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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy

“If Martin Luther King lived today, the single most important thing he could do would be to persuade black Americans to shun sex outside of marriage as if their lives depended on it.”

I often wondered what would have happened if King had started a revival instead of a rights movement.


33 posted on 07/28/2013 7:59:20 AM PDT by huldah1776
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To: huldah1776

If someone from the Repubican party had the cajones, they should come forward and start explaining who Margeret Sanger was and why she talked about putting the abortion clinics in black areas.


34 posted on 07/28/2013 8:29:01 AM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (The reason we own guns is to protect ourselves from those wanting to take our guns from us.)
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To: huldah1776

Everything has its time.

For example, before about the 1940s, black preachers in the South made a name for themselves by creating sermons that described a dark and hot Hell that awaited sinners. It was said that some were so gifted in this that congregations “could feel the flames licking the underside of the floor boards, and smell the brimstone through the cracks.” Heavenly descriptions, added almost after the fact, just served as a peaceful contrast of rest and happiness.

Importantly, this reached their congregations and gave them what they wanted, and caused many to mend their ways and resist temptation.

However, by the time of MLK, this way of thinking had pretty much collapsed. With the return of the soldiers from WWII, segregation in most of the US quickly and quietly collapsed.

At the time, many small towns across the Bible belt were ruled by cliques of various Protestant sects that pressured others to maintain the social order, which included segregation and social behavior. The veterans rejected this outright, as well, and refused to cooperate with a dictatorship of gossips.

A lot of social pressure suddenly got released in a hurry, and MLK was a the forefront of one part of it. He had evolved into a religious skeptic and rejected parts of the Bible in their entirety; but he saw within it the justification for social reform.

“King was originally skeptical of many of Christianity’s claims. At the age of thirteen, he denied the bodily resurrection of Jesus during Sunday school. From this point, he stated, “doubts began to spring forth unrelentingly”. However, he later concluded that the Bible has “many profound truths which one cannot escape” and decided to enter the seminary.”

The bottom line is that he could not have led a religious revival, because there was too much of his faith he did not believe. As soon as he got his PhD, with a plagiarized dissertation, he immediately started rabble rousing, something he was far better at.


38 posted on 07/28/2013 9:39:36 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy (Be Brave! Fear is just the opposite of Nar!)
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To: huldah1776; yefragetuwrabrumuy
“If Martin Luther King lived today, the single most important thing he could do would be to persuade black Americans to shun sex outside of marriage as if their lives depended on it.”

I often wondered what would have happened if King had started a revival instead of a rights movement.


In view that he couldn't keep it in his own pants, not much chance of it.

Don't get me wrong; I greatly admire his accomplishments and the moral purposes of his aims, which today's "commooonity" seems incapable of even understanding. But his partying with multiple loose women in motels while he was on the road? Not so much.

53 posted on 07/28/2013 3:03:17 PM PDT by Albion Wilde ("Remember... the first revolutionary was Satan."--Russian Orthodox Archpriest Dmitry Smirnov)
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