Strength to love

by Jr. Martin Luther King

Paper Book, 1963

Status

Available

Call number

252/.0613

Collection

Publication

Philadelphia : Fortress Press, 1981, c1963.

Description

A collection of sermons by this martyred Black American leader which explains his convictions in terms of the conditions and problems of contemporary society.

User reviews

LibraryThing member tymfos
Many people think of Dr. King primarily as a civil rights leader; but first of all, he was a Baptist minister, thoroughly trained in systematic theology and philosophy. This collection of sermons (capped with an article about the development of his "pilgrimage to nonviolence") makes it abundantly
Show More
clear that Dr. King's work for civil rights and his principles of nonviolent resistance were rooted in his deep Christian faith and careful theological reflection.

While the book clearly reflects the circumstances of its time and place of origin -- the U.S. Civil Rights movement, the Vietnam war, and nuclear proliferation -- the book transcends time and place, dealing with timeless and universal issues and principles.

Chapters 1 through 13 are sermons, each based on a Bible text. Chapter 14 is a sermon in the form of an imaginary epistle, "Paul's letter to American Christians," in which Dr. King offered his take on what the apostle might write to American Christians at that time.

In his preface, Dr. King noted that sermons are "oral" events which lose something when imparted on paper; he adapted the sermons to the written medium with some reluctance. But as I read, I could imagine his clear, resonant voice delivering each paragraph in my imagination.

In Chapter 15, the closing article, Dr. King made explicit what I sensed throughout the book -- the influence of existentialism upon his beliefs and practices. This book tackles the most basic issues of human existance and shines the light of the Christian gospel upon them. This is Christianity at its best -- a faith of love and reconciliation, addressing the deepest conflicts and needs of humanity. But Dr. King did not hesitate to address the Church in its failures -- its divisions and biases, its acceptance (and, too often, even defense) of the "status quo" in an unjust society, and more.

The sermons in this volume exhibit a great depth of faith and logic. Biblical and literary allusions are extensive. The rhetoric (and I use that word in its classical sense) was constructed with the skill of a master.

Notes to younger readers: twenty-first century eyes, unfamiliar with the 1960's, may be startled by vocabulary rooted in the time of the volume's publication -- use of the term "negro" and male-dominated language. This was simply the way of speech in 1963, when the book was first published.

Most highly recommended.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bell7
This collection of Martin Luther King Jr.'s sermons, published in 1963, contains sixteen messages on various topics and an essay entitled "Pilgrimage to Nonviolence," in which Dr. King describes the study and philosophy that informs his convictions. Dr. King preached these sermons "during or after
Show More
the bus protest in Montgomery, Alabama" (ix), and does indeed often refer to the struggle against segregation going on in that time. Instead of dating the collection, this fact puts them firmly in a specific historic moment while strikingly illustrating many universal, still-relevant truths he espouses.

That this took me a month to read should not be taken as a negative. From the first sermon, I realized that to be fully engaged with Dr. King's wisdom, intellect, and passion, I wanted to take it slowly. Even so, I rather with it were a book I owned, because I rushed at the end when the library due date sneaked up on me. I didn't always agree with Dr. King's theology, but my admiration and respect for him have only grown as a result of reading some of his sermons. I was often challenged personally and a few times the sermon I was reading was directly applicable to something else I was mulling or struggling with at the time. I would recommend those unfamiliar with Dr. King's theology and philosophy read the final essay first, as it clarified some points that I had been wondering about while reading.
Show Less
LibraryThing member wrmjr66
I'd heard this King guy was good, but I had no idea. Seriously, I had read "I have a Dream" and "Letter from Birmingham Jail," but I wasn't still blown away by this. It's a collection of 14 sermons (which he revised for a written format) and an essay. I'm not sure what surprised me most. The range
Show More
of his allusions and quotations is larger than I would have guessed for sermons. He quotes poets from Shakespeare to Tennyson to Dunbar and philosophers from Plato to Schopenhauer(!). I probably shouldn't have been surprised by his anti-war and anti-nuclear stances, but I just don't think of him in terms of debates over disarmament, for example. I think that was my major blind spot: I thought of him only in terms of the Civil Rights Movement. Certainly these sermons often touch on civil rights, but only in the larger context that he is established in his reading of the biblical verse. I checked out another book of his writings, and I can hardly wait to start.
Show Less
LibraryThing member eunoia00
Fundamentally one of the greatest books written by the late Dr. King
LibraryThing member CGSLibrary
Contents: A tough mind and a tender heart -- Transformed nonconformist -- On being a good neighbor -- Love in action -- Loving your enemies -- A knock at midnight -- The man who was a fool -- The death of evil upon the seashore -- Three dimensions of a complete life -- Shattered dreams -- What is
Show More
man? -- How should a Christian view communism? -- Our God is able -- Antidotes for fear -- The answer to a perplexing question -- Paul's letter to American Christians -- Pilgrimage to nonviolence.
Show Less
LibraryThing member juliecracchiolo
There was more to Martin Luther King, Jr. than as the leading representative of the early 1960s Civil Rights Movement. He was a Baptist preacher first and foremost. And here we have a collection of his sermons, some written while he was jailed.
This is the third of the five books King
Show More
collected/wrote before his tragic assassination in 1968. They were composed during the years 1955-1963. It’s also one of his most requested works.
Theses short and meditative sermons, crafted during the heyday of the Civil Rights Movement, are predominately about racial segregation in America. They have a heavy emphasis “on permanent religious values. I was amazed that the words spoken by King sixtyish years ago are purposeful today as they were back then. Well, the first ten spoke to today’s racial unrest; the other five didn’t for me, carry the weight of modern times.
His widow, Coretta Scott King, wrote in a Forward that was penned in 1981: "I believe it is because this book best explains the central element of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s philosophy of nonviolence: His belief in a divine, loving presence that binds all life. That insight, luminously conveyed in this classic text, here presented in a new and attractive edition, hints at the personal transformation at the root of social justice: “By reaching into and beyond ourselves and tapping the transcendent moral ethic of love, we shall overcome these evils."
One of the things I thought about as I read, is that we, event in the 21st Century, and especially here is St. Louis, are still practicing segregation. Oh the Colored Only signs may be gone, but look at our neighborhoods. And not only in St. Louis, but around the country, blacks and whites are segregated via their neighborhoods. Interesting concept, in my opinion, and something on which to ponder.
Show Less
LibraryThing member fulner
This short book was very good. King's voice is heard loud and well; I truly felt like I could hear his unique cadence spotting these great truths from the pulpit.

A collection of 15 sermons that King had given during his time pastoring a growing Baptist congregation. A much deeper faith that many
Show More
Christian leaders of today, and certain much more than what we were tough of MLK in public school.

I can't recommend this enough and I'm looking to get a copy for our Pastor. While there are certainly some clearly protestant positions touched on, like salvation by faith alone, when he does he clearly states that they are Protestant positions.
Show Less

Awards

Language

Original publication date

1963

Physical description

155 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

0800614410 / 9780800614416
Page: 0.3585 seconds