A Timely and Powerful MLK Prayer by Rev. Dr. Thomas Hudspeth, Lovers Lane United Methodist Church, Dallas, Texas![]() While visting Lovers Lane United Methodist Church in Dallas, Texas, Sunday, January 20, 2019, I heard a dynamic sermon by Senior Pastor Rev. Dr. Stan Copeland. Then came the call-to-action trubute to Dr. Martin L. King Jr., in the form of a wake-up-call prayer by Rev. Dr. Thomas Hudspeth, Pastor of Congregational Care & Deaf Ministry at Lovers Lane. Dr. Hudspeth's prayer not only remembered Dr. King, but also other civil rights champions, including James Farmer, Medgar Evers, Viola Liuzzo, James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. Click below to listen to Dr. Hudspeth's rich and timely prayer. The original text is also below. | Author's Note: The original blog post was published April 2011. I updated with new information January 21, 2019.While many people know that Dr. Martin L. King Jr. was killed in Memphis on April 4, 1968, the reason why he traveled there gets little, if any, attention. King had originally gone to Memphis to lead a march in support of striking sanitation workers. The black workers were upset about unfair wages and other concerns and they went on strike in February 1968, after two men, Echol Cole and Robert Walker, were crushed to death when a garbage truck malfunctioned. The striking sanitation workers sent a list of demands to then Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb. Rev. King received a call from Southern Christian Leadership Conference Memphis representative Rev. James Lawson, asking him to come to Memphis and offer assistance. On March 28, 1968, the strikers, led by Dr. King, began their march in the streets of Memphis. On the sidelines, violence erupted. Dr. King told Rev. Lawson to call the march off. Bernard Lee, a King aide, pulled the Baptist preacher and 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner, out of the march. A Memphis youth named Larry Payne was killed and more than 60 people were hurt. King went home to Atlanta feeling defeated by this test of his non-violence philosophy. Even though family members and aides pleaded with him not to, King returned to Memphis convinced he could lead a nonviolent march there. On April third at Mason Temple in Memphis, King delivered his prophetic last speech “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop.” The next day, King was to have dinner at the home of friend and aide, pastor Rev. Billy Kyles. As they left his room at the Lorraine Motel, King leaned over the balcony and made a request. He wanted to hear “Precious Lord” at the next rally, but he never lived to hear the hymn because he was assassinated on the balcony. King’s death forced Memphis leaders to settle the sanitation workers’ strike. Mayor Loeb began to formulate a plan to end the strike as the Memphis' damaged reputation remained in the national spotlight. Memphis businessman Abe Plough’s financial contribution for the sanitation workers helped settle the strike, according to Joan Beifuss, author of “At the River I Stand.” Author's note: Portions of this blog item include excerpts from the award-winning 1990 WGKX-KIX 106 documentary “Dr. Martin L. King Jr.: The Man, The Movement, The Momentum.” Learn More: Dr. Martin L. King Jr. killed in Memphis by the lack of courage, The New Tri-State Defender, https://bit.ly/2MnDcYT Six: 01 Martin Luther King Jr: The Last 32 Hours, The Commercial Appeal, http://601.commercialappeal.com/ The Late Memphis Photographer Ernest Withers, https://bit.ly/2AXagT3 The 1964 Nobel Peace Prize, http://goo.gl/uaF90 Memphis Entrepreneur Abe Plough's Role in Getting Pay Raises for the Sanitation Workers (from Southern Jewish Heritage) Books by Dr. Lewis V. Baldwin, King scholar and Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, Vanderbilt University, http://goo.gl/rAQYn The Mississippi River Valley Collection at The University of Memphis, http://www.memphis.edu/specialcollections/index.php (Documentary) “At the River I Stand,” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzRUwwRQzVc (Book) “At the River I Stand,” https://amzn.to/2W77rHV The New York Times’ obit of former Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb, http://goo.gl/yP5XO The National Civil Rights Museum (formerly the Lorraine Motel), http://www.civilrightsmuseum.org/ Memphis Sanitation Workers' Strike | Stanford University | The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute I AM A MAN, Wayne State University, https://bit.ly/2FF81rE "‘I Am a Man’: The ugly Memphis sanitation workers’ strike that led to MLK’s assassination" The Washington Post, https://wapo.st/2CxOsxk |