Thanks, readers, for sharing your observations of Martin Luther King day. I’ve enjoyed your pictures and your words of wisdom. I love the ways people capture the spirit of this day in art, song and story. And mostly, I enjoy seeing how communities of faith, and communities in general gather around on this day to listen and learn, to sing and celebrate, to mourn and cast a hopeful vision forward together. Here are some inspiring glimpses from MLK day around the country.




I appreciated these words from Carol Howard Merritt of the ChristianCentury today on Facebook:
I often hear white pastors and church leaders challenge… “If we were alive during those critical Civil Rights days, would we be marching with King?” There’s a very practical answer to that hypothetical time-machine question. Because the struggle is far from over. The question should be, “Are we showing up now? Are we supporting activists? Are we engaged today?”
And my friend Heather over at HerKentucky shares some history with a local MLK connection, (local being Frankfort, KY) today on her blog.
Meanwhile, this is how we roll at my house on MLK day, when it is stupid cold outside and there are no marches or services within a 30 mile radius…
And here is my brother Chris and his girlfriend Megan, singing James Taylor’s “Shed a Little Light.” Every year on MLK day, I text him and say “I need a video of you doing that song!” And he’s like, “Let’s remember it sooner next year so I’ve got time to practice and record it!” And this year he actually remembered. So, ten years later, here you go…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIwlrrNfft4
How did you “shed a little light” today? We want to hear about it. Peace.
Let us turn our thoughts today to Martin Luther King
and recognize that there are ties between us, all men and women living on the Earth…
There is a feeling like the clenching of a fist
There is a hunger in the center of the chest
There is a passage through the darkness and the mist
And though the body sleeps the heart will never rest…