Here's what I said:
My parents always remembered
clearly where they had been when they heard the news from Warm Springs,
Georgia, on April 12, 1945, that Franklin Delano Roosevelt had died. And like
most people my own age, I remember where I was—in my fifth-grade teacher’s
classroom—when we learned that President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. I
don’t, however, remember where I was on Thursday night, April 4th, 1968;
it was a school night, so at a few minutes after seven I was probably at home,
and I suppose we would have heard of Dr. King’s death later that evening from
Walter Cronkite, as we were not a Huntley-Brinkley family. Nor do I remember
hearing Bobby Kennedy’s speech about Dr. King’s death, delivered that night in
our own state capital of Indianapolis.
I do, however,
remember going to school the next morning, Friday, at Culver Military Academy,
the excellent private school in my home town, and discovering that Mr. Gordon
Hough, our freshman English teacher, was still
so shattered by the loss that he couldn’t pull himself together to do anything,
but just sat there on his desk, and quietly sent us away.
I had a colleague
once, though, who impressed me with a different memory of that week. He had
been a choirboy at the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St. Paul—the National
Cathedral, in Washington, D.C.—and he remembered hearing Dr. King’s last
sermon, delivered there on Sunday, March 31. The sermon was entitled,
“Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution," and Dr. King took as his
text, from the 16th Chapter of the Book of Revelation, "Behold I make all things new; former
things are passed away." This was the sermon which Dr. King closed with
the words that are now inscribed on his memorial in Washington, his declaration
that “With this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair the
stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling
discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood.”
At the center of the sermon, it seems to me, at the heart of
it, Dr. King talks about why he happened to be in Washington that Sunday in the
first place. He was, of course, happy to preach in the great Cathedral: but Washington
was very much on his mind at the time because, ever since the previous fall, he
had been devoting his energies, and those of the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, to a major new project scheduled to begin in the spring of 1968. He
called it the Poor People’s Campaign. If
you will allow me a rather long quotation, this is what he said to the
cathedral congregation on that last Sunday morning of this life,
In a
few weeks some of us are coming to Washington to see if the will is still alive
or if it is alive in this nation. We are coming to Washington in a Poor
People’s Campaign. Yes, we are going to bring the tired, the poor, the huddled
masses. We are going to bring those who have known long years of hurt and
neglect. We are going to bring those who have come to feel that life is a long
and desolate corridor with no exit signs. We are going to bring children and
adults and old people, people who have never seen a doctor or a dentist in
their lives.
We are
not coming to engage in any histrionic gesture. We are not coming to tear up
Washington. We are coming to demand that the government address itself to the
problem of poverty. We read one day, "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." But if a man doesn’t have a job or an
income, he has neither life nor liberty nor the possibility for the pursuit of
happiness. He merely exists.
We are
coming to ask America to be true to the huge promissory note that it signed
years ago. And we are coming to engage in dramatic nonviolent action, to call
attention to the gulf between promise and fulfillment; to make the invisible
visible.
Why do
we do it this way? We do it this way because it is our experience that the
nation doesn’t move around questions of genuine equality for the poor and for
black people until it is confronted massively, dramatically in terms of direct
action.
Many of Dr. King’s
friends and allies in 1968 thought the Poor People’s Campaign was a mistake, that he was
losing his focus. Desegregation, voting rights, fair jury trials and similar
issues had been Dr. King’s specialty and the main thrust of the SCLC; but on
April 4, 1967, King had, in another powerful sermon at the equally famous
Riverside Church in New York City, come out against the war in Vietnam, finding
a connection between the Civil Rights movement and the Peace Movement that many
other people just did not see. So when he began adding poverty to the mix in
the fall of 1967, as the idea of the Poor People’s Campaign began to grow, people told
him that he was dividing his energies among three causes, and thereby weakening
his support of all of them.
Dr. King was
convinced, though, that these three causes were deeply and intrinsically
related. Indeed, the National Cathedral sermon not only talks about the Poor People’s Campaign but also firmly denounces
the war in closely related terms, saying “It has strengthened the
military-industrial complex; it has strengthened the forces of reaction in our
nation. It has put us against the self-determination of a vast majority of the
Vietnamese people, and put us in the position of protecting a corrupt regime
that is stacked against the poor.” And, in searing language that could have
been written yesterday as easily as fifty years ago, he condemned racism that
day as strongly as he ever had: again, quoting--
We are challenged to eradicate the
last vestiges of racial injustice from our nation. I must say this morning that
racial injustice is still the black man’s burden and the white man’s shame.
It is an unhappy truth that racism
is a way of life for the vast majority of white Americans, spoken and unspoken,
acknowledged and denied, subtle and sometimes not so subtle—the disease of racism
permeates and poisons a whole body politic. And I can see nothing more urgent
than for America to work passionately and unrelentingly—to get rid of the
disease of racism.
Something positive must be done.
Everyone must share in the guilt as individuals and as institutions. The
government must certainly share the guilt; individuals must share the guilt;
even the church must share the guilt.
So, then, whatever
others may have thought, Dr. King on
that last Sunday certainly felt that poverty and peace and racism were all
parts of the same puzzle, all parts of the same fundamental challenge to
America and indeed to the world.
Dr. King argues
that poverty is a violation of human rights by appealing to the grand language
of Mr. Jefferson’s declaration, that sweeping assertion of self-evident truths
about unalienable rights that belong to individuals not as principles of
government but as gifts of their Creator: “if a man doesn’t have a job or an income,” King says, “he has neither
life nor liberty nor the possibility for the pursuit of happiness. He merely
exists.” And, as far as it goes, Dr. King’s interpretation is perfectly sound.
But it does seem to me that he is ignoring another part of Mr. Jefferson’s
thought, a part of Jefferson’s thought that shaped America far more profoundly
than the soaring language of the Declaration—which is, after all, just a
declaration and not the constitution or a law.
As the great American historian Edmund S. Morgan pointed out
in his ground-breaking book American
Slavery, American Freedom, back in 1975, Jefferson was, like so many of the
Founding Fathers, a great student of ancient Rome, and the message, above all
messages, that they took from that study was that Rome fell into tyranny
because of the political power of the common people, the political power of the
huge mob of Romans who had to be kept satisfied with bribes of cheap food and
free entertainment—with bread and circuses, as the Romans would have said.
Jefferson, Adams, Madison—the whole pack of them thought that poor people are, by their very nature, the enemies of the
state, and they quite literally and specifically designed America to deny power to the poor. America is a
republic, not a democracy, founded from the beginning on a deep fear of the poor and on an absolute terror of the enslaved—and all of this nation’s undemocratic features, and the cultural
attitudes that result from them, are fundamental parts of the original plan to
keep those groups in their place. Dr. King’s expansive reading of the
declaration may make sense to us, but
Jefferson would have rejected with horror the implication that the government should do something about
poverty. Once a nation starts giving bread to its poor people, the Founding
Fathers would have told us, the end is near.
So part of what I am saying is that Dr. King’s struggle
continues today, fifty years later, because it is a struggle against ideas and
attitudes that are more American than
apple pie. I heard on the radio on Friday evening the honorable governor of
Utah talking about imposing a work requirement for various sorts of poor
relief, because people shouldn’t be “on the dole”—if you just take handouts, he
said, you lose your self-respect. But this is nonsense. I stand here this
afternoon with degrees from some of the best universities in this country,
including both Harvard and Yale, and someplace in my attic I have the receipts
to prove that whatever work I did to help pay for that education, and whatever
loans I took out, were only teaspoons in
the ocean compared to what it actually cost. And I don’t feel that all
those scholarships reduced my self-respect. Not do I feel my self-respect
slipping away when I drive on a free interstate highway or visit a free
national park. And after shelling out a chunk of change for medical deductibles
this week, I am certainly not going
to lose any self-respect when I sign up for Medicare next June, assuming it’s
still around by then. Nor, I think, do any major corporations lose self-respect
when they line up for tax breaks and handouts at the public trough. What people
like the honorable Governor really mean, though they may not even realize it
themselves, is that “people who are not
respectable in the first place lose self-respect if you give them free
help.” And that’s what Jefferson would want
the governor to think, because if we
think like that we are less likely to give
those people the help, the bread and circuses, that will, in the opinion of the
Founders, undermine the Republic.
So, then, part of what I am laying out here is a quibble with
Dr. King about America’s deepest values, as represented by Jefferson and his
colleagues, great men though they were; following Professor Morgan, I think Dr.
King’s reading of their work is entirely too optimistic. But the other part of
what I want to say is that Dr. King is surely,
ultimately, right about the values to which he calls us. And to make that
point, let me go back further in American history than Dr. King did, back
almost another 150 years, back to the ship Arbella,
which sailed from England on April 8, 1630, arriving in Massachusetts on June
12. The Puritan passengers of Arbella
and its companion ships were to be the founders of the Massachusetts Bay
colony, and their Governor was John Winthrop, who preached, while they were
still at sea, a sermon called “A Model of Christian Charity.” Presidents and
politicians have often quoted the last lines of this sermon, where Winthrop
applies to his new colony the words Jesus used to refer to the Church, “You
shall be as a city set upon a hill.” But what the Presidents and the
politicians leave out is the reason why:
Winthrop doesn’t think the colonists will attract the attention of the world
just because they have started a new
colony. Not at all: they will attract attention because of the covenant they
have made with themselves and with God. The message of the sermon is that the
colony, like any place else, will certainly end up with both rich people and
poor people: but unlike other places, the rich people of this colony will
remember their covenant and will understand that it is their obligation to help the poor. Winthrop
says “If thy brother be in want and thou canst help him, thou needst not make
doubt of what thou shouldst do; if thou lovest God thou must help him.” Notice
that there is no quibbling here about losing self-respect: Winthrop is brutally
straightforward: “If your brother or sister needs help, and you can help, if
you love God then you must help.” Speaking as he is to a Christian audience,
Winthrop appeals to the idea of the Body of Christ, but as we have heard in
this afternoon’s lessons, he could make equally good arguments from Jewish or
from Muslim principles as well. This new colony, he says, has entered into a
covenant with God, and one element of that covenant is that “We must be willing
to abridge ourselves of our superfluities, for the supply of others’
necessities.” What the world will marvel at, in Winthrop’s opinion, is not the
mere fact of a new colony, but the fact of a colony which dares to take seriously “the counsel of Micah, to do justly,
to love mercy, to walk humbly with our God.” America is not a city set upon a
hill because Jefferson’s and Madison’s republic continues to creak
undemocratically along: rather, it is a city set upon a hill because, and if,
and when, and to the extent that, we see it as the basic covenant of our
society that we are willing to abridge ourselves for the supply of others. If,
fifty years after the death of Dr. King, and fifty years after Bobby Kennedy’s
funeral procession passed through the People’s Campaign’s “Resurrection City”
in Washington, D.C.; if now, at last, in defiance of President Jefferson and
the governor of Utah, we can truly become a nation that, as a result of its
fundamental covenant, sees the needy, sees its own immense wealth, and
concludes that its duty is therefore to help the needy, then truly “we shall be
as a city upon a hill, and the eyes of all people will be upon us.”