Sermons and speeches of Martin Luther King Jr.
The sermons and speeches of Martin Luther King Jr., comprise an extensive catalog of American writing and oratory – some of which are internationally well-known, while others remain unheralded, and some await re-discovery.
Martin Luther King Jr. was a prominent African-American clergyman, a civil rights leader, and a Nobel laureate.
King himself observed, "In the quiet recesses of my heart, I am fundamentally a clergyman, a Baptist preacher."
Speechwriter and orator
The famous "I Have a Dream" address was delivered in August 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Less well-remembered are the early sermons of that young, 25-year-old pastor who first began preaching at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1954. As a political leader in the Civil Rights Movement and as a modest preacher in a Baptist church, King evolved and matured across the span of a life cut short. The range of his rhetoric was anticipated and encompassed within "The Three Dimensions of a Complete Life," which he preached as his trial sermon at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in 1954 and every year thereafter for the rest of his life.Sermons
- 1953 – "The Three Dimensions of a Complete Life."
- 1954 – "Rediscovering Lost Values," February 28, 1954.
- 1955 - "The Impassable Gulf," October 2, 1955.
- 1956 - "The Death of Evil Upon the Seashore"
- 1956 – "Paul's Letter to American Christians," November 4, 1956.
- 1957 – "The Birth of a New Nation," April 7, 1957.
- 1957 – "Loving Your Enemies," November 17, 1957.
- 1963 – "Eulogy for the Martyred Children," September 18, 1963.
- 1965 – "How Long, Not Long," also known as "Our God Is Marching On!" March 25, 1965.
- 1966 – "Guidelines for a Constructive Church", Delivered at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta, Georgia, on 5 June 1966.
- 1967 – "The Three Dimensions Of A Complete Life", Delivered at New Covenant Baptist Church, Chicago, Illinois, on April 9, 1967.
- 1967 - "Three Evils of Society" Address Delivered to the First Annual National Conference for New Politics
- 1967 - "The Casualties of the War in Vietnam" Address delivered at the Nation Institute
- 1967 – "Why Jesus Called A Man A Fool," Delivered on several occasions, including at Mt. Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church, Chicago, Illinois, on August 27, 1967.
- 1967 – "A Knock at Midnight," Delivered on several occasions, including the Installation Service of Ralph Abernathy at West Hunter Baptist Church February 11, 1962.
- 1968 – "The Drum Major Instinct", February 4, 1968.
- 1968 – "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution", March 31, 1968. Delivered at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.
- 1968 – "I've Been to the Mountaintop"," April 3, 1968.
- 1968 – "Why America May Go to Hell", planned to be delivered on April 7, 1968, but never delivered due to his assassination.
Speeches
Year | Date | Title | Location | Notes |
Undated | Who is Truly Great | Unknown | From the Archival Description Dr. King addresses the subject of individual greatness within society and how to truly go about achieving such a status. He begins by dispelling common signifiers of greatness before indicating that greatness can only be substantively measured through the ability to put others before self. Dr. King cites the life of Jesus Christ as an example of humility culminating into greatness. | |
Undated | 1951 - 1954 | The Negro Past and Its Challenge for the Future | Boston, MA | Negro History Week, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Twelfth Baptist Church |
1954 | February 28 | Rediscovering Lost Values | Detroit, Michigan | A sermonic presentation containing some themes which would become part of King's eternal philosophy. |
1954 | March 7 | Untitled Speech | Lansing, MI | King delivered a speech at the Union Baptist Church morning service. Later that day he spoke at Lansing's NAACP office. |
1954 | July 4 | A Religion of Doing | Montgomery, AL | From the Archival Description King asserts: "Christ is more concerned about our attitude towards racial prejudice and war than he is about our long processionals. He is more concerned with how we treat our neighbors than how loud we sing his praises." |
1955 | Between June 28 and July3 | The Task of Christian Leadership Training for Education in the Local Community | Atlantic City, NJ | From the Archival Description "King traveled to Atlantic City on 28 June to attend the National Sunday School and Baptist Training Union Congress.1 The subject matter of the following undated, typed manuscript indicates that it may have served as the basis for an address at the conference. King lays out three primary challenges facing local communities: economics, religious sectarianism, and race." |
1955 | May 8 | The Crisis in the Modern Family | Montgomery, AL | This is not technically a speech, however its language and outline are similar to many speeches Dr. King delivered in forthcoming years. |
1955 | December 5 | |||
1956 | May 17 | Death of Evil Upon the Seashore | New York, NY | From the Archival Description "King delivered this sermon at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, headquarters of the Episcopal diocese of New York State, in an ecumenical program commemorating the second anniversary of the Supreme Court's school desegregation decision in Brown v. Board of Education. Twelve thousand people attended the event" |
1956 | July 23 and October 16 | Non-Aggression Procedures to Interracial Harmony | Cortland, New York | From the Archive Description In this address to executives of the Home Mission Societies of Christian Friends, sponsored by the American Baptist Assembly, King responds to the question: "How will the oppressed peoples of the world wage their struggle against the forces of injustice?" Dismissing the use of violence as "both impractical and immoral," he endorses the method of nonviolent protest. This "mentally and spiritually aggressive" technique not only avoids "external physical violence," but "seeks to avoid internal violence spirit." He delivered the same speech on 16 October to the 131st Universalist Convention in Cortland, New York; it was edited for publication in the organization's journal. Significant variations between the Green Lake speech and the article are noted. |
1956 | September | Living Under the Tensions of Modern Life | Montgomery, Alabama | From the Archival Description The emotionally and physically trying bus boycott was in its tenth month when King delivered a sermon with this title. He laments: "Oh, I know all of us sometimes worry about our particular situation. We worry about the fact that we live now amid the tension of the Southland. We worry about what will, what's going to happen in this whole struggle toward integration." He appeals to them to draw on resources of strength and hope: |
1956 | December 15 | Desegregation and the Future | New York, New York | An early version of a speech topic Dr. King would speak on often. From the Archive Description Referring to his recent experience with segregated dining policies at the Atlanta airport, King claims that equality is not only quantitative but also qualitative, "not only a matter of mathematics and geometry," but "a matter of psychology." |
1956 | December 6 | Remember Who You Are | Howard University | From the Archival Description Dr. King addresses the student body and officials of Howard University with a poignant sermon entitled, "Remember Who You Are." The content of the sermon makes various references between Jesus, Shakespeare and Greek philosophers who sought to identify the mechanisms that made man important to society. |
1957 | Unknown | God's Judgment On Western Civilization | Unknown | This speech is documented as having occurred in 1957 but its content is unknown due its archival status. |
1957 | January 1 | "Facing the Challenge of A New Age," Address Delivered at NAACP Emancipation Day Rally | Atlanta, GA | From the Archival Description In celebration of the ninety-fourth anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, King addresses seven thousand people at a NAACP rally at Big Bethel AME Church on Auburn Avenue. Atlanta police covering the event reported that people in the church were "over packed, standing on the sidewalks and the basement of the church and every available place." |
1957 | February 17 | Untitled Speech | Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Lansing, MI | Donations at the Lansing speech went to the victims of racially motivated bombings of homes and churches. |
1957 | April 3 | Justice Without Violence | Brandeis University | From the Archival Description Dr. King gave this 1957 address to the Institute of Adult Education at Brandeis University in Boston, Massachusetts. |
1957 | April 10 | From the Archival Description The Citizens Committee of Greater St. Louis, a federation of several area ministerial groups, sponsored King's address at a Freedom Rally held to raise funds for the MIA. John E. Nance, a Morehouse classmate of Martin Luther King, Sr., introduced King, who captivated the "intensely integrated inter-racial audience" of eight thousand people at Kiel Auditorium. | ||
1957 | April 14 | Garden of Gethsemane | Montgomery, AL | When first read, the sermon is impressive for its interpretation of a pivotal biblical moment, yet, in considering events unfolding one decade later, the sermon is prophetic. From the Archival Description In this Palm Sunday sermon, King declares, "You can stand up amid despair. You can stand up amid persecution. You can stand up amid disappointment. You can stand up even amid death. But you don't worry because you know God is with you. You have made the transition. You have faced life's central test." |
1957 | April 25 | "The Role of the Church in Facing the Nation's Chief Moral Dilemma," | Nashville, TN | From the Archival Description The day after receiving the Social Justice Award from the Religion and Labor Foundation in New York, King addressed the final morning session of the Conference on Christian Faith and Human Relations. |
1957 | May 17 | |||
1957 | July 14 | "Overcoming an Inferiority Complex," | Montgomery, AL | Technically not a speech, though its length and breath are similar to Dr. King's speech format. Moreover, this Sermon, along with his Sermon "Conquering Self-Centeredness", offers a look into how he kept himself leveled as his star rose. |
1957 | August 11 | "Conquering Self-Centeredness" | Montgomery, AL | Combined with Dr. Kings Sermon from July 14, 1957, this Sermon provides a window into how Dr. King managed his personality as his fame grew. |
1957 | December 4 | "The Christian Way of Life in Human Relations" | St. Louis, Missouri | Address Delivered at the General Assembly of the National Council of Churches From the Archival Description In his second of two addresses during the annual meeting of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., King charges that "all too many ministers are still silent while evil rages."1 He calls on church leaders to be "maladjusted" to social injustice and asserts that "the aftermath of nonviolence is the creation of the beloved community, while the aftermath of violence is tragic bitterness." |
1957 | December 5 | "Some Things We Must Do," Address Delivered at the Second Annual Institute on Nonviolence and Social Change at Holt Street Baptist Church | Montgomery, AL | From the Archival Description In a November letter King invited local pastors and their congregations to the December institute marking the second anniversary of the MIA. King described the four-day event as "the school in which our people will be prepared to lead the freedom movement in the spirit of love and non-violence." |
1958 | January 9 | This is a Great Time to be Alive | New York, NY | Address delivered at the Tenth Annual Installation Dinner of the Guardians Association of the Police Department of the City of New York. |
1958 | January 13 | The Desire-ability to be Maladjusted | Evanston, Ill | Address delivered at Beth Emet The Free Synagogue |
1958 | March 12 | "The Christian Doctrine of Man" | Detroit, Michigan | Sermon Delivered at the Detroit Council of Churches' Noon Lenten Services From the Archival Description On 1 March 1957 Detroit Council of Churches executive director G. Merrill Lenox invited King to preach during the Council's 1958 Noon Lenten series. |
1958 | April 15 | Crisis in Human Relations | Evanston, Ill | Address delivered at Northwestern University |
1958 | June 27 | "Nonviolence and Racial Justice, Address delivered at the Friends General Conference" | Cape May, N.J | Similarly titled to an article Dr. King submitted for publication in the Christian Century, an article released from the King archives for public review, this is similarly named however the content has not been released to the public as of yet |
1958 | August 14 | Shreveport, LA | Given at the Galilee Baptist Church in Shreveport, Louisiana. Recorded by Dr. C.O. Simpkins. | |
1959 | September 9 | Divine and Human Mutuality, Man's Helplessness Without God | Montgomery, AL | From the Archival description King offers two possible titles for this handwritten sermon. He criticizes those who rely too much on their own power, as well as those who "wait on God to do everything" and believe they "don't need to do anything about the race problem." |
1959 | August 20 | Address to the National Bar Association | Milwaukee, Wisc. | The preeminent Black Lawyer Association of the Time, welcomed Dr. King for the delivery of this speech which covers a wide range of topics. |
1959 | December 3 | Address delivered at the Fourth Annual Institute on Nonviolence and Social Change at Bethel Baptist Church | Los Angeles, CA | From the Archival Description In this typescript of his final address as president of the MIA, King summarizes the past year's accomplishments, highlighting attempts to desegregate the city's public schools and parks: "I think this is enough to say to the cynics, skeptics, and destructive critics that the MIA is still in business, and that while it does not have the drama of a bus boycott, it is doing a day to day job that is a persistent threat to the power structure of Montgomery." He outlines the MIA's "threefold task": challenging segregation, suffering and sacrificing for freedom, and making full and constructive use of existing freedoms. |
1960 | April 10 | "Keep Moving from This Mountain," Address at Spelman College | Atlanta, GA | From the Archival Description In this Founder's Day address at Spelman College, King identifies four symbolic mountains—relativism, materialism, segregation, and violence—that must be overcome. |
1960 | September 6 | "The Rising Tide of Racial Consciousness", Address at the Golden Anniversary Conference of the National Urban League | New York, NY | From the Archival Description "In this typed draft of his address, King asserts that 'there need be no essential conflict' between the Urban League's efforts to help 'the Negro adjust to urban living' and the need for 'more militant civil rights organizations' to present a 'frontal attack on the system of segregation'. He advises that 'the NAACP'er must not look upon the Urban Leaguer as a quiet conservative and the Urban Leaguer must not look upon the NAACP'er as a militant troublemaker. Each must accept the other as a necessary partner in the complex yet exciting struggle to free the Negro. |
1960 | September 25 | "The Negro and the American Dream," Excerpt from Address at the Annual Freedom Mass Meeting of the North Carolina State Conference of Branches of the NAACP | Charlotte, NC | Predecessor to the "I Have a Dream Speech", the link provided has only an excerpt of the entire speech, however there does exist an audio recording if it can be found. |
1961 | Unknown | The Modern Negro Activist | Unknown | A recently released transcript, impressive in its totality. Dr. King gives a majestic voice to the rising consciousness among Negros in this very early speech on the topic. Though criticisms would erode his credibility as a Black leader in later years, his remarks in this speech show just how prepared for Black Power Dr. King foretold himself to be. |
1961 | January 2 | The Negro and the American Dream | Savannah, GA | From the Archival Description In the spring of 1960, African Americans in Savannah, Georgia, began a boycott of the white downtown merchants to protest their segregationist practices.1 Speaking before a capacity crowd in honor of the ninety-eighth anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, King calls on protesters to remain nonviolent as they continue their "program of economic withdrawal. |
1962 | February 12 | King suggests that black emancipation is also the key to workers' rights. | ||
1962 | May 23 | "The Future of Race Relations in the United States"; Speech Delivered at Darmouth University | Hanover, NH | A nearly lost speech detailing the challenges facing the Civil Rights Movement up to that point in time. |
1962 | September 12 | Address to the New York State Civil War Centennial Commission | New York, NY | A speech memorable for its commemoration of the Civil War. |
1962 | September 16 | Levels of Love | Atlanta, GA | A sermon which contained information significantly influential to Dr. King's philosophy. |
1962 | September 30 | Can A Christian Be a Communist | Atlanta, GA | From the Archival Description While insisting that "no Christian can be a communist," King calls on his congregation to consider communism "a necessary corrective for a Christianity that has been all too passive and a democracy that has been all too inert." Frustrated by the church's unwillingness to take a stand against racial discrimination, he complains, "This morning if we stand at eleven o'clock to sing 'In Christ There Is No East or West,' we stand in the most segregated hour of America." |
1963 | April 16 | A Reading of the Letter from a Birmingham Jail | Birmingham, AL | A digital recording of Dr. King reading his infamous Letter from a Birmingham Jail. |
1963 | June 23 | King's first "I Have A Dream" Speech - Titled, in LP released by Detroit's Gordy records, The Great March to Freedom | ||
1963 | August 28 | |||
1963 | September 18 | |||
1963 | December 2 | Social Justice and the Emerging New Age | West Michigan University | A sobering, often somber but optimistic look at the Civil Rights Movement |
1963 | December 15 | Address at the Pilgrimage for Democracy | Atlanta, GA | From the Archival Description Dr. King discusses the issues of segregation, poverty and discrimination within the City of Atlanta, in this 1963 speech at the Pilgrimage for Democracy. He explains that although Atlanta was thought to be a place of "racial harmony," the reality of glaring discrimination in Atlanta's schools, restaurants, and housing has left the local Negro community "tired," and hungry for change. |
1963 | December 15 | Demonstrating Our Unity | Atlanta, GA | Delivered the same day as his Address at the Pilgrimage for Democracy, little is known about this speech outside the following quote lifted from a paper found on the internet, ""We are unified in segregation just as, one hundred years ago we were unified in slavery; is this the unity we want? The unity of oppression? The unity of discrimination? The unity of poverty and ignorance and want? It is not – it can not – it will not be so!" Unfortunately the item's archival status prevents public digestion of its content. |
1964 | February 6 | The Summer of Our Discontent or The Negro Revolution Why 1963 | The New School | Given from a chapter in his book, Why We Can't Wait, this speech was thought lost until it was discovered in the archives of the New School. |
1964 | September 13 | Comments on John F. Kennedy Delivered at a Berlin Festival | Berlin, Germany | From the Archival Description Dr. King gave this speech at the Berlin Freedom Festival in Berlin, West Germany, in memorial to the recently assassinated President John F. Kennedy. Dr. King reflects on the personality, achievements and enormous influence Kennedy had on the world. He highlights Kennedy's commitment to international human rights, which included recognition of Negro rights, and his leadership in concluding the atmospheric nuclear test ban treaty. On June 26, 1963, Kennedy captured the hearts of the citizens of West Germany when he challenged the Soviet Union and proclaimed "Ich bin ein Berliner." This copy of the speech, presumably the version Dr. King read off of when delivering it, features a handwritten conclusion not found on other typed versions. Howard University contains a longer version of this speech in their collection. |
1964 | November 29 | Untitled speech | ||
1964 | December 10 | |||
1964 | December 11 | Nobel laureate lecture | ||
1965 | February 11 | Facing the Challenge of a New Age | Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI | King also called for new civil rights legislation to aid in the dissolution of discrimination problems in the South. He made particular reference to the Civil Rights Commission and MSU President John A. Hannah, who was appointed chairperson of the Civil Rights Commission in January 1957 by President Dwight Eisenhower, serving until September 1969. |
1965 | March 1965 | "Civil Rights '65: the Right to Vote, the Quest for Jobs." | Atlanta, GA | Contents of this speech is unknown. |
1965 | May 1 | Address delivered at Law Day U.S.A | Philadelphia, Pa | |
1965 | May 23 | How to Deal with Grief and Disappointment | Atlanta, GA | Contents of this speech are limited to the hand written outline King wrote |
1965 | June 6 | Modern Man's Crucial Problem | Atlanta, GA | |
1965 | June 14 | Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution | Oberlin, Ohio | Commencement address at Oberlin College |
1965 | June 15 | Why Are You Here | Atlanta, GA | A motivation speech, addressing the volunteers of the SCLC's Summer Conference on Community Organizing and Political Education which was almost lost to history. |
1965 | July 6 | America's Chief Moral Dilemma, Address delivered to the General Synod of United Church of Christ. | Chicago, IL | Contents of this speech are unknown. |
1965 | July 26 | Address delivered at the March on Chicago | Chicago, IL | The Speech is listed at 23 pages in the archives, yet its contents are unknown. |
1965 | August 17 | Press Statement on the Watts Riot | Atlanta, GA | King's diagnosis of the cause of the riots in Los Angeles, attributing the riots to the lack of prosperity in the Black community. |
1965 | October 7 | Address to the Illinois AFL-CIO Convention | Springfield, IL | Delves into the side-by-side concerns of organized Labor and the civil rights movement, and how each must join together to achieve their goals. |
1965 | October 11 | Address delivered in Crawfordville, GA | Crawfordville, GA | |
1965 | October 15 | Address delivered at the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom | Philadelphia, PA | Content of Speech is unknown |
1965 | October 29 | The Dignity of Family Life | Westchester Country, NY | Content of the Speech is unknown but it is confirmed. |
December 15 | A Great Challenge Derived from a serious Dilemma | New York, NY | Address to Members of the Hungry Club | - |
1966 | January 27 | The Negro Family, a Challenge to National Action | Chicago, IL | A powerfully moving speech concerning the Black Family in America. |
1966 | February 2 | Address delivered to the New York City Clergy at Riverside Church | New York, NY | Before he delivered Beyond Vietnam, King stopped by Riverside Church to deliver this speech, a speech who's content is unknown to the public. |
1966 | February 5 | Who Are We | Atlanta, GA | From the Archival Description In this sermon Dr. King contemplates "who are we?" and "what is man?". He differentiates between the pessimistic attitudes of the materialistic understandings of man and the optimistic attitudes of humanistic definitions of man. King also states that man is neither all good nor all bad, but a combination. Man is both an everlasting miracle and mystery. |
1966 | March 9 | Address at Michigan State University, "Chicago Wall" | East Lansing, MI | "I think almost any major northern city can explode if measures are not taken to remove the conditions which led to the seething desperation that brought Watts into being." "Berlin Wall situation like nothing I've seen before," |
1966 | April 21 | Address to the New York City Bar Association | New York, NY | An impassioned speech to a room of litigators, Dr. King speaks on the legal history of the Black Freedom Movement. |
1966 | April 24 | Making the Best of a Bad Mess | Atlanta, GA | Sermon dealing with facing challenges in a powerful way. |
1966 | May 4 | The Social Activist and Social Change | Atlanta, GA | Address at the Invitational Conference on Social Change and the Role of Behavioral Science. |
1966 | May 5 | ; accepting Planned Parenthood Federation of America's Margaret Sanger Award for "his courageous resistance to bigotry and his lifelong dedication to the advancement of social justice and human dignity." | Due to what he described as "last minute urgent developments in the civil rights movement," King's wife, Coretta Scott King, delivered his speech on his behalf. Before reading his speech, Mrs. King declared, "I am proud tonight to say a word in behalf of your mentor, and the person who symbolizes the ideas of this organization, Margaret Sanger. Because of her dedication, her deep convictions, and for her suffering for what she believed in, I would like to say that I am proud to be a woman tonight." | |
1966 | May 8 | Training Your Child in Love | Atlanta, GA | Mother's Day sermon delivered at Ebeneezer Church, content is unknown besides the entry provided. |
1966 | May 18 | Given as the prestigious Ware Lecture at the General Assembly of the Unitarian Association of Congregations, now the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations | ||
1966 | June 17 | |||
1966 | July 15 | The Role of Education in the Civil Rights Movement | Syracuse University | Possibly the greatest policy focused speech Dr. King ever delivered! |
1966 | July 23 | Message of the Riots | Unknown | Speech Content is unknown but the archival information lists its length as 10 pages. |
1966 | August 18 | "Why I Must March" | Chicago, IL | Address at a Rally, speech content is unknown. |
1966 | September 19 | Negros in History | Grenada, MS | Better known as the Grenada, MS speech, content though, is unknown. |
1966 | September 30 | Address to the International Conference of the Radio and Television Directors Association | Chicago, IL | Speech content is unknown |
1966 | October 6 | Statement on the Negro's Political and Economic Power | Atlanta, GA | A statement concerning the powerlessness felt by Black People. |
1966 | November 14 | Address at SCLC Retreat | Frogmore, SC | An infamous speech among academics, known simply as The Frogmore Speech. From the Archival description Dr. King addresses the staff of the SCLC at a retreat in Frogmore, South Carolina. He divides his speech into three parts: "whence we have come, where we have come, and where do we go from here." Dr. King thoroughly discusses his thoughts on Communism, the practice of nonviolence, the belief that racism is an "ontological affirmation,"and the weaknesses of Black Power. |
1966 | November 27 | The Next One Hundred Years | Atlanta, GA | Address delivered at Morehouse College Centiennial, what was said is unknown, though the address does exist in audio form. |
1966 | December 6 | Change Must Come | New York, NY | Address delivered to The United Neighborhood Houses of New York |
1966 | December 15 | Statement and Related Comments of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., given to the Subcommittee on Executive Reorganization, Committee on Governmental Operations | Washington D.C | Dr. King delivers a statement on the Urban Poor, Education Problems in the Inner Cities and the rebalancing of national priorities, before he is questioned by Senator Abram Ribicof and Robert Kennedy. |
1967 | February 11 | The Domestic Impact of the War in Vietnam | Chicago, IL | Another predecessor to Dr. King's legendary "Beyond Vietnam" Speech, breathtaking in its scale. |
1967 | February 25 | Casualties of the Vietnam War | The Nation Institute, Los Angeles, California | A stunning predecessor to Dr. King's legendary "Beyond Vietnam" Speech, in this almost forgotten speech Dr. King lists the numerous political and social casualties afflicted onto the American Social/ Political Body by the war's continuation. |
1967 | March 31 | A Revolution in the Classroom | Atlanta, GA | Delivered to the Georgia Teacher and Education Association, during the final paragraph, Dr. King states in part "I remember a group of teachers in Selma, Alabama who were tired of waging a hopeless battle within the classroom only to see their children destroyed by the corrupt and racist political system of George Wallace and Jim Class. And one day they decided to meet after school and join their children and their parents by marching in protest ... I knew then the revolution would continue in the classroom". |
1967 | April 4 | |||
1967 | April 16 | Interview on CBS's Face the Nation | A combative interview, important, for its proceeding Dr. King's Beyond Vietnam Speech. Many misconceptions held by the status quo are raised during this interview, yet despite Dr. King's answers, those misconceptions have persisted. | |
1967 | April 30 | |||
1967 | May | To Charter our Course for the Future | Frogmore, SC | |
1967 | June 18 | Interview on ABC's Issues and Answers | New York, NY | Another interview concerning Dr. King's stance on the Vietnam War. |
1967 | June 25 | To Serve the Present Age | Los Angeles, CA | Sermon Delivered at Victory Baptist Church, content is unknown. |
1967 | July 6 | Interview on Merv Griffin Show | Hollywood, CA | Interview concerning Dr. King's controversial stance on the Vietnam War. |
1967 | July 28 | Interview with Associated Press | Atlanta, GA | Interview Concerning Operation Breadbasket. |
1967 | August 15 | The Crisis in America's Cities | Atlanta, GA | Address at the Eleventh Annual Convention of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. |
1967 | August 16 | Speech to the 10th annual session of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference | ||
1967 | August 31 | The Three Evils of Society, Address at the National Conference for New Politics | Chicago, IL | A speech piercing in its confrontation of the national illness afflicting the United States. One needs only to hear it to know how divine Dr. King truly was. |
1967 | Sept 1 | The Role of the Behavioral Scientist in the Civil Rights Movement | Washington D.C | Speech delivered at the APA's Annual Convention, it is an intense reading of social commentary and brilliant insight. |
1967 | October 30 | Statement on the Attack on the First Amendment | Atlanta, GA | This quote from the statement, says it all "It concerns me that we have placed a weapon for repression of freedom in the very hands of those who have fostered today's malignant disorder of poverty, racism and war." |
1967 | November 4 | Address at the Atlanta Airport | Atlanta, GA | Statement made upon his arrival from Birmingham, AL after being released from jail. King announces that he was invited along with three other Nobel Peace Prize winners to participate in talks in the Soviet Union about ending the war in Vietnam. |
1967 | November 11 | Address to the National Leadership Assembly for Peace | Chicago, IL | Delivered at the University of Chicago |
1967 | November 20 | Massey Lecture #1 - Impasse in Race Relationships | Canada | The first in a five part lecture series for the Canadian Broadcast Channel. A brilliant speech drawing upon the question of the need for Black Power, the reason for the white backlash and what the inability of the broader society to meet the reasonable demands of Black people says about the society and its Humanitarianism. |
1967 | November 27 | Massey Lecture #2 - Vietnam | Canada | The second in a five part lecture series for the Canadian Broadcast Channel, much of the lecture here is combed from his "Beyond Vietnam" presentation. |
1967 | December 4 | Statement Announcing the Poor People's Campaign | Atlanta, GA | The statement announcing the Poor People's Campaign, brilliantly precise and sharply telling. |
1967 | December 4 | Massey Lecture #3 - Youth and Social Activism | Canada | The Third in a five part lecture series for the Canadian Broadcast Channel, a gem in its explanation of the isolation felt within White Communities and the connection between the Black Power Movement and the empowerment felt by White Radicals to seek dramatic change in the society. |
1967 | December 11 | Massey Lecture #4 - Nonviolence and Social Change | Canada | The fourth in a five part lecture series for the Canadian Broadcast Channel, another gem for its explanation of the development of nonviolence as a strategy going forward. Much of the language used is combed from an internal report from SCLC, and several speeches delivered by Dr. King during the previous year. |
1967 | December 25 | Massey Lecture #5 - Christmas Sermon on Peace | Canada | The fifth and final part of the five part lecture series. Here Dr. King delivers a Sermon at Ebeneezer Baptist Church concerning Peace in the world. |
1968 | January 7 | What are your New Years Resolutions | Atlanta, GA | A sermon declaring the importance of making resolutions count for something more than just vein pursuits. |
1968 | January 16 | The Need to Go to Washington, Press Conference on the Poor People's Campaign | Atlanta, GA | Conference concerning the evolution of the Poor People's Campaign. The Stanford archival file does not ascribe a name to the press conference, however the long running show MLK Speaks referenced the press conference by this name in Episode 6806. |
1968 | January 19 | The Future of Integration | Manhattan, KS | He addressed the state of racial inequality in our nation, the progress made since the time of slavery, and the progress still needed to solve the issue. Elaborating and identifying the history and injustices that had befallen such a large range of our national community, he made it clear that our country needed to come to terms with an uncomfortable, yet critical, truth that could no longer be overlooked or pushed aside. |
1968 | February 7 | In Search for a Sense of Direction | Atlanta, GA | While preparing for the Poor People's Campaign, he delivered this speech at a SCLC staff retreat, while much was discussed, in his own words, he was attempting to "grapple with this entire question of the "state of the movement"". |
1968 | February 15 | Why We Must Go to Washington, speech by Martin Luther King, Jr. at a staff retreat at Ebenezer Baptist Church, February 15, 1968 | Atlanta, GA | The only reference to this speech is located in the SCLC archives for MLK speaks, the speech in its entirety ran during Episodes 6807 & 6808. |
1968 | February 16 | Things are not Right in this Country | Montgomery, AL | Address at a mass meeting, the context discussed is unknown as the archival information cited has yet to be released to the public. |
1968 | February 23 | Speech Honoring Dr. Dubois | New York, NY | A speech rumored to be in existence, has been confirmed to have actually occurred. From the Archival description "The Centennial Address delivered by Nobel laureate Dr. Martin Luther King at Carnegie Hall in New York City, February 23, 1968. The occasion was the International Cultural Evening sponsored by Freedomways magazine on the 100th birthday of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois and launching an "International Year". |
1968 | March 4 | Statement on the President's Commission | Atlanta, GA | A brilliant, albeit short, rebuke of the President's refusal to speak candidly about the Kerner Commission's findings. |
1968 | March 14 | "The ultimate logic of racism is genocide. Hitler took his racism to its logical conclusion and six million Jews died." | ||
1968 | March 25 | Unknown | From the Archival description The editor of Conservative Judaism introduced this transcription with the following head note; "On the evening of March 25, 1968, ten days before he was killed, Dr. Martin Luther King appeared at the sixty-eighth annual convention of the Rabbinical Assembly. He responded to questions which had been submitted in advance to Rabbi Everett Gendler, who chaired the meeting. | |
1968 | March 31 | To Minister to the Valley | Unknown | Speech delivered by Dr. King at a Ministers Leadership Training Conference. Appeared on Martin Luther King Speaks on the date provided. The Ministers Conference referenced is possibly the same one Dr. King delivered the Closing remarks for in February. |