Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr - Dr. King and the Dream :: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Essays
Dr. King and the Dream   The world saw him as a marching protest leader, an activist, spokesman, civil rights leader, and the conscience of a solid ground. With keen and thin insight, he so eloquently proclaimed that a profound kindly and human predicament faced our nation and the world. However, some of his outstandingest messages to us were not preached from a mountaintop in the beginning millions, but from a little snout back home at the Ebeneezer Baptist Church. Dr. King once said, before I was a civil rights leader, I was a preacher of the gospel. This was my first traffic and it still remains my greatest commitment.   Just one month before an assassins bullet found him, Dr. King went back home. For so long, he had lectured and preached to others astir(predicate) the magnificent dreams of unity, brotherhood, hope, and justice. He had taken his messages to the uttermost parts of the world and met with kings, queens, popes, rabbis, and archbishops. alone now he wa s home for a time of reflection, reunion, and rest.   This sermon was different. In this sermon, Unfulfilled Dreams, he preached from the eighth chapter of first Kings and talked almost its cosmic importee because it says so much in so few words about life. It tells the story of King David, who had a dream to build a great temple to honor the Lord, God of Israel. Although the temple was never completed, God pleased David because the dream was in his heart.   In this sermon, Dr. King talked about the shattered dreams of Mahatma Gandhi who conceive of about the independence and unity of India as one great nation moving toward a higher destiny. Gandhi labored for years through unprovoking revolution hoping to realize his dream. But the dream was shattered because the nation that Gandhi cute so badly to unite was riddled with conflict between the Hindus and Moslems. chairman Woodrow Wilson dreamed of a League of Nations but died before the promise was delivered. The Apost le capital of Minnesota dreamed of carrying the gospel to Spain but instead ended up in a prison cell in Rome.   While reading this sermon, I remembered my own dream, that my children would never see the inhumanity I saw, would never flavor the injustice I felt, nor would they taste the bitterness of bigotry that consumed this nation when I was a child.
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