Friday, February 20, 2026

1992 MLK Sermon at Temple Emanuel: King: Lessons for the Closing Decade of the Century

KING: LESSONS FOR THE CLOSING DECADE OF THE CENTURY

David Fishback 
Temple Emanuel, Kensington, MD 
January 17, 1992 

Most of us tend to think of the holiday celebrating the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., as a time to reflect on the time in our history when Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement forced America to examine itself closely to confront the simple fact that the principles upon which we belleved our country was founded were being ignored with respect to our citizens of African-American descent. 

The American Jewish Community vas particularly receptive to this message, not just because it evoked our ancient stories of slavery and freedom, but because Jevs in Europe vere always made to feel as outsiders, just as blacks vere in America. Our ancestors came to America so that they and their children and grandchildren would never again have to be outsiders, oppressed by undemocratic governments and hostile "host" cultures. For in America -- a "nation of immigrants", a "nation of nations" -- the Dream was that all peoples could belong, that no one need be an outsider. 

The Dream, of course, was imperfect, but the American Jewish experience taught us that, with every succeeding generation, the reality came closer to the theory. As we became comfortable in America, the glaring exception to the American Dream was finally confronted. 

I have been a citizen member of the Montgomery County Government's Martin Luther King Commemorative Committee since 1986. I applied for appointment to the Committee as an outgrowth of my work in anti-poverty programs in the late '60s, my experience as a VISTA Volunteer in Memphis the year after King's assassination, and my two years as co- president of the PTA of the Rosemary Hills magnet integration primary school. In preparation for my work on the Committee, I read several of Dr. King's books, written between 1956 and 1967. I had always thought of him as an essentially secular figure, using the church as simply an organizing base. But in delving into his writings and speeches, I learned that the religious basis of his vision vas deep and profound. 

Religion for Dr. King was not merely an organizing tool. Rather, it was the well-spring of a public morality which King saw as firmly rooted in, and springing from, the best Judeo-Christian traditions. He spoke with a religious voice, harkening to the words of the Old Testament prophets. "Let Justice well up as waters," he quoted from Amos (5:24), "and righteousness as a mighty stream. " Dr. King expressed not a religion of the rulers, but a religion of the masses: Speaking to power, condemning injustice, calling on an entire society to live up to the beliefs it held, but did not practice. 

He wove a vital synthesis of religious conviction and belief in American democratic principles. In a speech in 1961, Dr. King observed that "America is essentially a dream, a dream as yet unfulfilled. It is a dream where men of all races, of all nationalities and of all creeds can live together as brothers. The substance of the dream is expressed in these words, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.' This is the dream. Ever since the Founding Fathers of our nation [King continued] dreamed this noble dream, America has been something of a schizophrenic society, tragically divided against herself. On the one hand we have proudly professed the principles of democracy, and on the other hand ve have sadly practiced the very antithesis of those principles." 

Unlike our prophets of ancient days, Dr. King went beyond words. He acted. He reminded us that "human progress is neither automatic nor inevitable. No social advance rolls in on the wheels of inevitablity; it comes through the tireless efforts and persistent work of dedicated individuals, who are willing to be co-workers with God." In a sermon the last year of his life, he explained that "time is neutral. It can be used either constructively or destructively. Without ... hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the primitive forces of social stagnation. So we must help time and realize that the time is always ripe to do right." In the end he was an optimist: "We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." 

This was all simply another way of stating the Jewish concept of Tikkun Olam -- humankind's effort to repair the world. Just as we saw in the black struggle for equal rights a replaying of our own earlier struggles, Dr. King saw in the American Jewish community a model for black progress. In 1967, explaining the "social mobility and status attained by Jews in America, he wrote that, and these are his exact words: "Jews progressed because they possessed a tradition of education combined with social and political action. The Jewish family enthroned education and sacrificed to get it. The result was far more than abstract learning. Uniting social action vith educational competence, Jews became enormously effective in political life. Those Jews who became lawyers, businessmen, writers, entertainers, union leaders, and medical men did not vanish into the pursuits of their trade. They lived an active life in political circles, learning the techniques and arts of politics. Nor was it only the rich who were involved in social and political action. Millions of Jews for half a century remained relatively poor, but they were far from passive in socíal and political areas. They lived in homes in which politics was a household word. They were deeply involved in radical parties, liberal parties, and conservative parties -- they formed many of them. Very few Jews sank into despair and escapism, even when discrimination assailed the spirit and corroded initiative. Their life-raft in the sea of discouragement was social action." So said Dr. King. Rabbi Schindler or Al Vorspan or David Saperstein could not have described our American Jewish traditions better. Maybe, sometimes, we need to be reminded of our recent heritage. 

Dr. King did not minimize what he called the "towering differences "between the black and Jewish experiences, " but he instructed his community that "the lesson of Jewish mass involvement in social and political action and education is worthy of emulation. . . . We in this generation must do the work and in so doing it stimulate our children to learn and acquire higher levels of skill and technique." 

King understood clearly what enabled the American Jewish community to succeed; and he clearly understood what It would take, beyond the end of legal segregation, to enable the African American community to succeed. Lessons for all of us. 

In the end, Dr. King saw into the Promised Land, although he did not live to fully experience it. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 -- which set the norms that even the most conservative of presidential administrations in the 1980 essentially embraced -- were only beginning to bear fruit when he was gunned down just before Passover in 1968. Yet, King had known it would be a long process. In 1965, he said that "it is the keystone of my faith in the future that we will someday achieve a thoroughly integrated society. I believe that before the turn of the century, if trends continue to move and develop as presently, we vill have moved a long, long way toward such a society."

Unfortunately, those trends slowed and at times have had reversals. It is easy these days to see how far we need to go. We must, at the same time, remember how far we have come from what was, in the lifetimes of the adults here this evening, an apartheid structure in much of our country. 

I believe that the wisdom of celebrating Dr. King lies not just in his call for justice and democracy, but in the means by which he achieved it: the doctrine of militant non-violent direct action. The success of this approach enabled us to undergo what was truly a revolution with very little bloodshed. Yes, we have our martyrs, black and white, Christian and Jewish. But they died in circumstances which strengthened the Movement, and which caused a rotten system to shrivel up in a few short years. This was, in fact, the Second American Revolution. And it was a world revolution because it dealt with the exercise of power in a revolutionary context, in a completely new way. In 1967, Dr. King explained that: "Power, properly understood, is the ability to achieve purpose. It is the strength required to bring about social, political or economic changes. In this sense, power is not only desirable, but necessary in order to Implement the demands of love and justice. One of the greatest problems of history is that the concepts of love and power are usually contrasted as polar opposites. What is needed is a realization that power without love is reckless and abusive, and that love without power is sentimental and anemic. Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice. Justice at its best is love correcting everything that stands against love." 

The Second American Revolution was not only a revolution in the change it brought about, but in the way it brought about change. 

The Second American Revolution -- of which Dr. King was the most visible leader -- may well turn out to be as Important, or even more important, in its world-wide impact as in its impact within our borders. 

To understand the impact of this Second American Revolution, it is well to remember the impact of the First American Revolution. In our First Revolution, the fledgling democracy of the colonial experience expelled, by force of arms, monarchical control. What emerged was the first real democracy on a significant scale in the history of the human race. Even though it was flawed by the genocide of the Native American population and the existence of African slavery in the South, the message which went out to the rest of the world was that governments could, to quote Jefferson, be based upon "the consent of the governed." 

That message led to a century and a half of upheavals which ended in the establishment of freedom and democracy In the Western half of Europe and Japan. That message also led to the Gandhian Movement in India, which led to another expulsion of colonial rule and the creation of democracy in the most trying of circumstances. Gandhi added a new element to the formula: militant, mass non-violent direct action. And although the Indian Independence Movement was often overcome b y terrible violence, particularly during the partition, it was instructive to a young minister in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955. 

By 1956, Dr. King was involved in intense discussions with two American disciples of Gandhi -- Bayard Rustin and Harris Wofford (yes, the same Harris Wofford who is now a Senator from Pennsylvania). In 1959, Dr. King traveled to India to learn more of Gandhi's impact: how his ideas were followed and how they were not. By the early 1960s, the strategy of militant non-violent resistance to injustice and oppression was being refined by Dr. King and his associates, bringing about the Second American Revolution: the turbulent, but relatively peaceful, end of American apartheid. 

So the ideas which began in the First American Revolution sung to Europe and Asia, where they were refined, and were sent back to America, where they sparked the Second American Revolution. The strategy of the Second American Revolution, in turn, spread back to the Eastern Hemisphere, as the historic events of the past few years have demonstrated. 

The success of King's adaptation led, in large part, to its adoption by the freedom movements of Eastern Europe and the Far East. The victorious non-violent massing of people opposing dictatorship and making it impossible for dictatorship to continue, was seen in Manila, Prague, East Berlin, and, finally, even in Moscow. Although it did not succeed in Beijing, it may rise again. It is not a coincidence that the Chinese erected a replica of the Statue of Liberty, and that, in the streets of Warsaw and Prague, the people sang "We Shall Overcome." 

Just as, at the Seder, we, as Jews, are admonished to retell to our children the story of the Exodus from Egypt, I believe that, at the King Holiday, we, as Americans, must retell to our children the story of our nation's internal Exodus from apartheid to equal rights. Both are stories of movement to freedom. While the first required flight from an oppressive society -- flight which we as Jews have been familiar with over the centuries -- the second tells perhaps an even more astounding story: a transformation of the oppressive society. In the Exodus from Egypt, Pharoah's "heart was hardened" after each plague. In the Exodus within America, Pharaoh was the entire white society, and ultimately its heart was softened and its soul vas changed by the non-violent demonstrations, the civil disobedience which forced the 20th Century Pharoah to itself be transformed. 

It would be wonderful if the American Exodus had already led to a Messianic Age. But it has not, just as the Egyptian Exodus did not. It took the Hebrew people 40 years in the desert to recover from slavery. It looks as though it may take American society a similar period of time - Into the next century --- to recover from slavery and apartheid. But this should not be cause for despair; that is the lesson we must learn from Dr. King: "The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends towards Justice." If we york for progress, we can achieve progress. If we work for a Messianic Age, we can continually improve our world, even in the face of seemingly insurmountable challenges. 

We, in America, face serious problems, some a residual of the American congenital defect (slavery and its consequences), some relating to a changing world economy. The people of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union face even greater problems, as they emerge from totalitarian rule, in trying to create, almost out of whole cloth, free democratic and economically functioning societies. But if we do not despair, if we are prepared to look our problems squarely in the face and find fair and practical solutions, we can continue to progress. And in succeeding, we will leave our children a better world. 

Dr. King described it well in his 1967 book Where De We Go From Here: Chaos or Community? 

"Some years ago [King wrote,] a famous novelist died. Among his papers was found a list of suggested plots for future stories, the most prominently underscored being this one: "A widely separated family inherits a house in which they have to live together.' This is the great new problem of mankind. We have inherited a large house, a great 'world house' in which we have to líve together -- black and white, Easterner and Westerner, Gentile and Jew, Catholic and Protestant, Moslem and Hindu -- a family unduly separated in ideas, culture and interest, who, because we can never again live apart, must learn somehow to live with each other in peace." 

Shalom.

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