Let Us Turn Our Thoughts Today
There are so many ways we could honor Martin Luther King Jr., today. I was born after King tragically left this world, so all I really know of him comes from the words he left behind. So I prefer to celebrate his life by reading his speeches, often for the first time. I find that they are still as challenging to my generation as I imagine they were to the generations before mine.
Yesterday, I was reading through a few of King’s earlier speeches and I came across one I had never read before. In 1956, King gave a sermon at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, in which he delivered something he called “Paul’s Letter to American Christians.” While I’m generally wary of a rhetorical device that puts words in the mouths of Jesus or the Apostles, I still think this is a challenging and fascinating piece.
Here are a few excerpts, but if you have some time, I encourage you to read the entire sermon.
I understand that you have an economic system in America known as Capitalism. Through this economic system you have been able to do wonders. You have become the richest nation in the world, and you have built up the greatest system of production that history has ever known. All of this is marvelous. But Americans, there is the danger that you will misuse your Capitalism. I still contend that money can be the root of all evil. It can cause one to live a life of gross materialism. I am afraid that many among you are more concerned about making a living than making a life. You are prone to judge the success of your profession by the index of your salary and the size of the wheel base on your automobile, rather than the quality of your service to humanity.
The misuse of Capitalism can also lead to tragic exploitation. This has so often happened in your nation. They tell me that one tenth of one percent of the population controls more than forty percent of the wealth. Oh America, how often have you taken necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes. If you are to be a truly Christian nation you must solve this problem. You cannot solve the problem by turning to communism, for communism is based on an ethical relativism and a metaphysical materialism that no Christian can accept. You can work within the framework of democracy to bring about a better distribution of wealth. You can use your powerful economic resources to wipe poverty from the face of the earth. God never intended for one group of people to live in superfluous inordinate wealth, while others live in abject deadening poverty. God intends for all of his children to have the basic necessities of life, and he has left in this universe “enough and to spare” for that purpose. So I call upon you to bridge the gulf between abject poverty and superfluous wealth.
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Let me rush on to say something about the church. Americans, I must remind you, as I have said to so many others, that the church is the Body of Christ. So when the church is true to its nature it knows neither division nor disunity. But I am disturbed about what you are doing to the Body of Christ. They tell me that in America you have within Protestantism more than two hundred and fifty six denominations. The tragedy is not so much that you have such a multiplicity of denominations, but that most of them are warring against each other with a claim to absolute truth. This narrow sectarianism is destroying the unity of the Body of Christ. You must come to see that God is neither a Baptist nor a Methodist; He is neither a Presbyterian nor a Episcopalian. God is bigger than all of our denominations. If you are to be true witnesses for Christ, you must come to see that America.
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There is another thing that disturbs me to no end about the American church. You have a white church and you have a Negro church. You have allowed segregation to creep into the doors of the church. How can such a division exist in the true Body of Christ? You must face the tragic fact that when you stand at 11:00 on Sunday morning to sing “All Hail the Power of Jesus Name” and “Dear Lord and Father of all Mankind,” you stand in the most segregated hour of Christian America. They tell me that there is more integration in the entertaining world and other secular agencies than there is in the Christian church. How appalling that is.
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May I say just a word to those of you who are struggling against this evil. Always be sure that you struggle with Christian methods and Christian weapons. Never succumb to the temptation of becoming bitter. As you press on for justice, be sure to move with dignity and discipline, using only the weapon of love. Let no man pull you so low as to hate him. Always avoid violence. If you succumb to the temptation of using violence in your struggle, unborn generations will be the recipients of a long and desolate night of bitterness, and your chief legacy to the future will be an endless reign of meaningless chaos.
In your struggle for justice, let your oppressor know that you are not attempting to defeat or humiliate him, or even to pay him back for injustices that he has heaped upon you. Let him know that you are merely seeking justice for him as well as yourself. Let him know that the festering sore of segregation debilitates the white man as well as the Negro. With this attitude you will be able to keep your struggle on high Christian standards.
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I still believe that love is the most durable power in the world. Over the centuries men have sought to discover the highest good. This has been the chief quest of ethical philosophy. This was one of the big questions of Greek philosophy. The Epicurean and the Stoics sought to answer it; Plato and Aristotle sought to answer it. What is the summon bonum of life? I think I have an answer America. I think I have discovered the highest good. It is love. This principle stands at the center of the cosmos. As John says, “God is love.” He who loves is a participant in the being of God. He who hates does not know God.
So American Christians, you may master the intricacies of the English language. You may possess all of the eloquence of articulate speech. But even if you “speak with the tongues of man and angels, and have not love, you are become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.”
You may have the gift of prophecy and understanding all mysteries. You may be able to break into the storehouse of nature and bring out many insights that men never dreamed were there. You may ascend to the heights of academic achievement, so that you will have all knowledge. You may boast of your great institutions of learning and the boundless extent of your degrees. But all of this amounts to absolutely nothing devoid of love.
But even more Americans, you may give your goods to feed the poor. You may give great gifts to charity. You may tower high in philanthropy. But if you have not love it means nothing. You may even give your body to be burned, and die the death of a martyr. Your spilt blood may be a symbol of honor for generations yet unborn, and thousands may praise you as history’s supreme hero. But even so, if you have not love your blood was spilt in vain. You must come to see that it is possible for a man to be self-centered in his self-denial and self-righteous in his self-sacrifice. He may be generous in order to feed his ego and pious in order to feed his pride. Man has the tragic capacity to relegate a heightening virtue to a tragic vice. Without love benevolence becomes egotism, and martyrdom becomes spiritual pride.
So the greatest of all virtues is love. It is here that we find the true meaning of the Christian faith. This is at bottom the meaning of the cross. The great event on Calvary signifies more than a meaningless drama that took place on the stage of history. It is a telescope through which we look out into the long vista of eternity and see the love of God breaking forth into time. It is an eternal reminder to a power drunk generation that love is most durable power in the world, and that it is at bottom the heartbeat of the moral cosmos. Only through achieving this love can you expect to matriculate into the university of eternal life.
6 Ripples from “Let Us Turn Our Thoughts Today”
Brandon says:
January 16, 2006 at 9:01 pm
Wow.
Scott says:
January 19, 2006 at 4:01 pm
I can’t get behind “fixing” capitalism with the forced and/or guilt-driven redistribution of wealth (a.k.a. theft), which is neither compassionate nor charitable. The basic principals of Capitalism have nothing to do with greed or the acclimation of wealth, but rather the freedom to do with one’s money as they see fit. I think that’s a more Godly system than Socialism. Not because it allows more freedom, but because it allows the choice on whether or not to give; just as he would allow us the choice on whether or not to love.
And Paul never said that money was the root of all evil. He said that the love of money is the root of all evil.
Sorry for breaking the string of one word ripples.
zalm says:
January 19, 2006 at 8:02 pm
No need to apologize. I haven’t really written something worthy of more than a word or two response in quite some time.
I mostly understand your point, Scott, but I’m sure it will come as no big shocker that I tend to look at things a bit differently. It’s been kind of a crazy week, and I haven’t had the time or the focus to write much of substance lately, but I’ll try to respond more fully to this in time.
First, though, I agree with you that saying that money can be the root of all evil was a bit clumsy on King’s part. But as I think about how to respond to the rest of the points you’ve made, I’d like to ask you: why do we make that distinction between money as the root of all evil and the love of money as the root of all evil?
Scott says:
January 20, 2006 at 10:02 pm
Well I certainly wouldn’t spend time lurking on blogs like yours if I weren’t up for hearing how people with differential view from mine think. Of course your exquisite taste in music and you superlative talent for writing is a nice candy coating that makes the medicine go down easy. Right, so on to your question.
I think God made the distinction because money itself is neutral. Money can be used for good, and it can be used for evil. I mean sex certainly isn’t evil, but there are a hundred different ways we can make it pretty terrible. I think it’s the same idea here. It’s fine to make a living. It’s fine to gain possessions. But at some point, and I’m not exactly sure where that is and it’s probably not the same for every person, but at some point we cross a line and it turns gluttonous.
Furthermore, I think it’s an important distinction because money itself were evil it would be money’s fault that evil were in the world. But as it is, it’s fully my fault evil is in the world. Me and my big fat love for (insert random desire of the flesh here).
Meh. Sorry again for the lack of thought in this brief response to your question. Frankly, it’s been one of those Chicago nights. You know the kind I’m sure, the old 6 inches of snow in one hour and the plows can’t keep up so I’m outside shoveling peoples cars out who are stuck in the middle of the road and the guy behind him is honking like it makes a difference and I’m wet and kinda cold actually and can’t see too far because my glasses are covered in snow and the wind is blowing snow pretty hard and it’s tough to get much of a footing to actually move the snow out of the way of the fifth car that got stuck in the last 13 minutes kind of Chicago nights. So really I’m kinda tired, actually, btw.
I really appreciate your gracious response to my comment though.
zalm says:
January 21, 2006 at 1:01 am
Ugh. I do remember those.
Or the old leave work only to find an inch or so of ice on your car so you start the engine to let it warm up and to heat the windshield to make it easier to hack away at the ice while standing in a half-foot of slush on a busy road as cars hurtle by, spraying you with unimaginable frozen nastiness until you’ve mostly scraped away enough ice to make the car drivable only to discover that you locked the keys in the car with the car running. I remember that, too.
Good times.
And you’re a good man for doing the shoveling.
Thanks for responding, even though you were tired. I think you did a nice job of explaining the distinction, and I agree with you across the board.
Although I was a little startled to discover that you were the root of all evil. I think you’re being a little hard on yourself, but still, it’s nice to have someone to blame.
Seriously, though, I’m working on a response to the rest, but it’s getting a little, well, long. So it may not happen until later in the weekend.
zalm says:
January 23, 2006 at 3:01 am
Well, I done gone and turned my response into a post of its own.
Sorry if I ended up giving your initial thoughts more attention than you expected when you wrote them. I guess it took you pushing a few of my buttons to get me out of the writing slump I was in. Not that the post is great writing. Far from it. But at least it’s not just another link to someone else’s writing.
I realize that I punted on the topic of the “godliness” of capitalism. But as I look back at your post one more time, I should probably add that I really did like your comparison of choice in whether and how we give to choice in whether and how we love. I guess I just see the range of choices we have to be different than you do. And I hope I didn’t express that difference too harshly.
Grace and peace.
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