US Churches in MLK Anniversary March on Washington
Source: WCC
Thousands of demonstrators joined faith and community leaders in the 60th Anniversary March on Washington to the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, despite intense summertime heat. Many carried signs and flags. Children came with their parents and elders, many of whom remembered the day back in August 1963 when Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr and his "I have a dream" speech became icons in the push for justice and peace. Some carried photos taken 60 years ago.
Then and now, the people reaffirmed that their fight for justice and peace that is not over. A recurrent theme was: 'We must reset the moral compass of the nations'.
World Council of Churches (WCC) president from North America Rev Dr Angelique Walker-Smith personally brought greetings to the crowd from the WCC, and she reflected on the power of faith, resiliency, and resolve.
"Yes, we have marched nationally and globally and we are still marching!" she said. "Let us remember we must always march forward, for to do otherwise is to give in to death which we can never do!"
Walker-Smith added: "Let us be clear that we are a global and beautiful people seeking the embodiment of reparatory justice and God-given freedoms, even as we seek to find new ways to love one another having learned from our past and moving forward in faith, by faith and grace."
Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA president and general secretary, asked those gathered: when are we going to say enough is enough?
"Crazily, it is unsafe to be Black and Brown anywhere, anytime in America," she said. "This is an all-out war against us."
The same day as the March on Washington, a gunman took the lives of three people of African descent in Jacksonville, Florida at a local store, a hate-based attack originally intended for Edward Waters University, a campus related to the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a historic Black church and a WCC member church.
It's a struggle everyday for people to maintain their personhood, noted McKenzie. "People feel they have a right to revoke our rights-basic rights-all of them making a mockery out of democracy," said McKenzie. "This is the hour to keep believing that justice is still possible even when democracy is on life support."
This is the time, McKenzie urged. "We must have the will to lead and not just react," she said. "We must reset the moral compass of our nations. Now is the time. Now is the hour. The future is in your hands."
Bishop Charley Hames Jr, presiding bishop of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, reflected that the March on Washington in 1963 was not really a singular moment but a catalyst for change reverberating through generations.
"As we stand here today, we recognize that the fight for equality, justice, and civil rights is not over," Hames said. "We must carry the torch they lit and continue their mission to create a truly inclusive and equitable society."
The March on Washington 60 years ago was a powerful statement against racial injustice, acknowledged Hames. "They demonstrated the power of the collective action and the strength of unity," he said. "The March on Washington reminds us that we must address all forms of systemic oppression and discrimination."
Today, we still witness injustices that demand our attention and action, Hames added. "We must challenge prejudice and discrimination where we encounter them," he said. "We must amplify the voices of the marginalized communities."
Marching is still necessary, Hames urged, otherwise: "My grandson will be seen as a weapon and not as a child of God."
Bishop Talbert Wesley Swan II from the Church of God in Christ reflected that we live in strange times. "We are here to say you cannot erase us," he said. "We're not going anywhere."
On 4 July, 1968, Dr Martin Luther King Jr should have entered the Uppsala Cathedral in Sweden to preach at the opening service of the World Council of Churches (WCC) 4th Assembly.
But King was assassinated on 4 April of that same year. On the 75th anniversary of WCC, we especially remember these ecumenical moments of profound lament still shape our ecumenical commitment to justice and peace today.
Rev Dr W Franklyn Richardson, chair of the National Action Network, a primary hosting organization of the March on Washington, said the march was not merely a march of reflection but a march of projecting into the future.
Richardson is also a former member of the WCC central committee. "We will not let the clock turn back," he said. "We've come through great difficulties and great hardships."
Richardson noted that the nation was built on the backs of African-Americans and African people. "Today we come to serve notice that we are determined to collect what we invested-what our foremothers and forefathers deposited in this nation. Therefore we are all here because we all have an investment in this nation turning and living up to its possibilities."
In a letter to all those gathered, WCC general secretary Rev Prof Dr Jerry Pillay agreed with Richardson that this is not the first wave.
"Today we see far because we stand on the shoulders of the giants of 1963," Pillay wrote. "The march must continue. I exhort you, sisters and brothers, to make sure that we are not the last wave," he urged. "The demands must be taken to every nook and cranny of the earth!"
LINK
Text: Martin Luther King, Jr 'I Have a Dream' speech: www.indcatholicnews.com/news/47888