January 12, 2007 By Kathy L. Gilbert
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – A civil rights leader told a gathering that racism, sexism,
violence and greed have wounded the world and people still need to hear Martin
Luther King Jr.'s words: "You are somebody." "At the
heart of King's message was, ‘You are somebody; you are not a nothing,'" said
the Rev. James Lawson, a friend of King's, civil rights justice leader and visiting
professor at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Lawson, a United Methodist, was
the keynote speaker at the United Methodist Publishing House's celebration honoring
King on Jan. 11. "In Matthew 5 Jesus says to a huge crowd
of people, ‘You are the salt of the earth, you are the light of the world.' Why
don't we hear that message today when so many are despairing?" Lawson
added, "King's message wasn't just for people of color but for the whole world."
Taking to the streets Before
the worship service, members of local United Methodist churches, other agencies
of the church as well as employees of the Publishing House took part in a roundtable
discussion on "Unfinished Business: Experiencing God's Grace," led by the Rev.
Becca Stevens, priest at St. Augustine's Episcopal Chapel at Vanderbilt University.
Stevens founded Magdalene House, a two-year residential
community designed to rehabilitate women with a criminal history of drug abuse
and prostitution. In 2001, Magdalene House launched Thistle Farms, a cottage industry
that manufactures bath and body care products that promote healing and health,
to provide training and revenue for the participants. In
a time when more troops are being sent to the Iraq war and Nashville is full of
homelessness, racism and other problems, Stevens asked the group, "How do you
decide what you are going to do? What takes you to the streets?" Lawson
noted in his sermon that he heard a lot of confusion and despair during the roundtable
discussion. "There is no reason for despair or confusion,"
he said. "You are the crowning achievement of God's creation." Publishing
House's role Lawson began by saying the last time he
was at the Publishing House was in 1968, when he was part of a group picketing
outside in protest of segregation. "It is very important
for the people at the Publishing House to be thinking, reading and talking to
each other," he said. He added he has sometimes been
frustrated with literature coming out of the Publishing House because "it always
hedged on the issues of the gospel of Jesus and racism. ... It constantly translated
the Scriptures as though there was another side on the issues of racism, sexism.
" "Sisters and brothers, we have no option according
to the Scriptures concerning how we treat one another," he said. "Moses and Jesus,
both Jewish prophets and teachers, are quite clear you shall love the Lord your
God with all your heart, mind and soul and strength and your neighbor as yourself."
The Rev. Fred Allen, executive director of African American
Initiatives and International Outreach at the Publishing House, said he heard
Lawson's words as a challenge to the Publishing House to be more sensitive, "to
stay on course and be intentional and bold." "The United
Methodist Publishing House Martin Luther King Jr. Dialogue and Worship Service
provided the audience with a fresh vision and challenge about the church's call
for taking a posture of interacting with the community in which it exists," Allen
said. "The church is called upon to use its power in
direct opposition to those negative elements of the principalities and powers
which deny the dignity of the human creature," he said. "We
are honored by every soul gathered here today to say that as a community it matters
what we pray about, what we reflect on (and) how we honor God together in our
lives," said Neil M. Alexander, publisher and chief executive officer. Lawson
concluded his sermon by encouraging his listeners. "Celebrate this weekend with
the notion that there is marvelous work for each of us to do as we move past our
reservations and fears. We can be surprised by what God is yet doing today." United
Methodist News Service Kathy L. Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service
news writer based in Nashville, Tenn. |