“A symbol of the divisions of men on the face of the earth. For here on either side of the wall are Godâs children and no man-made barrier can obliterate that fact.
Regardless of the barriers of race, creed, ideology, or nationality, there is an inescapable destiny, which binds us together. There is a common humanity which makes us sensitive to the sufferings of one another.â – Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dr. King is well known for his sermons, his speeches and addresses at marches and rallies, his letters and correspondence, and for being quoted out of context by people who even today oppose his body of work, goals, and objectives in the attempt to make themselves sound less bigoted and more enlightened. There are one series of his sermons and speeches that are not, however, very well known. In 1964 Dr. King was invited to speak, or preach if you’d prefer that term, in both East and West Berlin. As everyone who actually knows something about Dr. King’s life’s work and beliefs can imagine, which excludes Vice President Pence, Dr. King was not very thrilled with the idea of the Berlin Wall or other walls erected for similar reasons. In the first 33 seconds of the video below, you can see Dr. King express his actual sentiments when seeing the Berlin Wall in person for the first time.
Unfortunately Dr. King’s actual speeches in East and West Berlin were not broadcast, so unlike many of his other addresses and sermons and speeches, there is no video available. Unless, perhaps, there is some old footage gathering dust and waiting to be published in a German government archive. Fortunately, there is a transcript of his remarks on the East German side, which, according to reports, was virtually the same as his address in West Berlin minus a few key passages most likely removed because he was speaking from within the DDR.
My dear Christian friends of East Berlin, I want to say what a great privilege and a great pleasure it is for me to come and share this period of worship and fellowship with you this evening.
I come to you not altogether as a stranger, for the name that I happen to have is a name so familiar to you, so familiar to Germany and so familiar to the world and I am happy that my parents decided to name me after the great Reformer. I am happy to bring you greetings from your Christian brothers and sisters of West Berlin, where I have just spent a day in that community and certainly one of the most rewarding days of my life.
Certainly I bring you greetings from your Christian brothers and sisters of the United States. In a real sense we are all one in Christ Jesus, for in Christ there is no East or West, no North or South but one great fellowship of love throughout the whole, wide world.
As you know that is the great social revolution taking place in the United States of America and it is the struggle to free some twenty million Negroes from the long night of segregation and discrimination.
We have attempted to conduct our struggle for freedom in the United States on the basis of Christian friendship. Therefore we struggle with non-violence and love and as the basic elements of our struggle.
I solicit your continuous support and backing as we continue to go on in our efforts to make brotherhood a reality all over that country and over the world.
May I say that it is indeed an honor to be in this city, which stands as a symbol of the divisions of men on the face of the earth. For here on either side of the wall are Godâs children and no man-made barrier can obliterate that fact. Whether it be East or West, men and women search for meaning, hope for fulfillment, yearn for faith in something beyond themselves, and cry desperately for love and community to support them in this pilgrim journey.
Regardless of the barriers of race, creed, ideology, or nationality, there is an inescapable destiny which binds us together. There is a common humanity which makes us sensitive to the sufferings of one another. And for many of us, there is one Lord, one faith and one baptism which binds us in a common history, a common calling, and a common hope for the salvation of the world.
But here the similarity ends. For in the truth our situations are quite different. It is with some reluctance that I attempt to bring you Godâs word for your situation. (I am not familiar with your plight. I donâ t know your politics.) I have not been here long enough to discern Godâs plan for you and his calling to you. However, I would like to share with you the way in which the spirit moves our midst in the freedom struggle in the southern United States.
Throughout the New Testament there runs the theme of reconciliation. Corinthians speak of a ministry reconciliation which has been given to us in Christ. Ephesians tells us of a plan of God to âunite all things in him, things of heaven and things on earth.â The Gospels speak directly and in parables about the responsibility which we have for one another regardless of the differences of race and nation. And so it is not difficult for us to go a step further and assume that wherever reconciliation is taking place, wherever men are âbreaking down the dividing walls of hostilityâ which separate them from their brothers, there Christ continues to perform his ministry of reconciliation and to fulfill his promise that âLo I am with you always, even to the end of the age.â
It is with great humility that we in the United States have taken the liberty to assume that we are serving as agents of God’s reconciliation. This is through no particular virtue of ours, for we are most aware of our unworthyness. And yet, every Negro who has ever been involved in our movement very soon becomes caught up in a web of destiny which convicts us in the faith that God is working with us and through us in ways that we cannot fully understand. It is the messianism of a moment in history. For we believe that the Negro is called to be the conscience of our nation, and that in being that conscience, we will permit our nation to fulfill its particular role in history under God.
But, under God, every nation has a destiny: and the âpeople of Godâ in that nation have a peculiar responsibility to witness to that destiny and work toward itâs fulfillment. (Here in Berlin, one cannot help being aware that you are the hub around which turns the wheel of history. For just as we are proving to be the testing ground of races living together in spite of their differences: you are testing the possibility of co-existence for the two ideologies which now compete for world dominance. If ever there were a people who should be constantly sensitive to their destiny, the people of Berlin, east and west, should be they.)
Perhaps then we can share with one another of the blessings of God, which we have received in our particular situations. (Realizing that the situations are different, and that you must discern that which is relevant to your place here in Germany.) Let me begin to tell you some of the things that we have learned about Godâs action in our midst.
This period of our freedom struggle began when Mrs. Rosa Parks, of Montgomery, Alabama, refused to move to the rear of the bus, as was the southern custom in 1955. In refusing to move, she did not resist, or respond discourteously in any way, she merely said by her presence that âit is wrong for a woman to have to give up her seat to a man merely because his skin is white and her skin is black.â This was no planned protest. It was one of those spontaneous events of conscience, which the spirit calls for on occasion.
Immediately, the leadership of the Negro community organized to support Mrs. Parks when she was arrested, and called for a one-day boycott of the buses of the entire city. The boycott was so effective, and the response and indignation of the Negro citizens so great that we continued the protest until the city of Montgomery and the bus company agreed to treat Negro passengers with courtesy and respect.
(It took 381 days before the city would admit itâs wrong and seek to rectify it, and even then it was in response to a court suit, which abolished the entire system of segregation in bus travel.)
Several things happened as a result of this local protest, which indicate to us how Godâs grace continues to operate amongst us. First, an isolated incident grew into a local movement. Then, this local movement spread to other cities and gave us a south wide protest which awakened the majority of the Negro population in the United States. Second, a new pattern of social change became a part of the life and history of our nation, for the philosophy and method of Mohandas Gandhi joined with the Negroâs Christian tradition and gave us philosophical rationale and practical method by which our faith might be transmitted into mass movement for the liberation of our people from over 400 years of oppression.
But the results were far out of keeping with our expectations. Our only explanation can be that we were gripped by God in his holy kairos; our only response could be that of Martin Luther, âHere I stand, I can do no other, so help me God.â
And so our movement began. Not by the plans of men, but by one of the accidents of God. Men were merely called to respond in obedience. To suffer if necessary, to face death, and to die if this be the price of faith. But it was out of the suffering and sacrifice of the poor folk of Montgomery, Alabama, that God brought forth a powerful modern missionary action movement.
From this beginning, the students followed with a movement to desegregate lunch counters, which swept across the South and desegregated lunch counters in more than two hundred cities in a year s time. Here the students learned that it was better to go to jail in dignity than to live in humiliation. More than 5,000 students served time in prison during the year of 1960 but this gave us the base for massive action across the South.
(Finally came Birmingham in 1963 when the movement finally ignited the conscience of the entire nation and President Kennedy moved to bring about an end to legalized segregation in every area of public life.
It was 1964 before the Civil Rights Act finally passed Congress. We were engaged in continuing our protest in St. Augustine, Florida, the nationâs oldest city. This was the most brutal situation we had confronted at that time. Demonstrators were beaten daily by mobs of Ku Klux Klansmen as police stood by and offered no protection. It was the twenty-third psalm which encouraged the people as they went out on each demonstration. âYea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for thou art with me.â And indeed this was in the shadow of death. But as the Civil Rights Act was signed into law, and the power of the federal government was declared through the courts. The people experienced the truth of the remainder of that psalm, and as they were served in restaurants where they had been beaten only a few days before, they understood for the first time the meaning of that beautiful promise of Godâs âpreparing a table before me in the presence of mine enemies,⊠anointing my head with oil, `til my cups runneth overâ and we witnessed together to our living experience that, âsurely Goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord, forever.â)
Now we have left Egypt of slavery. We have journeyed and suffered through the âwildernessâ of segregation. For the first time, we stand on the mountain looking into the âpromised landâ of creative integrated living. But there are giants in that land, and many of our leaders falter.
Once we reached the top of the mountain we could look out into two directions. As we look back into the wilderness, we see our brethren who have borne the burdens of slavery and segregation much too long. Many have not had the opportunity to get an education, which will prepare them for the âpromised landâ. Many are hungry and physically undernourished as a result of the journey. May bear on their souls the scars of bitterness and hatred, seared there by the crowded slum conditions, police brutality, and the exploitation they experienced on the rural southern plantations. Still others lack self-confidence and courage to compete in this new land and they wallow in drunkenness and despair.
On the other side of the mountain, we see the giants. (We see massive urban societies, dominated by well-entrenched political machines that see new voters as a threat to their power. We see automation, replacing manpower at the rate of 41,000 jobs per week. We see real estate men serving as slum landlords anxiously waiting to crowd us into new racial ghettos. We see big business, running away with profits and leaving behind a wake of unemployment and poverty far worse than the wilderness conditions we have just left behind.)
But God has brought us along this far, and we sing a song in our movement, âAinât gonna let nobody turn me aroundâ. And when we have been afraid in the past, we have sung this song and kept on marching. And so, we will not turn back. We will learn to confront these demons just as we have those in the past, and we shall overcome.
(It will not be easy, and one of the things that we have learned is the necessity for a group action in the public sector of life. The days of a mere personal piety have long since past. Group action, even mass action, in the public realms of politics and economics is the only way that we can get hope to confront the tremendous forces of our time.)
We have found ourselves literally âthrown to the lionsâ in the arena of life. No longer is there any question of what St. Paul meant by principalities and powers. We are just beginning to learn the rules of this new order. We are often abused, but we are learning to work together to fulfill our dreams through the political structures of our society.
(We will elect school officials that will educate our children fairly. We will elect legislators who will provide us with social security and medical care and who will extend their concern to our brothers in other lands through creative foreign aid programs. We will give our support to those businesses who hire men without regard to race or color and who exhibit a human concern for their employees who are about to be displaced by automation; and we will withhold our support from those businesses and industries which do not follow fair and humane personnel policies. We do not have any great wealth or political power, but we are often the difference between profit and loss for many particular industry, and God has so placed us geographically that we wield political power far out proportion of our numerical strength. Therefore, we will be wise stewards over our talents. We will not use our talents to cooperate with evil, but we will use our talents to build up that which is good.)
âGod of our weary years, God of our silent tears, thou who has brought us thus far on the way. Thou who hast by thy might, led us into the light, keep us forever in the path we pray.â
This is our prayer. For it is only by the might and power of God that we have been able to proceed. We have been as a âvalley of dry bonesâ and the spirit of the lord breathed into us the strength and breath of life and the dry bones of my people put on flesh and courage and faith and began marching on to freedom land.
This is a faith which has kept us going. This is a faith which has enabled us to face death. This is a faith which has given us a way when there seemed to be no way. This is a faith that let us face our daily crucifixions, in the knowledge that Godâs world is changed through resurrection and there can be no resurrection without crucifixion. This is a faith I commend to you Christians here in Berlin. A living, active, massive, public faith that affirms the victory of Jesus Christ over the world, whether it be an Eastern world or a Western World.
(This is the faith with which I return home to the Southland.) With this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain despair a stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of the nations into beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to suffer together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day.
At this link you’ll find a lecture by Michael P. Steinberg, President of the American Academy in Berlin, speaking about Dr. King’s speeches in East and West Berlin if you’re looking fore greater historical context.
Given the day, the man in whose honor it is set aside as a national holiday, and the incomplete and unfinished cause of his life’s work that falls to the rest of us to continue, even if we cannot complete it either, we’ll end with this abolitionist variant of My Country Tis of Thee. Done in a minor key, it becomes a haunting spiritual begging the divine providence cited by the Founders in the Declaration, Constitution, and their other writings to finally bring liberty to all..
Open thread.
The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr’s 1964 Remarks About the Berlin WallPost + Comments (45)