January 14, 2002






PULPIT POWER: The Legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.
___By Ben Johnson
___Religion News Service
___HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (RNS)--Ask the average person to recite two or three lines from a sermon by Martin Luther King Jr. and you're likely to hear a familiar refrain: "Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!"
___Those are the noted last three sentences from King's "I Have a Dream" speech delivered during the 1963 March on Washington. Considering the major role King played in the civil rights movement in the 20th century, it's easy to forget he was a preacher at heart, said Mervy
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
n Warren, a professor at Oakwood College in Huntsville.
___As the son, grandson and great-grandson of black Baptist preachers in the South, King sprang from "the womb of the black church," Warren writes in his new book, "King Came Preaching: The Pulpit Power of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr."
___Unlike King biographers Lewis Baldwin, James Cone and Taylor Branch, Warren doesn't focus on King's life and social activism. Instead, he meticulously examines King's sermons.
Read excerpts from King's sermons.
___Ever since he was a doctoral student at Michigan State University in the 1960s, Warren has studied King's sermons and preaching style. His dissertation was a scholarly look at King the preacher.
___The new book is a complete rewriting and updating of that dissertation, scripted for lay rather than scholarly consumption. In it Warren dissects King's research, writing, speaking and delivery styles. The book includes the full text of four of King's sermons that never had been published.
___One of these was delivered at Oakwood College March 2, 1962, during King's only visit to Huntsville.
___Warren, an Oakwood student then, heard King's sermon. It inspired him to study King as part of his doctoral work in philosophy.
___Warren's doctoral adviser approved the dissertation subject but mandated that Warren get King's approval as well as a personal interview. In a stroke of luck, one of Michigan State's few black professors then, Robert Green, had spent time with King during the Selma march. He was able to set up an interview for Warren.
___Prior to speaking at a Chicago church, King spent a couple of hours with Warren.
___"He exhausted every question I had to ask him," Warren said during an interview in his Huntsville home.
___Warren writes: "Here was a man who spoke and served from principles hammered out primarily from family, the Bible and theological underpinnings. All of his responses to my questions bore indelible marks of a conscious fulfillment of the understanding of God's law of love incumbent on his life--love of God and love of his fellow human beings--and he could do none other, come what might."
___Warren interviewed numerous King associates and biographers and consulted some of the hundreds of books and thousands of newspaper and magazine articles about King.
___The result is a painstakingly researched book that examines common notions about King's sermons. The book includes some little-known facts, including this one: By the time King turned 13, he had tried to commit suicide twice--both times in the wake of traumatic events involving his grandmother, first a serious accident and later her death.
___Another observation deals with King's decision to enter the ministry after considering becoming a doctor and then a lawyer. He wrestled with his conscience and his soul.
___When Time magazine selected him as the 1964 "Man of the Year" (the same year he won the Nobel Peace Prize), King told a reporter: "I had doubts that religion was intellectually respectable. I revolted against the emotionalism of Negro religion, the shouting and the stamping. I didn't understand it, and it embarrassed me."
___There are four ways to deliver sermons, according to scholars who study them: extemporaneous, reading a manuscript, memorization and impromptu or off-the-cuff.
___King preferred extemporaneous speeches, often using the same subject matter and many references, but always varying the content. Warren quotes King as saying he preferred to write out his sermons, making numerous revisions. But when he stepped to the pulpit, King generally used only notes or an outline, never a prepared text from which he read.
___This approach made his sermons more spontaneous, Warren observes. Writing out the sermon helped him familiarize himself with his ideas, pushed him to select just the right language and helped him organize the material.
___King told Warren during their interview, "Occasionally, I read a policy speech or an address for civil rights, but I never read a sermon. Without a manuscript, I can communicate better with an audience. Furthermore, I have greater rapport and power when I am able to look the audience in the eye."
___Though King asked Warren to send him a copy of the dissertation after it was completed, King was killed before Warren could comply. Years later, at the invitation of Coretta Scott King, Warren presented copies of his work to her, and they now are part of the King collection at the Center for Non-Violent Social Change in Atlanta.
___Martin Luther King Jr., shown here at a civil rights march in Selma, Ala., in 1965, is remembered for his political and social action, but his roots were in the Baptist church, where he was an able orator.
___

The Baptist Standard



News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.


Contents/ Masthead / Why We're Here / Links / Archive / E-mail us/ SUBSCRIBE!/ Signup for FirstLook