Calvin O. Butts III - Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Service (undated)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (upbeat organ music) | 0:01 | |
| - | We are here tonight to give thanks | 5:03 |
| for the life and work of Martin Luther King Jr. | 5:05 | |
| He told us that we can live together | 5:10 | |
| in spite of our many differences. | 5:12 | |
| We realize that there is still hurt and hatred in the world, | 5:23 | |
| but we come tonight united as children as God. | 5:28 | |
| (organ music) | 5:40 | |
| (choir singing) | 6:49 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 10:30 |
| Gracious God, | 10:34 | |
| we gather before you this night | 10:37 | |
| in this place of worship | 10:39 | |
| invoking your presence on our gathering. | 10:42 | |
| In the past, you've sent us great profits | 10:47 | |
| to speak your word of truth. | 10:50 | |
| You've sent us the prophet Martin Luther King. | 10:54 | |
| He spoke to us words of comfort, | 10:57 | |
| but also words of truth. | 11:02 | |
| He knew how to soothe the troubled soul of people, | 11:05 | |
| and yet, he knew also how to inflame the conscience | 11:10 | |
| of a complacent nation. | 11:16 | |
| O God, we recognize | 11:20 | |
| that his life was a gift from you, | 11:23 | |
| that the words he spoke were words | 11:27 | |
| that he was empowered through your spirit to speak, | 11:29 | |
| that the great things that he accomplished | 11:34 | |
| for his faithful, suffering, truthful people, | 11:37 | |
| all was accomplished through your guiding hand. | 11:42 | |
| And therefore, we begin this time together | 11:47 | |
| by seeking your presence even yet among us. | 11:51 | |
| Come touch us, we pray, | 11:56 | |
| breathe your empowering spirit upon us. | 11:58 | |
| May each speaker be empowered with your words of truth, | 12:04 | |
| and more so, may our ears be opened | 12:09 | |
| to hear your truth in our time and place, | 12:13 | |
| for we need your presence, | 12:17 | |
| we need your word this night | 12:20 | |
| as much as ever before. | 12:24 | |
| And so, we are bold to invoke your presence among us, | 12:26 | |
| and may all that we do here be done for your glory, | 12:31 | |
| and that your kingdom of peace, | 12:36 | |
| justice and love may become a reality for us | 12:40 | |
| in our time and place, amen. | 12:44 | |
| Be seated. | 12:49 | |
| - | Good evening. | 13:07 |
| I'm very happy to be here this evening | 13:09 | |
| to bring greetings from the city of Durham, | 13:11 | |
| the Durham city council | 13:16 | |
| on this very wonderful occasion, | 13:18 | |
| this occasion honoring the great Doctor Martin Luther King, | 13:21 | |
| a person who I think is probably | 13:26 | |
| one of the greatest Americans, | 13:29 | |
| one of the greatest human beings that ever lived. | 13:31 | |
| It is fitting that we be here tonight | 13:36 | |
| to keep the dream alive. | 13:38 | |
| And I'm so happy to see all of you here. | 13:42 | |
| I'm happy to see the mix of people that are here, | 13:46 | |
| because Martin Luther King | 13:49 | |
| was no respecter of color or persons, | 13:52 | |
| he loved everybody, | 13:56 | |
| and his dream was that America | 13:58 | |
| would come to a time where every one of us, | 14:01 | |
| black and white, | 14:05 | |
| would live free and in a just society. | 14:07 | |
| So, it's very good to see you here | 14:11 | |
| to try to keep that dream alive. | 14:14 | |
| And I want to say to you that dream is alive tonight, | 14:18 | |
| although I must say that the dream has not been satisfied, | 14:23 | |
| that Doctor Martin Luther King dreamed of freedom, | 14:28 | |
| justice, and equality for us all. | 14:31 | |
| And tonight, I hope that we will rededicate ourselves | 14:36 | |
| and pledge to ourselves that we will | 14:40 | |
| continue to work very hard to make sure | 14:43 | |
| that Doctor Martin Luther King's dream comes true. | 14:47 | |
| We are in some very trying times, | 14:51 | |
| especially for a man that exemplified peace and harmony | 14:55 | |
| throughout the world. | 15:01 | |
| So, I think that we should and must continue to pray | 15:03 | |
| for peace, harmony, righteousness, and justice, | 15:06 | |
| and if we continue to do that, | 15:11 | |
| I think that what we will have in the upcoming days | 15:14 | |
| will be a better world. | 15:18 | |
| I know that we are upset at this given time | 15:20 | |
| about what's happening in the Middle East, | 15:22 | |
| and we differ, some of us, | 15:24 | |
| about whether we should even be there. | 15:26 | |
| But we must be proud of our young men that are there, | 15:29 | |
| giving their, maybe, some of them already have | 15:34 | |
| given their lives in the defense | 15:38 | |
| of freedom and justice for all. | 15:40 | |
| So, as the mayor of the city of Durham, | 15:44 | |
| representing the city council and administration of Durham, | 15:46 | |
| again, I want to welcome you here to this event | 15:50 | |
| honoring this great leader, | 15:53 | |
| and hope that you will go away from this place | 15:56 | |
| rededicated to his dream | 15:59 | |
| of freedom, justice, righteousness, | 16:02 | |
| and equality for all, | 16:06 | |
| thank you very much. | 16:08 | |
| - | There were three college students sitting on a pew. | 16:51 |
| They were attendees of the King worship service | 16:55 | |
| just like you. | 16:59 | |
| A great spirit swept down | 17:01 | |
| and whispered in their ears, | 17:04 | |
| if you could in a few sentences, | 17:06 | |
| please tell me why are you here? | 17:09 | |
| The first student exclaimed | 17:12 | |
| I am here to remember, | 17:14 | |
| remember because, as Cicero said, | 17:17 | |
| to be ignorant of what occurred | 17:20 | |
| before or after you were born | 17:21 | |
| is to remain always a child. | 17:24 | |
| To remember the banished Jim Crow signs, | 17:27 | |
| to remember the colorization of American politics, | 17:30 | |
| to remember the birth of a new freedom, | 17:34 | |
| yes, to remember. | 17:37 | |
| The second student answered | 17:40 | |
| I am here to celebrate, | 17:42 | |
| celebrate because, Emerson stated, | 17:45 | |
| in the mud and scum of things, | 17:47 | |
| there always, always something sings. | 17:50 | |
| To celebrate the first black American | 17:54 | |
| honored by a national holiday, | 17:57 | |
| to celebrate progress, | 18:00 | |
| yeah, celebrate. | 18:03 | |
| The last student exclaimed I am here to renew, | 18:05 | |
| renew by studying, struggling, | 18:09 | |
| and preparing for the victory to come, | 18:12 | |
| to renew my commitment to peace, | 18:14 | |
| to renew my courage to do what is right, | 18:17 | |
| yes, renew. | 18:20 | |
| Well, the great spirit sighed, pondered, | 18:23 | |
| and then replied, | 18:27 | |
| have you honestly come to remember the man? | 18:29 | |
| Have you really come to celebrate the dream? | 18:33 | |
| Have you truly come to renew the hope? | 18:36 | |
| If so, you have sincerely commemorated | 18:40 | |
| Doctor Martin Luther King, thank you. | 18:43 | |
| (applause) | 18:46 | |
| (uplifting piano music) | 19:05 | |
| ♪ Our love is ♪ | 19:47 | |
| ♪ Warmer than a smile ♪ | 19:53 | |
| ♪ It gives ♪ | 19:58 | |
| ♪ To ♪ | 20:01 | |
| ♪ Every needing child ♪ | 20:04 | |
| ♪ If anyone should ask you what you love ♪ | 20:08 | |
| ♪ Tell them this is true ♪ | 20:14 | |
| ♪ That God lets all his love flow out to you ♪ | 20:19 | |
| ♪ God's love ♪ | 20:29 | |
| ♪ Feeds ♪ | 20:32 | |
| ♪ More than just a face ♪ | 20:35 | |
| ♪ It spreads through ♪ | 20:40 | |
| ♪ All of time and space ♪ | 20:45 | |
| ♪ You know that everything about his love is ♪ | 20:49 | |
| ♪ Precious and true ♪ | 20:56 | |
| ♪ And it lets me spread all my love ♪ | 21:00 | |
| ♪ To you ♪ | 21:04 | |
| ♪ Let our love shine throughout the world ♪ | 21:06 | |
| ♪ To every mountain top and steeple ♪ | 21:15 | |
| ♪ Let it be felt by every soul ♪ | 21:24 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 21:30 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 21:34 | |
| ♪ Let it reach out to every heart ♪ | 21:41 | |
| ♪ To every distant foreign people ♪ | 21:49 | |
| ♪ Til it is present in the world ♪ | 21:57 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 22:02 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 22:06 | |
| ♪ Our love sees ♪ | 22:16 | |
| ♪ That love's the key to peace ♪ | 22:20 | |
| ♪ We'll pray til ♪ | 22:25 | |
| ♪ All world wars have ceased ♪ | 22:29 | |
| ♪ If you or anyone you know ♪ | 22:33 | |
| ♪ Enough to say they feel as weak ♪ | 22:37 | |
| ♪ Let our universal song, O Lord, be free ♪ | 22:42 | |
| ♪ Let our love shine throughout the world ♪ | 22:48 | |
| ♪ To every mountaintop and steeple ♪ | 22:56 | |
| ♪ Let it be felt by every soul ♪ | 23:04 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 23:09 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 23:13 | |
| ♪ Let it reach out to every heart ♪ | 23:20 | |
| ♪ To every distant foreign people ♪ | 23:27 | |
| ♪ Til it is present in the world ♪ | 23:35 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 23:39 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 23:43 | |
| ♪ Say words of love to all we see ♪ | 23:50 | |
| ♪ To let them know that love is equal ♪ | 23:57 | |
| ♪ Let us lift up humanity ♪ | 24:05 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:09 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:13 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:17 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:21 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:24 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:28 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:32 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:35 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:39 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:43 | |
| ♪ Til love's ♪ | 24:46 | |
| ♪ All over ♪ | 24:50 | |
| (applause) | 24:59 | |
| - | Woe to you who desire the day of the Lord. | 25:16 |
| Why would you have the day of the Lord? | 25:19 | |
| It is darkness and not light, | 25:22 | |
| as if a man fled from a lion | 25:24 | |
| and a bear met him, | 25:26 | |
| or went into the house | 25:28 | |
| and leaned with his hand against the wall, | 25:30 | |
| and a serpent bit him. | 25:33 | |
| Is not the day of the Lord darkness and not light? | 25:37 | |
| And gloom with no brightness in it? | 25:42 | |
| I hate, I despise your feasts, | 25:45 | |
| and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies. | 25:48 | |
| Even though you offer me your burnt offerings | 25:51 | |
| and cereal offerings, | 25:54 | |
| I will not accept them. | 25:56 | |
| And the peace offerings of your fatted beasts, | 25:58 | |
| I will not look upon. | 26:00 | |
| Take away from me the noise of your songs, | 26:03 | |
| to the melody of your harps I will not listen. | 26:05 | |
| But let justice roll down like the waters | 26:09 | |
| and righteousness like an ever flowing stream. | 26:13 | |
| - | Ladies and gentlemen, | 26:32 |
| let me welcome you here tonight to this program | 26:34 | |
| in honor of Doctor Martin Luther King. | 26:37 | |
| I'm pleased to be able to introduce | 26:40 | |
| the speaker of tonight. | 26:43 | |
| In 1985, I think it was, | 26:48 | |
| I first met our speaker. | 26:50 | |
| He was doing what he does best when we met, | 26:54 | |
| and that was to advocate for better treatment, | 27:00 | |
| better support for children in New York City. | 27:04 | |
| Doctor Butts is a New York native, | 27:11 | |
| although he lived in New York, | 27:16 | |
| he spent many summers | 27:19 | |
| in rural Georgia | 27:22 | |
| where his grandmothers | 27:24 | |
| had a great influence on his life. | 27:27 | |
| While they were churchgoing people, | 27:31 | |
| and a young man was obligated | 27:35 | |
| to participate in those activities, | 27:40 | |
| and as we will see as his life developed, | 27:44 | |
| it had an influence on him | 27:47 | |
| that last until today. | 27:51 | |
| He participated in some of the first integration activities | 27:55 | |
| in the New York public schools, | 27:59 | |
| and after graduating, | 28:03 | |
| the south influenced him again, | 28:05 | |
| and he entered Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, | 28:09 | |
| planning to complete a degree | 28:13 | |
| in industrial psychology. | 28:16 | |
| But as the confluence of events would have it, | 28:19 | |
| Doctor Martin Luther King's assassination, | 28:24 | |
| the influence and prevalence of religion in Atlanta, | 28:27 | |
| the potential for religious leaders | 28:31 | |
| to have an influence in shaping and developing | 28:33 | |
| the social structure of this country, | 28:37 | |
| Doctor Butts changed his major to philosophy | 28:41 | |
| and graduated from Morehouse with a degree in that field. | 28:46 | |
| He went back to New York | 28:52 | |
| and entered union theological seminary, | 28:55 | |
| and in 1972, as events would have it, | 29:01 | |
| he became executive minister of Abyssinian Baptist Church. | 29:06 | |
| These events continued the influence | 29:12 | |
| on his realization | 29:18 | |
| of the value of a religious leader | 29:20 | |
| in the communities of today. | 29:24 | |
| He earned his masters in church history | 29:27 | |
| from Union Theological Seminary | 29:30 | |
| in 1975, | 29:34 | |
| and a doctorate of ministry and church and public policy | 29:37 | |
| from Drew University in 1982. | 29:42 | |
| I met him in 1985, | 29:48 | |
| he was the spiritual leader of Abyssinian Baptist Church, | 29:52 | |
| he acted as the conscience | 29:58 | |
| of the black community in New York City, | 30:02 | |
| and in 1989, July, | 30:07 | |
| he became pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church. | 30:12 | |
| The events that shaped the direction | 30:18 | |
| Doctor Butts took | 30:21 | |
| continues to influence his life and his work, | 30:24 | |
| his commitment to serving | 30:28 | |
| his congregation and the peoples around him. | 30:31 | |
| I think he is a fitting person to speak to us tonight | 30:36 | |
| because I think, and I believe, | 30:40 | |
| that his work and his life | 30:42 | |
| typifies the kind of person | 30:44 | |
| that Doctor King would have wanted | 30:47 | |
| to have all of us be. | 30:49 | |
| Of course, he's been and is chair of many boards, | 30:53 | |
| but I want to mention, and having you meet Doctor Butts, | 30:59 | |
| his commitment to serving people | 31:07 | |
| in Harlem in New York, | 31:13 | |
| his work at attempting to eliminate and remove | 31:15 | |
| billboards that | 31:20 | |
| are subject to lead young persons to drink, | 31:24 | |
| his concern with health, | 31:28 | |
| and his commitment to assisting and working | 31:32 | |
| to develop more programs for persons | 31:35 | |
| who are stricken with AIDS in New York City, | 31:37 | |
| his concern for housing, | 31:41 | |
| and his commitment to assisting and developing | 31:44 | |
| more and appropriate housing | 31:46 | |
| for people who are homeless in New York City. | 31:48 | |
| I believe that Doctor Butts represents | 31:55 | |
| the kind of person that Doctor King believed | 31:59 | |
| could enhance all of our lives | 32:03 | |
| to make us better persons | 32:06 | |
| and would serve to improve the possibility | 32:08 | |
| for peace on Earth and goodwill toward all men. | 32:13 | |
| Ladies and gentlemen, | 32:17 | |
| it is my pleasure to introduce to you | 32:18 | |
| Reverend Doctor Calvin L. Butts III, | 32:22 | |
| who will be our major speaker tonight, thank you. | 32:26 | |
| (applause) | 32:33 | |
| (choir singing) | 33:41 | |
| (applause) | 37:12 | |
| - | Firstly, I'd like to thank Doctor Leonard Beckham | 38:01 |
| for the introduction this evening, | 38:05 | |
| and for the privilege of being able to stand in this place | 38:07 | |
| here at Duke University. | 38:12 | |
| A special word of appreciation goes out | 38:15 | |
| to the Reverend Doctor William H. Willimon, | 38:18 | |
| dean of the chapel, | 38:20 | |
| for extending also the privilege | 38:21 | |
| of being able to stand in this sacred place. | 38:24 | |
| I want to thank Brother Michael Hunt | 38:28 | |
| for all of his kindness, | 38:30 | |
| and especially for my swift and safe ride from the airport. | 38:32 | |
| And I am blessed to have come in | 38:39 | |
| just at the beginning of the remarks | 38:43 | |
| of the honorable Chester Jenkins, | 38:45 | |
| mayor of the city of Durham. | 38:48 | |
| To all of these students | 38:51 | |
| who have participated in the program thus far, | 38:52 | |
| to the distinguished members of the faculty | 38:56 | |
| and administration here at Duke University, | 38:58 | |
| and to those persons who may be visiting here | 39:02 | |
| from the local community, | 39:05 | |
| I greet you in peace, | 39:08 | |
| grace and peace be unto you | 39:10 | |
| from God the Father | 39:13 | |
| and from our Lord Jesus Christ. | 39:15 | |
| I am | 39:18 | |
| somewhat anxious about being here | 39:20 | |
| simply because | 39:25 | |
| I had to move so quickly to get here, | 39:28 | |
| and I was scurrying to make sure | 39:31 | |
| that I was in the airport in New York in enough time, | 39:32 | |
| and I have learned about flying | 39:37 | |
| that I don't like it, | 39:40 | |
| and you go up and you go down | 39:43 | |
| and my stomach rises and descends with the airplane. | 39:45 | |
| My palms sweat, my knees knock together, | 39:50 | |
| and my eyes roll to the back of my head. | 39:53 | |
| Upon arriving, I saw a minister in the airport | 39:56 | |
| who noticed how pale I looked. | 39:59 | |
| He said son, why are you so pale? | 40:01 | |
| I said I don't like to fly, it makes me nervous, I'm afraid. | 40:03 | |
| And he said you should be ashamed, | 40:07 | |
| you're a young clergy person, | 40:08 | |
| God is with you on land, on sea, and in the air, you know? | 40:10 | |
| But I remember in Matthew where Jesus said lo, | 40:14 | |
| I am with you. | 40:18 | |
| And so therefore I'm glad to be here. | 40:20 | |
| It's a little New York humor. | 40:24 | |
| (applause) | 40:27 | |
| A little New York humor, you know? | 40:33 | |
| But I really do appreciate the invitation. | 40:39 | |
| And certainly nothing gives me greater pleasure | 40:43 | |
| than to be able to address you | 40:46 | |
| concerning the life and the work | 40:48 | |
| of Doctor Martin Luther King Jr. | 40:51 | |
| And I want to begin my talk with you this evening | 40:56 | |
| by raising a flag of caution. | 41:01 | |
| Usually when people discuss the life and the work | 41:07 | |
| of Doctor King, | 41:10 | |
| they try | 41:13 | |
| to compartmentalize him. | 41:16 | |
| They try to put him in | 41:19 | |
| certain categories | 41:22 | |
| that would make him appealing to some of us, | 41:25 | |
| but perhaps not all of us. | 41:29 | |
| And I'm disturbed by that, | 41:33 | |
| an I want you to be careful of it, | 41:34 | |
| because I think it's dangerous to parochialize Doctor King. | 41:37 | |
| Some people will say that | 41:44 | |
| Doctor King was a great civil and human rights leader. | 41:46 | |
| And, to be sure, | 41:51 | |
| Doctor King was, in fact, | 41:53 | |
| a great civil and human rights leader, | 41:56 | |
| but he was much more than that. | 41:58 | |
| Some people will say well, | 42:03 | |
| Doctor King was a great black leader, | 42:05 | |
| a great leader of the African-American community. | 42:10 | |
| And I would agree, | 42:15 | |
| Doctor King, in fact, was a great African-American leader. | 42:17 | |
| But he was much more than that. | 42:23 | |
| Some people will say oh, Martin Luther King Jr. | 42:26 | |
| was a great orator, | 42:29 | |
| he could really lay down a good stem winder. | 42:31 | |
| He had the ability to relate to us | 42:36 | |
| the rhetoric in a most eloquent way, | 42:40 | |
| he was a master, if you will, | 42:43 | |
| of the sacred rhetoric. | 42:45 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr., yes, | 42:48 | |
| was a great civil and human rights leader, | 42:50 | |
| yes, he was a great | 42:53 | |
| orator, and yes, Martin Luther King Jr. was, | 42:57 | |
| with everything else, a great Baptist preacher, | 43:01 | |
| but he was much more than all of these things. | 43:04 | |
| And I think that the title | 43:08 | |
| that makes Doctor King appealing | 43:13 | |
| for all of us in this chapel | 43:16 | |
| and all of us across the United States of America | 43:19 | |
| is to say that Doctor Martin Luther King Jr. | 43:24 | |
| above all things | 43:27 | |
| was a great American. | 43:30 | |
| He was an American, | 43:34 | |
| and he said it himself, | 43:37 | |
| because we can never rehearse the life and work | 43:39 | |
| of Doctor Martin Luther King | 43:41 | |
| without calling upon his great speeches. | 43:43 | |
| He said, when he talked about his dream, | 43:47 | |
| that it was a dream deep rooted | 43:49 | |
| in the American Dream. | 43:53 | |
| He defined himself as a great American, | 43:56 | |
| and if we allow | 43:59 | |
| people to compartmentalize him, | 44:01 | |
| people to parochialize him, | 44:03 | |
| if we allow people to put him in certain categories, | 44:06 | |
| we will miss the great impact that he had | 44:09 | |
| for all of us in this nation called the United States. | 44:12 | |
| He was a great American, | 44:18 | |
| and he did not come full grown out of the head of Zeus | 44:20 | |
| with his love for America, | 44:25 | |
| he did not combust on a street corner | 44:27 | |
| in Montgomery, Alabama. | 44:30 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr. was nurtured in the incubator | 44:32 | |
| of America, | 44:37 | |
| and he picked up his love of this country | 44:39 | |
| from great Americans who had gone before him. | 44:43 | |
| You see, because in order to understand | 44:47 | |
| Doctor Martin Luther King Jr., | 44:49 | |
| you must understand that he was a man | 44:51 | |
| who stood on the shoulders of giants. | 44:54 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr. believed in America | 44:58 | |
| because he understood that | 45:01 | |
| those before him believed in America. | 45:03 | |
| In order to understand Martin Luther King Jr., | 45:07 | |
| you would have to understand Mordecai Johnson. | 45:09 | |
| You would have to understand Mary McLeod Bethune. | 45:13 | |
| You would have to understand Ida B. Wells | 45:17 | |
| and Mary Church Terrell. | 45:20 | |
| In order to understand Martin Luther King Jr., | 45:22 | |
| you would have to understand Howard Thurman | 45:25 | |
| and Benjamin Elijah Mays. | 45:28 | |
| You cannot understand Martin Luther King Jr. | 45:32 | |
| apart from his nurturing by other great Americans | 45:36 | |
| who taught him that America | 45:39 | |
| was the place where he should cast his lot | 45:42 | |
| and build his dreams on the foundation | 45:46 | |
| that was found in the preamble | 45:50 | |
| to that glorious document called the Constitution. | 45:53 | |
| We hold these truths to be self evident | 45:58 | |
| that all, allow me a little editorialism, | 46:02 | |
| persons are created equal, | 46:06 | |
| that they are endowed by their creator | 46:08 | |
| with certain inalienable rights. | 46:11 | |
| And among them are life, liberty, | 46:15 | |
| and the pursuit of happiness. | 46:17 | |
| Doctor Martin Luther King Jr., | 46:21 | |
| recognizing what he had inherited from his ancestors | 46:24 | |
| and also what he had inherited | 46:27 | |
| from the founding fathers, if you will, | 46:30 | |
| of this nation, | 46:32 | |
| decided to cast his lot with America. | 46:34 | |
| And even though he recognized | 46:40 | |
| that the ones who put pen to paper | 46:44 | |
| and drafted that great document called the Constitution | 46:47 | |
| were themselves hypocritical as regarded its words, | 46:50 | |
| he still believed that what was on that paper | 46:55 | |
| could be used to create | 46:59 | |
| the land of the free | 47:02 | |
| and the home of the brave. | 47:05 | |
| But you know, it's never good, really, | 47:09 | |
| to talk about men or women | 47:10 | |
| who resembled Martin Luther King Jr. | 47:13 | |
| without being able to put them | 47:17 | |
| really in historical perspective. | 47:20 | |
| And culturally, we as African-American people, | 47:23 | |
| like to call upon our great cultural giants | 47:27 | |
| to help us to focus on our religious | 47:30 | |
| and political spokespersons. | 47:33 | |
| So, I want to help you to understand | 47:37 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr's dream of America | 47:39 | |
| by going back to the turn of the 20th century. | 47:43 | |
| I wanna find a black person in Harlem, | 47:48 | |
| Harlem, that white scar, | 47:52 | |
| that black scar on the alabaster underbelly | 47:56 | |
| of a leviathan called Manhattan. | 48:01 | |
| I wanna find a little black poet | 48:04 | |
| who's name was Langston Hughes, | 48:08 | |
| my oh my what a curious thing | 48:11 | |
| to paint a poet black and bid him to sing. | 48:14 | |
| But Langston Hughes did sing, | 48:18 | |
| and I want you to hear what he said | 48:20 | |
| in a poem called Let America | 48:24 | |
| Be America Again. | 48:28 | |
| Now, this poem has many stanzas to it, | 48:31 | |
| but I wanna lift up just one stanza for you tonight. | 48:33 | |
| Listen to what Langston Hughes wrote. | 48:38 | |
| He said I am the poor white | 48:41 | |
| fool and pushed apart, | 48:44 | |
| I am the Negro bearing slavery's scars. | 48:47 | |
| I am the red man pushed from the land, | 48:53 | |
| and I am the immigrant from Czechoslovakia, | 48:59 | |
| from Greece, from Germany, from France, from England, | 49:03 | |
| I am the immigrant from Korea, from Mexico, from Cuba, | 49:07 | |
| I am the immigrant clutching the hope I seek | 49:12 | |
| and finding the same old stupid plan | 49:16 | |
| of dog eat dog and mighty crush the weak. | 49:20 | |
| Oh yes, I say it plain, | 49:25 | |
| America never was America for me, | 49:27 | |
| but yet I swear this oath, | 49:30 | |
| America will be. | 49:33 | |
| Langston Hughes wrote that poem in the early 20s, | 49:37 | |
| and I want you to understand, my beloved friends, | 49:43 | |
| that he lived in an America | 49:47 | |
| where Jim Crow was the law of the land. | 49:50 | |
| Langston Hughes lived in an America | 49:53 | |
| where an African-American man was lynched | 49:56 | |
| every few moments in the south. | 49:59 | |
| Langston Hughes lived in an America where | 50:02 | |
| in some parts, perhaps of even Durham at that time, | 50:05 | |
| a black man had to jump off the sidewalk | 50:09 | |
| in order for a white man to pass by. | 50:12 | |
| But yet, when this poet wrote, | 50:16 | |
| he saw an America made up of poor whites, | 50:18 | |
| of the so-called Negro, | 50:23 | |
| of the so called red man, | 50:25 | |
| and of the immigrants coming from lands far away, | 50:28 | |
| here was a man who had a vision of America that said | 50:31 | |
| if America is going to really be America, | 50:35 | |
| all of us have got to learn to live together, | 50:39 | |
| poor white, so-called Negro, | 50:43 | |
| red man, and immigrant. | 50:45 | |
| O beautiful, for spacious skies, | 50:49 | |
| for amber waves of grain, | 50:53 | |
| for purple mountains majesty | 50:55 | |
| above the fruited plain, | 50:58 | |
| America, America, God shed his grace on thee, | 51:01 | |
| and crown thy good with brotherhood | 51:06 | |
| from sea to shining sea. | 51:09 | |
| But how are you going to be my brother, | 51:12 | |
| or how are you going to be my sister | 51:15 | |
| when you don't even know my name? | 51:18 | |
| And so, Martin Luther King Jr. said | 51:23 | |
| if we're going to bring America together, | 51:25 | |
| we've got to rise above our ignorance | 51:28 | |
| and begin to learn who each other is | 51:31 | |
| in terms of where we've come from | 51:36 | |
| and what we've contributed to make America great. | 51:38 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr. reminded us | 51:42 | |
| that our ignorance keeps us apart, | 51:45 | |
| and it creates hatred among us, | 51:47 | |
| and because of our division, America is that much weaker, | 51:50 | |
| for a house divided against itself | 51:54 | |
| cannot stand. | 51:57 | |
| So, Martin Luther King Jr. | 51:59 | |
| made his way, | 52:02 | |
| based on the thoughts of great Americans before him, | 52:04 | |
| based on the foundation of the constitution, | 52:08 | |
| and convinced that this nation could be great | 52:11 | |
| if we would all come together | 52:14 | |
| to build his beloved community | 52:16 | |
| on love and the principle of love | 52:19 | |
| that binds us together | 52:22 | |
| because of our love for America. | 52:24 | |
| I too sing America, | 52:29 | |
| oh, I'm the darker brother, when company comes, | 52:31 | |
| they send me to the kitchen. | 52:33 | |
| And that's all right, I go to the kitchen, | 52:35 | |
| and I eat, and I get fat and beautiful, | 52:37 | |
| so when company comes again, | 52:40 | |
| they'll see how beautiful I am | 52:42 | |
| and no one will be ashamed of me. | 52:43 | |
| Yes, I too sing America, | 52:47 | |
| because this is my country. | 52:50 | |
| Everyone wonders how America could be so rich and powerful, | 52:55 | |
| I tell them that's no math test, | 52:58 | |
| if you had all of us working for you | 53:01 | |
| and paid us nothing for 200 years, | 53:03 | |
| you could be rich and powerful also. | 53:05 | |
| This is my country, | 53:12 | |
| I farmed the land, | 53:14 | |
| I worked in the factories and got a substandard wage | 53:17 | |
| when everyone else was making more than I did. | 53:21 | |
| This is my country, | 53:24 | |
| I nursed the babies when their mothers didn't want them. | 53:27 | |
| This is my country, I picked the cotton, | 53:31 | |
| I cracked the tobacco, I cut the cane. | 53:33 | |
| This is my country. | 53:37 | |
| We've given America everything, | 53:40 | |
| why, we've given America its only truly American music, | 53:42 | |
| our subtle sense of song did that. | 53:45 | |
| We gave America its only laughter and pathos, | 53:48 | |
| its only fairytales and its mad money getting plutocracy. | 53:50 | |
| This is my country. | 53:55 | |
| As a matter of fact, in that city where I come from, | 53:58 | |
| a barrier was built to protect the Dutch from the English | 54:02 | |
| at the tip of Manhattan island. | 54:06 | |
| You know who built the wall | 54:08 | |
| after which Wall Street is named? | 54:10 | |
| I did, I built it not only physically with my hands, | 54:12 | |
| but the blood of my ancestors | 54:16 | |
| made the money that keeps the stock exchange rolling today. | 54:18 | |
| This is my country, | 54:24 | |
| and when American decided that it | 54:26 | |
| wanted to break free from Great Britain, | 54:29 | |
| represented by a man named Chris Pizadeks, | 54:32 | |
| there were countless thousands of Africans | 54:35 | |
| who died to make this the United States of America | 54:39 | |
| rather than the Confederated Colonies of Great Britain. | 54:43 | |
| This is my country. | 54:46 | |
| And when the nation was divided, | 54:49 | |
| we marched not only with the north, | 54:52 | |
| but there were some of us with the south, | 54:55 | |
| fighting in order to try to create a balance, | 54:57 | |
| and those in the north made this nation whole | 55:00 | |
| and, thank God for Denzel and Morgan Freeman | 55:04 | |
| on the screen and glory because nobody | 55:06 | |
| maybe would've known the story | 55:09 | |
| of how we shed our blood to save America. | 55:12 | |
| Then in World War One | 55:20 | |
| there was a group called the 369th infantry division | 55:23 | |
| hup, two, three, four, | 55:27 | |
| and they went over to Germany and France to fight. | 55:29 | |
| I took my son to the museum | 55:34 | |
| that's in the place in the armory in New York. | 55:37 | |
| And he looked up and he saw this sign that said | 55:41 | |
| these are the Hell Fighters. | 55:44 | |
| So, being my son, he said Daddy, | 55:47 | |
| why did they call them the Hell Fighters? | 55:49 | |
| Chaplin, you'll forgive me, | 55:51 | |
| but I had to tell him the truth | 55:52 | |
| because they fought like hell. | 55:53 | |
| And I wanted to make sure that you understood that | 55:56 | |
| this 369th infantry division | 56:03 | |
| quipped the Germans on every turn, | 56:07 | |
| and they also had a band with them, | 56:09 | |
| it was led by a man named Jim Europe, | 56:11 | |
| he directed this band, | 56:13 | |
| and they had a drum major, | 56:15 | |
| his name was Bill Bojangles Robinson, | 56:17 | |
| I want you to know this. | 56:19 | |
| And so hard did they fight that after a while, | 56:22 | |
| when the Germans heard their band play, | 56:26 | |
| they put down their guns and ran | 56:28 | |
| and said uh oh, here come the Hell Fighters. | 56:30 | |
| My country, and when the Japanese | 56:34 | |
| decided that they were gonna bomb Pearl Harbor, | 56:37 | |
| a little black man got up on an anti aircraft gun | 56:40 | |
| and shot down plane after plane of the Japanese, | 56:43 | |
| his name was Dorie Miller. | 56:46 | |
| When we marched off to Vietnam, | 56:49 | |
| I was 10 percent here, but 22 percent on the front line, | 56:51 | |
| this is my country. | 56:55 | |
| I worked for it, I died for it, | 56:59 | |
| I cared for it, | 57:03 | |
| and anybody who tries to take it from me | 57:05 | |
| has made a terrible mistake | 57:08 | |
| because, you see, I want you to know | 57:10 | |
| that I can sing perhaps better | 57:16 | |
| than any other patriot, | 57:19 | |
| this is my country, land that I love, | 57:20 | |
| this is my country, sent from above, | 57:24 | |
| and I pledge thee my allegiance, | 57:27 | |
| America the bold, | 57:29 | |
| for this is my country to have and to hold. | 57:30 | |
| Your greatest patriots cannot sing like I can, | 57:33 | |
| O beautiful for patriots dreams | 57:37 | |
| that sees beyond the years | 57:40 | |
| thine alabaster city's gleam undimmed by human tears, | 57:42 | |
| America, America, God, mend thine every flaw | 57:46 | |
| and confirm thy soul in self control | 57:49 | |
| thy liberty and law. | 57:53 | |
| I like to do that, you see, | 57:56 | |
| because I know that there's some looking up | 57:57 | |
| at my black face and saying | 57:59 | |
| who do you think you are? | 58:00 | |
| I'm an American just like you, | 58:02 | |
| and I've earned every bit of it, | 58:05 | |
| and I'm proud of it. | 58:08 | |
| So therefore, when I go to the next portion of my speech, | 58:10 | |
| I don't worry about what I have to say, | 58:15 | |
| because I know that in the spirit | 58:19 | |
| of Doctor Martin Luther King Jr., | 58:21 | |
| I have every right to be as critical of America | 58:23 | |
| as the next person. | 58:27 | |
| And as I work in the bowels of the urban north | 58:29 | |
| and I see the dismay on the faces of men and women | 58:32 | |
| as I watch as the number of homeless | 58:37 | |
| continues to increase, | 58:39 | |
| and as people who are addicted to alcohol and drugs | 58:41 | |
| and sick with AIDS have no place to go, | 58:45 | |
| as I watch as children who need daycare | 58:49 | |
| are left alone so that their mothers can go out | 58:53 | |
| and earn a few nickels, | 58:56 | |
| and as I watch as the school system in New York | 58:58 | |
| begins to deteriorate, | 59:00 | |
| then I see hundreds of millions of billions of dollars | 59:03 | |
| being taken out of this country | 59:07 | |
| and sent overseas to fight a war | 59:09 | |
| against a group of people who have never said anything ugly, | 59:13 | |
| to me, | 59:20 | |
| then I've got a real problem with America. | 59:23 | |
| Martin Luther King Jr. was dead one year to the date | 59:29 | |
| after he made a similar statement | 59:31 | |
| from a church that looked as beautiful as this one | 59:33 | |
| in New York, the Riverside Church, | 59:36 | |
| April fourth, 1967. | 59:37 | |
| And he said that the money that we were wasting in Vietnam | 59:40 | |
| could be rebuilding lives right here in America, | 59:43 | |
| and as I speak, I speak as a black man from New York, | 59:47 | |
| but in the hills of North Carolina, | 59:50 | |
| in the bowels of Georgia, | 59:51 | |
| in the backwoods of Tennessee and Virginia, | 59:53 | |
| not only blacks, but poor whites suffer from no healthcare. | 59:55 | |
| Their children need to be nestled in daycare centers | 1:00:00 | |
| to allow their parents to work. | 1:00:04 | |
| Homelessness runs rampant not only in the black community, | 1:00:07 | |
| but in all communities of this nation. | 1:00:11 | |
| And as we look at the resources being taken | 1:00:14 | |
| from here to protect countries | 1:00:16 | |
| that don't even have their young men and women | 1:00:19 | |
| on the front line, what are we to think? | 1:00:23 | |
| I don't like to speak this way about my nation, | 1:00:32 | |
| and my heart goes out | 1:00:36 | |
| for those young men and women on the front lines, | 1:00:36 | |
| black and white, | 1:00:39 | |
| because they're children, | 1:00:41 | |
| and many of them are just as frightened as they can be. | 1:00:42 | |
| They don't understand why they're there, | 1:00:45 | |
| someone said you're going to fight to save the world | 1:00:47 | |
| from communism and to make the world safe for democracy, | 1:00:51 | |
| and everybody here at Duke University at least | 1:00:54 | |
| knows that Kuwait was anything other than a democracy. | 1:00:57 | |
| And also, as we go forward to march, | 1:01:01 | |
| we realize that we only get a small portion of our oil | 1:01:04 | |
| from that part of the land, | 1:01:07 | |
| and then we see that Saddam Hussein, | 1:01:09 | |
| as crazy as he is, and he is an absolute nut, | 1:01:12 | |
| is saying that he's got to tie | 1:01:16 | |
| the Palestinian question to the solution for this war. | 1:01:20 | |
| And I step back and I say oh my God, | 1:01:24 | |
| what are we doing? | 1:01:28 | |
| In the streets of New York, | 1:01:30 | |
| I hear the chant no justice, no peace. | 1:01:31 | |
| From South Africa, I hear the chant | 1:01:34 | |
| no justice, no peace. | 1:01:36 | |
| And from the Palestinians I hear the chant | 1:01:38 | |
| no justice, no peace. | 1:01:40 | |
| And I know what would count for peace in America, | 1:01:43 | |
| and I know what would count for peace in South Africa, | 1:01:46 | |
| but it is beyond me to figure out | 1:01:50 | |
| what is going to count for peace | 1:01:52 | |
| between the sons of Abraham, it's not our conflict, | 1:01:54 | |
| bring our boys and girls home. | 1:01:58 | |
| And as we sit back and wave the flag, | 1:02:05 | |
| who's gonna pay for it? | 1:02:10 | |
| Who's gonna pick up the bill? | 1:02:14 | |
| Billy Graham can pray with the president all he wants, | 1:02:17 | |
| but when the man puts the check on the table | 1:02:20 | |
| it's coming out of your pocket, | 1:02:23 | |
| and my pocket. | 1:02:25 | |
| And something tells me that as much as I love this nation, | 1:02:27 | |
| we've got to cure our waring madness | 1:02:32 | |
| or else we will find ourselves at home | 1:02:37 | |
| at each others' throats, | 1:02:41 | |
| and we will become an easy prey | 1:02:43 | |
| for anyone who wants to sweep in. | 1:02:45 | |
| Somebody said well, | 1:02:53 | |
| y'all went up and got one of them liberals from New York. | 1:02:55 | |
| And I don't see anything wrong with liberalism, | 1:03:00 | |
| I told you, liberalism was the thing that made us | 1:03:03 | |
| the United States of America | 1:03:05 | |
| and not the Confederated Colonies of Great Britain. | 1:03:07 | |
| Liberalism gave us freedom of speech, | 1:03:09 | |
| freedom of religion, freedom of assembly. | 1:03:11 | |
| Liberalism is what held the Union together | 1:03:14 | |
| when it was about to split. | 1:03:16 | |
| Liberalism is what gives you social security | 1:03:17 | |
| and all those good things that you hope will be there | 1:03:19 | |
| when you get old enough to enjoy them. | 1:03:22 | |
| But I don't want you to count my speech | 1:03:26 | |
| in just some kind of neoliberalism, | 1:03:28 | |
| I think those titles and terms are altogether wrong, | 1:03:30 | |
| just say that what's in this preacher's heart | 1:03:34 | |
| and coming out of his mouth | 1:03:37 | |
| is an appeal for sanity and love. | 1:03:38 | |
| And that if, in the spirit of King, | 1:03:43 | |
| you practice an eye for an eye | 1:03:47 | |
| and a tooth for a tooth, | 1:03:51 | |
| then all you will be is blind and toothless. | 1:03:53 | |
| And still have the same problems | 1:04:00 | |
| facing you. | 1:04:04 | |
| So, I don't want people to say that | 1:04:07 | |
| this man came down with an anti American speech, | 1:04:09 | |
| for this is my country. | 1:04:13 | |
| My country tis of thee sweet land of liberty, | 1:04:15 | |
| of thee I sing. | 1:04:18 | |
| Land, guess what? Where my fathers died. | 1:04:20 | |
| Land maybe of the Pilgrim's pride, | 1:04:23 | |
| but from every mountainside I do want freedom to ring. | 1:04:25 | |
| And I want it to ring not for | 1:04:29 | |
| just this lone little black boy standing up here, | 1:04:30 | |
| I want it to ring for everybody, | 1:04:33 | |
| the poor white, | 1:04:35 | |
| the red man, the immigrant, | 1:04:37 | |
| the so-called Negro, | 1:04:40 | |
| I want all of us to recognize that America | 1:04:42 | |
| can be America, | 1:04:46 | |
| but it can't be as long as the best of us | 1:04:49 | |
| are somewhere else fighting a war | 1:04:53 | |
| that most of us don't understand. | 1:04:56 | |
| And those on the rich, on the top, | 1:04:59 | |
| keep getting richer, | 1:05:02 | |
| and those on the bottom keep getting poorer, | 1:05:04 | |
| and I'll bet you | 1:05:08 | |
| that most of you out there in that audience are poor, | 1:05:13 | |
| or you may not be as poor as the dirt farmer, | 1:05:17 | |
| but you let a mean wave of depression hit and most of us, | 1:05:22 | |
| even if we got a couple of hundred thousand | 1:05:27 | |
| in the bank, will be wiped out. | 1:05:29 | |
| And you know what keeps us apart? | 1:05:32 | |
| The cruel hoax of race. | 1:05:35 | |
| I don't care how poor I am, | 1:05:37 | |
| I'm better than that colored man over there. | 1:05:40 | |
| And I was being kind. | 1:05:42 | |
| And I don't care what I'm going through, | 1:05:46 | |
| you ain't gonna get me til your night with no white man. | 1:05:48 | |
| We don't have anything in common. | 1:05:53 | |
| Martin King was the architect that taught us | 1:05:55 | |
| about each other and caused us to rise above racism | 1:05:58 | |
| and put our arms around us and brought us together | 1:06:01 | |
| so that we could effectively fight | 1:06:04 | |
| spiritual wickedness in high places. | 1:06:08 | |
| And whenever you see a prophet | 1:06:12 | |
| point to the real source of evil, | 1:06:14 | |
| John got his head cut off. | 1:06:17 | |
| Jesus got nailed to a tree. | 1:06:20 | |
| And Martin Luther King Jr. was shot down | 1:06:23 | |
| on a Memphis balcony. | 1:06:27 | |
| O beloved, when will we realize | 1:06:30 | |
| that we've got to hold each others' hands | 1:06:34 | |
| and unite for the common dignity | 1:06:38 | |
| of all humankind? | 1:06:40 | |
| And this one last point, | 1:06:44 | |
| Martin King Jr. was a man who had a dream about America, | 1:06:48 | |
| but that was not his total dream. | 1:06:53 | |
| And if you were to understand him, | 1:06:56 | |
| you must know that what he wanted most of all | 1:06:58 | |
| was a place where the lion | 1:07:03 | |
| and the lamb would lie down together. | 1:07:06 | |
| Where men and women would beat their swords | 1:07:09 | |
| into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks | 1:07:11 | |
| and study war no more. | 1:07:14 | |
| If you were to understand Martin Luther King Jr., | 1:07:16 | |
| he really wanted the place where | 1:07:19 | |
| every valley would be exalted | 1:07:21 | |
| and every mountain and hill brought low, | 1:07:23 | |
| where the leaves on the trees would be good | 1:07:26 | |
| for the healing of the nations, | 1:07:28 | |
| where the river flows pure as crystal. | 1:07:30 | |
| If you were to understand Martin Luther King Jr., | 1:07:33 | |
| he could never be satisfied with the mere | 1:07:35 | |
| manmade or womanmade piece of earth, | 1:07:39 | |
| he was looking toward the glories of heaven | 1:07:41 | |
| where he expected all of those who loved justice and mercy | 1:07:47 | |
| and righteousness to be. | 1:07:51 | |
| And because he had that vision, | 1:07:53 | |
| nothing on this earth would ever satisfy him, | 1:07:56 | |
| so I leave you with this: | 1:07:59 | |
| yes, I love America, | 1:08:00 | |
| and yes, I wanna see it become what it can be | 1:08:01 | |
| for all of us, | 1:08:04 | |
| but my hope is tied up | 1:08:06 | |
| in a realm beyond this place. | 1:08:09 | |
| It's a land flowing with milk and honey. | 1:08:13 | |
| Some of my more militant brothers say | 1:08:16 | |
| but you speak like a fool, | 1:08:18 | |
| you got your eyes in the sky, | 1:08:20 | |
| but my prize is there, | 1:08:22 | |
| and as long as my hope is built | 1:08:24 | |
| on the foundation that there is a place better than this, | 1:08:27 | |
| I'm not afraid of anything down here. | 1:08:30 | |
| So, I'll give my life for freedom and justice, | 1:08:35 | |
| whether it's for African-Americans in America, | 1:08:40 | |
| black South Africans in South Africa, | 1:08:42 | |
| or Palestinians in Palestine, | 1:08:45 | |
| I will give my life for those | 1:08:47 | |
| who have been crushed to the earth | 1:08:49 | |
| because I know | 1:08:51 | |
| that there is a place | 1:08:53 | |
| where pleasure reigns. | 1:08:56 | |
| Don't think this is it. | 1:08:59 | |
| When the body bags come home, | 1:09:02 | |
| when money is short, | 1:09:05 | |
| when we realize who's gonna pay this bill, | 1:09:08 | |
| you haven't seen anything yet. | 1:09:12 | |
| The ugliness is going to overflow into the streets, | 1:09:16 | |
| and the repression coming from the top | 1:09:20 | |
| is going to be more cruel and brutal. | 1:09:22 | |
| Blacks and whites are going to face off against each other, | 1:09:26 | |
| and there's going to be a terrible confrontation | 1:09:31 | |
| in the streets of America. | 1:09:34 | |
| Those of us who would fight for equality and justice | 1:09:36 | |
| will be a small number, | 1:09:40 | |
| so I leave you with the words of the hymn | 1:09:43 | |
| of the great Methodist preacher, | 1:09:45 | |
| harder yet may be this fight, | 1:09:48 | |
| and right may often yield to might, | 1:09:52 | |
| and wickedness a while may reign, | 1:09:56 | |
| and Satan's cause may seem to gain, | 1:10:00 | |
| but never forget there is a God | 1:10:04 | |
| who rules above | 1:10:08 | |
| with a hand of mercy and a heart of love. | 1:10:11 | |
| And if I'm right, | 1:10:16 | |
| I think Thomas Jefferson was right, | 1:10:18 | |
| he might've had some slaves, | 1:10:20 | |
| but I think what he put on paper was right. | 1:10:21 | |
| I think that Lyndon Baines Johnson | 1:10:24 | |
| and John F. Kennedy were right, | 1:10:27 | |
| I think that Adam Clayton Powell Jr. was right. | 1:10:31 | |
| I think that Martin Luther King Jr. was right, | 1:10:34 | |
| I think that my momma and daddy are right, | 1:10:36 | |
| and they never taught me to hate anybody. | 1:10:38 | |
| And if I'm right, | 1:10:41 | |
| I believe that God will help me | 1:10:42 | |
| to fight my battles. | 1:10:45 | |
| And we, | 1:10:49 | |
| black and white, | 1:10:51 | |
| rich and poor, | 1:10:53 | |
| male and female, | 1:10:55 | |
| Christian and Jew, | 1:10:57 | |
| we will be free | 1:11:00 | |
| someday. | 1:11:05 | |
| (applause) | 1:11:08 | |
| - | Let's bow our heads and our hearts together in prayer. | 1:11:41 |
| Father, we do long for that day | 1:11:46 | |
| when every knee shall bow before you, | 1:11:50 | |
| where men from every nation, every tongue, every people, | 1:11:52 | |
| black and white, | 1:11:56 | |
| where every country across the globe | 1:11:58 | |
| will recognize you, will love and adore you, | 1:12:00 | |
| and spend every day, | 1:12:04 | |
| every year for eternity | 1:12:07 | |
| enjoying your great presence together. | 1:12:10 | |
| But this is today, Lord, | 1:12:13 | |
| and we see division, | 1:12:16 | |
| we see it 11 o'clock every Sunday morning, | 1:12:18 | |
| your people divided, black and white, | 1:12:21 | |
| and Lord, our hearts weep | 1:12:25 | |
| because we see in our own lives, our lives divided, | 1:12:28 | |
| spent with those like us, | 1:12:31 | |
| with those whom we are most comfortable with, | 1:12:34 | |
| Lord, fearing, lacking the love, | 1:12:37 | |
| and lacking the drive | 1:12:41 | |
| to take the initiative to work to reach out | 1:12:43 | |
| to those whom you love, | 1:12:45 | |
| whom you've called us to love. | 1:12:48 | |
| God, move in our own hearts to root out | 1:12:52 | |
| bigotry, to root out hatred, | 1:12:55 | |
| to root out pride, | 1:12:59 | |
| and fill us with your love | 1:13:01 | |
| for the man next door, for the woman on the street, | 1:13:04 | |
| for the friend beside us in a classroom, | 1:13:08 | |
| for the professor ahead of us, | 1:13:11 | |
| or toward those around. | 1:13:15 | |
| Or where there are walls, personally tear them down, | 1:13:16 | |
| and bring repentance among your people, black and white, | 1:13:20 | |
| that we might be one on one, unify with one another. | 1:13:24 | |
| Father, where there is a wall between structures, | 1:13:30 | |
| between groups of peoples, tear it down. | 1:13:34 | |
| God, rise up great leaders with great visions | 1:13:38 | |
| who are unafraid to stand firm in your cause, | 1:13:42 | |
| who will take any name, any suffering, any cost, | 1:13:46 | |
| that we might be one people, | 1:13:52 | |
| black and white together in this nation, | 1:13:54 | |
| that we might worship you in unity, | 1:13:57 | |
| that we might serve and walk side by side, | 1:14:00 | |
| that we might sacrifice for one another, | 1:14:02 | |
| not holding onto that which is ours | 1:14:05 | |
| but realizing that all that we have is yours. | 1:14:06 | |
| God, tear down the structures within our nation | 1:14:10 | |
| that do make the rich richer, | 1:14:15 | |
| that make the poor poorer, | 1:14:17 | |
| that leave the rest of us able to continue | 1:14:19 | |
| as if nothing was wrong, | 1:14:22 | |
| as if the fight is not ours, | 1:14:24 | |
| that it is ours because it burns on your heart, | 1:14:25 | |
| and let it burn in our own. | 1:14:30 | |
| Lord, the time is over now | 1:14:33 | |
| for men and women to hate one another, | 1:14:36 | |
| and now is the time for your love. | 1:14:39 | |
| Father, the time is over now | 1:14:42 | |
| for whites to hold onto that which is theirs, | 1:14:44 | |
| and to realize that your great bounty, | 1:14:48 | |
| given to this nation, | 1:14:52 | |
| is for all the people in the city, in the poorest sections, | 1:14:53 | |
| in the mountains, where they have nothing. | 1:14:57 | |
| Lord, raise up a generation of leaders on this campus | 1:15:02 | |
| with new dreams, | 1:15:06 | |
| with new visions, | 1:15:07 | |
| and Lord, empower them with every bit of the resources | 1:15:10 | |
| of your great kingdom to make it happen in our day. | 1:15:14 | |
| That black children and white children | 1:15:19 | |
| can play together in schools that are strong, | 1:15:21 | |
| Lord, in this own very city we see great division, | 1:15:26 | |
| in our own community on campus we see great division, | 1:15:31 | |
| and how we long for a day when you will bring us together, | 1:15:35 | |
| and not just out of programs or out of a particular week, | 1:15:38 | |
| but Lord, the unity would be built on love and respect | 1:15:45 | |
| for one dignity recognizing that every man and woman here | 1:15:47 | |
| is made in your image. | 1:15:52 | |
| Stir in us, Lord, hearts that yearn for the things | 1:15:55 | |
| that are on your heart. | 1:15:58 | |
| In Christ's name, amen. | 1:16:01 | |
| I wanna remind you to join us for a reception | 1:16:04 | |
| in the alumni room of the Divinity School | 1:16:07 | |
| immediately following the service. | 1:16:10 | |
| (organ music) | 1:16:16 | |
| (choir singing) | 1:16:56 | |
| (organ music) | 1:20:48 |
Item Info
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