This coming week we begin our 8 month class,
meeting once a month, titled “What is God Calling You to in Your Life Right
Now?” (What can we learn from participants in the Civil Rights Movement?)
In this first session
the question we will discuss is this: “What
did you learn from your family, church, and community as you were growing up
about what God is like?”
Of
course, our first influences in our spiritual journeys, for better or for
worse, come from our parents. This was
true of Martin Luther King, Jr. as well.
Daddy
King, as Martin often called him, graduated from Morehouse College. He was a
“very strong, self-confident man.” He
was a sharecroper’s son from Stockbridge, Va., 18 miles south of Atlanta. He decided early on that “I ain’t going to
plough a mule anymore.” So off to
college he went. He was a man of “real
integrity, deeply committed to moral and ethical principles.” He was president of the NAACP of Atlanta, and
refused to ride the city buses after witnessing a brutal attack on a group of
black riders. As pastor of Ebenezer he
had great influence in the ‘Negro community.’”
For the first 25 years of his life MLK felt that if he had a problem he
could always call Daddy and things would get solved. [Ibid., 4-5]
In
summary, Martin says, “It is quite easy for me to think of a God of love mainly
because I grew up in a family where love was central and where lovely
relationships were ever present. It is quite easy for me to think of the
universe as basically friendly mainly because of my uplifting hereditary and
environmental circumstances. It is quite
easy for me to lean more toward optimism than pessimism about human nature
mainly because of my childhood experiences.” [Ibid.,2-3]
In
my blog of August 2, 2012 I described
the incident whereby, at the age of 6, Martin lost one of his best playmates
because the white boy’s father had told his son that he was no longer allowed
to play with Martin.
Martin
relates what happened next. He asked his
parents about this over dinner that night and this was the first time he was
made aware of the existence of a “race problem.” His parents then told him of some of the
insults they had borne over the years.
Martin: “I was greatly shocked, and from that moment on I was determined
to hate every white person. As I grew
older this feeling continued to grow. My
parents would always tell me I should not hate the white man, but that it was
my duty as a Christian to love him. The
question arose in my mind: How could I
love a race of people who hated me and who had been responsible for breaking me
up with one of my best childhood friends?
This was a great question in my mind for a number of years.” [Ibid, 6]
As
you look back on your growing up, what did you learn about God and the
world? Do you still see it exactly that
way? In what ways has your world view
changed?
No comments:
Post a Comment