarcoat anything. I am mentioning this because we are at a tipping point, with violence being seen on levels many of us have never dared to experience, coming from places our minds couldn’t have imagined. Yet this moment echoes the past as we witness assaults on truth, on bodies, on communities, and on the very right to live and to vote with dignity. Now is a time when we must go inward to deeply encounter God as we decide what to do outwardly. Dr. King had a prayer life that fortified his soul when his courage wavered. He cultivated spiritual disciplines, sitting at the feet of Howard Thurman. To confront the evil of Jim Crow, he had to draw deeply from God’s well. That is what we must do today. We must cultivate spiritual practices that strengthen our resolve to confront the evil that is, so that our inner life with God fuels our public witness in the streets, at the polls, and in the halls of power. We must pray, meditate, be still, be silent, sing, dance, weep and laugh. We must be fully human, experiencing all that life presents in healthy ways. This MLK Weekend, please take a moment to read Dr. King’s sermon at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. Take it in. Then, after you have read it, listen to the sermon's culmination. |
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