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This Bright Light of Ours offers a tightly focused insider’s view
of the community-based activism that was the heart of the civil
rights movement. A celebration of grassroots heroes, this book
details through first-person accounts the contributions of ordinary
people who formed the nonviolent army that won the fight for
voting rights. Combining memoir and oral history, Maria Gitin fills
a vital gap in civil rights history by focusing on the neglected
Freedom Summer of 1965 when hundreds of college students joined
forces with local black leaders to register thousands of new black
voters in the rural South. Gitin was an idealistic
nineteen-year-old college freshman from a small farming community
north of San Francisco who felt called to action when she saw
televised images of brutal attacks on peaceful demonstrators during
Bloody Sunday, in Selma, Alabama. Atypical among white civil rights
volunteers, Gitin came from a rural low-income family. She raised
funds to attend an intensive orientation in Atlanta featuring
now-legendary civil rights leaders. Her detailed letters include
the first narrative account of this orientation and the only
in-depth field report from a teenage Summer Community Organization
and Political Education (SCOPE) project participant. Gitin details
the dangerous life of civil rights activists in Wilcox County,
Alabama, where she was assigned. She tells of threats and arrests,
but also of forming deep friendships and of falling in love. More
than four decades later, Gitin returned to Wilcox County to revisit
the people and places that she could never forget and to discover
their views of the “outside agitators†who had come to their
community. Through conversational interviews with more than fifty
Wilcox County residents and former civil rights workers, she has
created a channel for the voices of these unheralded heroes who
formed the backbone of the civil rights movement.
This is a collection of prayers by Martin Luther King, Jr. Arranged
thematically in six parts - with prayers for spiritual guidance,
special occassions, times of adversity, times of trial, uncertain
times, and social justice - Baptist minister and King scholar Lewis
Baldwin introduces the book and each section with short essays.
The burgeoning terrain of Martin Luther King Jr. studies is leading
to a new appreciation of his thought and its meaningfulness for the
emergence and shaping of the twenty-first-century world. This
volume brings together an impressive array of scholars from various
backgrounds and disciplines to explore the global significance of
King-then, now, and in the future. Employing King's metaphor of
"the great world house," the major focus is on King's appraisal of
the global-human struggle in the 1950s and 1960s, his relevance for
today's world, and how future generations might constructively
apply or appropriate his key ideas and values in addressing racism,
poverty and economic injustice, militarism, sexism, homophobia, the
environmental crisis, globalization, and other challenges
confronting humanity today. The contributors treat King in context
and beyond context, taking seriously the historical King while also
exploring how his name, activities, contributions, and legacy are
still associated with a globalized rights culture.
The burgeoning terrain of Martin Luther King Jr. studies is leading
to a new appreciation of his thought and its meaningfulness for the
emergence and shaping of the twenty-first-century world. This
volume brings together an impressive array of scholars from various
backgrounds and disciplines to explore the global significance of
King-then, now, and in the future. Employing King's metaphor of
"the great world house," the major focus is on King's appraisal of
the global-human struggle in the 1950s and 1960s, his relevance for
today's world, and how future generations might constructively
apply or appropriate his key ideas and values in addressing racism,
poverty and economic injustice, militarism, sexism, homophobia, the
environmental crisis, globalization, and other challenges
confronting humanity today. The contributors treat King in context
and beyond context, taking seriously the historical King while also
exploring how his name, activities, contributions, and legacy are
still associated with a globalized rights culture.
About the Contributor(s): Lewis V. Baldwin is Professor of
Religious Studies at Vanderbilt University. He is the author or
editor of eleven books on Martin Luther King, Jr., including The
Voice of Conscience: The Church in the Mind of Martin Luther King,
Jr. (2010). Rufus Burrow Jr. is Indiana Professor of Christian
Thought at Christian Theological Seminary. He has authored or
coauthored three books on King, including Martin Luther King, Jr.
for Armchair Theologians (2009).
About the Contributor(s): Thomas A. Mulhall is an independent
researcher trained in International Peace Studies at the Irish
School of Ecumenics, Trinity College Dublin. He has done extensive
research on the life and thought of Martin Luther King Jr. He
contributed to the book ""In an Inescapable Network of Mutuality""
Martin Luther King Jr., and the Globalization of an Ethical Ideal,
edited by Lewis V. Baldwin and Paul R. Dekar (Cascade, 2013).
The scholarship on Martin Luther King Jr. has too often cast him in
the image of the Southern black preacher and the American Gandhi,
while ignoring or trivializing his global connections and
significance. This groundbreaking work, written by scholars,
religious leaders, and activists of different backgrounds,
addresses this glaring pattern of neglect in King studies. King is
treated here as both a global figure and a forerunner of much of
what is currently associated with contemporary globalization theory
and praxis. The contributors to this volume agree that King must be
understood not only as a thinker, visionary, and social change
agent in his own historical context, but also in terms of his
meaning for the different generations who still appeal to him as an
authority, inspiration, and model of exemplary service to humanity.
The task of engaging King both in context and beyond context is
fulfilled in remarkable ways in this volume, without doing
essential violence to this phenomenal figure. "I have personally
been to Martin Luther King Jr.'s memorial in Memphis, Tennessee,
and have felt inspired by his example of sacrifice and conviction.
I welcome this very insightful new book that introduces readers to
him, while also highlighting his strategic nonviolence as a pathway
to much-needed global peace. There is much here that is consistent
with Gandhi's principle of ahimsa. This is a comprehensive
exploration of Dr. King's meaning for the world." --His Holiness
the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, Spiritual Leader of the Tibetan People
"We have taken for granted Martin Luther King Jr. as a 'world
citizen, ' but have spoken about this in vague, generalized terms.
This magnificent volume puts an end to such vagueness. Baldwin and
Dekar have, through the thoughtful reflections and powerful
testimonies of scholars from across the world, brought into sharp
relief a King concerned about the world, helping to shape it in
ways we never truly understood." --Allan Aubrey Boesak,
Distinguished Desmond Tutu Visiting Professor of Ecumenical
Theology and Prophetic Preaching, Christian Theological Seminary
"Anybody concerned about the economic, social, and gender
inequalities anywhere in the world will benefit from the vision and
the transformational impact of Martin Luther King Jr.'s exemplary
leadership, which is carefully analyzed in this book by a diverse
group of scholars, religious leaders, and activists." --Peter J.
Paris, Professor Emeritus, Princeton Theological Seminary "Here is
Martin Luther King Jr. as a global visionary deeply rooted in the
promise and limitations of his time and place. These international,
transreligious, and multidisciplinary writers expose Dr. King's
influence at work in places and around issues that he himself knew
little or nothing about. They sort out King's genius of mind and
spirit to engage the evils and the promise of globalization."
--George Williamson, Civil Rights Activist and Founding President,
Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America Lewis V. Baldwin is
Professor of Religious Studies at Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tennessee. He is the author of To Make the Wounded Whole: The
Cultural Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1992) and The Voice of
Conscience: The Church in the Mind of Martin Luther King, Jr.
(2010). Paul R. Dekar is Professor Emeritus of Evangelism and
Missions, Memphis Theological Seminary, Memphis, Tennessee, and is
the author of Creating the Beloved Community: A Journey with the
Fellowship of Reconciliation (2005) and Thomas Merton:
Twentieth-Century Wisdom for Twenty-First-Century Living (2011).
Based on years of original research, Never to Leave Us Alone is the
first book-length treatment of the prayer life of the famed
religious and civil rights leader. Drawing on personal prayers that
King recited as a seminarian and graduate student, preacher,
pastor, and then civil rights leader, award-winning historian Lewis
Baldwin explains how King turned to both private prayer and
meditation for his own spiritual fulfillment, and to public prayer
as part of his sermonic discourse, as an aspect of his pastoral
care, and as a way of moving, inspiring, and reaffirming people in
the context of a crusade for equal rights, social justice, and
peace. In the end, Baldwin argues, King's prayer life and
reflections offer important keys not only to King the man but also
to our own cultivation of core human values. The book includes
photographs.
This book is a conscious effort to explore the dimensions of King's
cultural legacy, and aspires to demonstrate how King's vision
gradually transcended southern particularism to assume national and
international implications.
A major contribution to African-American religious scholarship and
clearly the most significant analysis of King's cultural roots yet
available in print.
MLK and the Practice of SpiritualityThe scholarship on Martin
Luther King Jr. is seriously lacking in terms of richly nuanced and
revelatory treatments of his spirituality and spiritual life. This
book addresses this neglect by focusing on King's life as a
paradigm of a deep, vital, engaging, balanced, and contagious
spirituality. It shows that the essence of the person King was lies
in the quality of his own spiritual journey and how that translated
into not only a personal devotional life of prayer, meditation, and
fasting but also a public ministry that involved the uplift and
empowerment of humanity. Much attention is devoted to King's
spiritual leadership, to his sense of the civil rights movement as
"a spiritual movement," and to his efforts to rescue humanity from
what he termed a perpetual "death of the spirit." Readers encounter
a figure who took seriously the personal, interpersonal, and
sociopolitical aspects of the Christian faith, thereby figuring
prominently in recasting the very definition of spirituality in his
time. King's "holistic spirituality" is presented here with a
clarity and power fresh for our own generation.
The Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. explores the development of
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s understanding of the relationship between
religion, morality, law, and politics. This fascinating work is
part of a broader effort by scholars in various fields to examine
unexplored areas in the life, thought, and activism of Martin
Luther King, Jr., and it represents the first book length treatment
of how King united moral-religious convictions and political
activity. This timely study is also the first in-depth analysis of
King's views on the roles that religion and morality ought to play,
not only in public debate concerning political choices and law, but
also in efforts to create political and legal structures that are
just and to perpetuate participatory democracy. Beginning with the
social, political, and economic implications of King's vision of
the "New South" and his prophetic critique of southern civil
religion, this pathbreaking study casts King in the role of
"political liberal," "consummate politician," and "political
theologian." The Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. focuses
considerable attention on King's refusal to separate religious
faith and moral considerations from politics, legal matters, and
social reformism. In so doing, it demonstrates King's remarkable
ability to transcend church-state boundaries and to formulate an
alliance that permeated every facet of American life. Featuring
four chapters by Lewis V. Baldwin-a leading authority on King-as
well as a chapter by Rufus Burrow, Jr., and one co-authored by
Barbara Holmes and the Honorable Susan Holmes Winfield, this volume
reveals how King moved beyond southern particularism to create a
more democratic America and a more inclusive world. Among the
topics covered are King's relationship to various American
political traditions and figures, King's theories of civil
disobedience and his understanding of the Constitution, and the
influence of moral law and personal idealism on King's teachings.
As debates over faith-based initiatives rage in America's modern
political arena, Baldwin's lucid analysis of King's writings on the
boundaries that exist between church and state, politics and
religion, offers a valuable resource to those engaged in public and
private discussions of this important topic.
The Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. explores the development of
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s understanding of the relationship between
religion, morality, law, and politics. This fascinating work is
part of a broader effort by scholars in various fields to examine
unexplored areas in the life, thought, and activism of Martin
Luther King, Jr., and it represents the first book length treatment
of how King united moral-religious convictions and political
activity. This timely study is also the first in-depth analysis of
King's views on the roles that religion and morality ought to play,
not only in public debate concerning political choices and law, but
also in efforts to create political and legal structures that are
just and to perpetuate participatory democracy.
Beginning with the social, political, and economic implications
of King's vision of the "New South" and his prophetic critique of
southern civil religion, this pathbreaking study casts King in the
role of "political liberal, " "consummate politician, " and
"political theologian." The Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr.
focuses considerable attention on King's refusal to separate
religious faith and moral considerations from politics, legal
matters, and social reformism. In so doing, it demonstrates King's
remarkable ability to transcend church-state boundaries and to
formulate an alliance that permeated every facet of American
life.
Featuring four chapters by Lewis V. Baldwin -- a leading
authority on King -- as well as a chapter by Rufus Burrow, Jr., and
one co-authored by Barbara Holmes and the Honorable Susan Holmes
Winfield, this volume reveals how King moved beyond southern
particularism to create a more democratic Americaand a more
inclusive world. Among the topics covered are King's relationship
to various American political traditions and figures, King's
theories of civil disobedience and his understanding of the
Constitution, and the influence of moral law and personal idealism
on King's teachings.
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