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Beyond Church: An Invitation To Experience The Lost Word Of The Bible
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Tag Archives: Civil Rights Movement
Please don’t make America hate again . . .
Name calling and insults don’t make America great. They stir up hate. True greatness is kind. Please don’t make America hate again (like it did until the Civil Rights Movement made it illegal). The Old Testament prophets would often publicly … Continue reading
Shall we overcome?
Shall we overcome? Don’t succumb to discouragement, self-destruction, and depression. Overcome through the reality of Christ’s love. “Deep in my heart, I do believe, we shall overcome someday!” The lost word of the Bible is a recovery word. It can … Continue reading
Posted in African American experience, African Americans, black history, Black history month, Christianity, Deep in my heart I do believe, depression, discouragement, encouragement, equal rights, equality, human rights, lyrics, overcoming circumstances, overcoming depression, overcoming hate, overcoming setbacks, overcoming temptation, posters, quote, Uncategorized, wisdom
Tagged addiction, all lives matter, Black Lives Matter, Civil Rights Movement, recovery, social justice, song, support groups, We shall overcome
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Seeing Selma Stirred My Spirit!
Seeing the movie, Selma, stirred my soul! It made me weep. It received an ongoing standing ovation from a theater packed with both blacks and whites in Nashville! Selma strikingly portrays a major turning point in the Civil Rights Movement during … Continue reading
Posted in after Ferguson, Ava, black history, Black history month, David Oyelowo, DuVernays, Ferguson Missouri, Mahalia Jackson, One dream can change the world, President Lyndon Johnson, Selma Alabama, Selma movie
Tagged Civil Rights Movement, Martin Luther King, MLK Day, movie reviews, Selma movie, Voting Rights Act
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6 Reasons Why The Civil Rights Activits Didn’t Call Their Opponents “Haters”
1) To call someone a hater would have violated Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s determination for the Movement to follow the spirit of the Biblical principles of love and non-violence. 2) Blacks were clearly hated in the South so there … Continue reading
Posted in activitists, African American experience, African Americans, biblical, Biblical principles, bigots, British Empire, British history, calling people haters, equal rights, extremist for love, freedom, hate, hate speech, haters, hatred, Jim Crow, love, Love one another, love your enemies, name calling, prejudice, quotation, Quotations, quote, Quotes, racial reconciliation, racism, racists, The Movement
Tagged black history, Civil Rights Movement, equal rights, hate, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, nonviolence
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Bold Christian Quotes from Martin Luther King, Jr. (For MLK Day)
“We need to pledge ourselves anew to the cause of Christ. We must capture the spirit of the early church. Wherever the early Christians went, they made a triumphant witness for Christ. Whether on the village streets or in the … Continue reading
Posted in Almighty God, Christ, disease of fear, early Christians, early church, evil, fear, God, God is able, gods, Gospel, holiday, holidays, Jesus, Jesus Christ, Jr., Martin Luther King Day, MLK Day, MLK quotes, moral foundations, moral laws, moral leaders, moral principles, moral reformer, moral restraints, morality, morals, Nashville, nonconformists, quotation, Quotations, quote, rare form of Christianity, relativism, Salvation Army, Salvation Army church, Savior, self-worth, sermon, servants, sin, spiritual, spiritual awakening, spiritual movement, spiritual transformation, The Movement
Tagged Christianity, Civil Rights Movement, Martin Luther King, MLK, quotes
16 Comments
The Movement
When people in America talk about “The Movement,” they usually mean the Civil Rights Movement, led by Martin Luther King, Jr. This movement changed America for the better by breaking the terrible hold that 200+ years of blatant, legalized racism … Continue reading
Posted in Christ followers, Christian, Christian history, Christian values, church, church history, Matthew 16, move of God, movement, Peter, Roman Empire, Spirit-filled, Spirit-led, spiritual movement, Uncategorized
Tagged Christian movement, Christianity, church, Civil Rights Movement, Jesus Christ, Martin Luther King Jr., religion
3 Comments
Freedom Riders And Church Diversity
I watched a two-hour documentary on PBS about the Freedom Riders, a group of young people (mostly college students) both black and white (committed to non-violence), who rode public busses together into the Deep South (in 1961) to challenge state segregation laws that … Continue reading
Posted in abolitionists, Bible, biography, black history, Civil Rights, Creator, freedom, God, history, house church, human rights, lifestyles, Nashville, organic church, prejudice, Quotations, Quotes, racism, religion, self-help, social justice, Supreme Court, Uncategorized, What is church?
Tagged 1961, Alabama, America, angry, Anniston, assistant, Attorne General, beat, Bible, Biblical, Birming jail, Birmingham, black and white, bus terminal, bus terminals, busses, challenge, choking, church, church diversity, churches, Civil Rights Movement, class, coach, college students, commitment, committed, country, courage, cross racial lines, cultural, DC, Deep South, Diane Nashv, diversity, documentary, end segregation, ethnicity, every kindred and every tribe, explode, federal government, fire bomb, Fisk University, freedom, freedom riders, God, group, hate-filled, heaven, heroism, idea, interstate commerce, into, Jackson, John Seigenthaler, kick, last will and testament, leadership, left, local police, Lord, Mississippi, mixed, movie, moving, multi-culturial, multi-racial, multiethnic, Nashville, New Orleans, non-violence, notorious, PBS, protect, public busses, race, racial reconciliation, required, Return of the Titans, Robert Kennedy, rode, ruled unconstitutional, school, segregation laws, state, states, Supreme Court, surrounded, team, tears, town, Trevecca Nazarene University, two-hour, US, victory, violence, Washington, white mob, worst prison
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How A White Guy Experienced Jim Crow As A Black Guy
Black Like Me is the story of how John Howard Griffin, a white man, colored his skin black and traveled around the segregated, Jim Crow South in the late 1950s. The cover reads: “What was it like, really like to be … Continue reading
Posted in American Literature, biography, black history, Black Like Me, Civil Rights, freedom, human rights, John Howard Griffin, lifestyles, popular culture, race, racism, self-help, social justice, The Declaration of Independence, Uncategorized
Tagged 10 million, 1950s, all men are created equal, amazed, America, American, American history, black, Black Like Me, book, called names, changed, charged, citizens, Civil Rights Movement, colored, commitment, continually, copies, country, courageous, cover, darkened, Declaration of Independence, Deep South, despised, experienced, forgotten, great, guy, hateful looks, hero, hidden, His, human rights, injustice, inspired, Jim Crow, John Howard Griffin, justice, killed, late, laws, leader, learn, life, like, love, mistreated, night, novelist, persecution, personal, personally, played down, prominent, protesting, racial, racism, report, risk, segregated, segregation, set out to discover, side, skin, South, startling, story, traveled, up, white
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Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Septima Clarck, & Miles Horton in Monteagle, TN
Here is a little known fact of American history. Monteagle, Tennessee could be called the cradle of the Civil Rights Movement. Before the Civil Rights Movement began, Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Abernathy, Rosa Parks and many other future leaders … Continue reading
Posted in black history, history, lifestyles, self-help
Tagged a white Tennessean, American hero, American history, back seat, black leadrship, Chattanooga, Civil Rights Movement, column, country road, cradle of the, first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, forced to move, forgotten, freer America, future leaders, greatest Americans of all time, greatness, hated, Highlander Folk School, humility, influential, land, liberty and justice for all, little know fact, Martin Luther King Jr., Monteagle, Monteagle Assembly, Monteagle Tennessee, Myles Horton, named for, non-violance, old, on this spot, one lane, persecution, Pete Seeger, private residence, Ralph Abernathy, rang in my heart, Rosa Parks, sang, school home, seized by, street, suffered, the state of, The Tennessean, the vision, trained, training and support Nashville, unknown nowadays, workshops
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Who’s My #1 Greatest American? William Lloyd Garrison
The PBS serises, The Abolitionists, is about 5 American anti-slavery activists: Angelina Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglas, John Brown, and Harriet Beecher Stowe. The series includes two of my Top 10 Greatest Americans Who is my greatest American of … Continue reading
Posted in Angelina Grimke, anti-slavery, biography, black history, Frederick Douglas, God, Harriet Beecher Stowe, history, human rights, John Brown, lifestyles, Nova, organic church, religion, self-help
Tagged abolitionist movement, Anti-Slavery Society, Civil Rights Movement, non-violent resistance, PBS Series, the abolitionists, The Liberator, William Lloyd Garrison
22 Comments