60 years ago today a man who received both his Masters and Ph.D. by massively plagiarizing, who was a serial adulterer, and whose chief lieutenants were known Communists gave his “I Have a Dream” Speech in Washington DC. (Yes, that speech was plagiarized as well. As was his famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.”)
A few months later on January 6, 1964, Martin Luther King Jr. (real name — Michael King) had experienced a long day. He spent the morning seated in the reserved section of the Supreme Court, listening as lawyers argued New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, a landmark case rising out of King’s crusade against segregation in Alabama. The minister was something of an honored guest: Justice Arthur Goldberg quietly sent down a copy of Kings account of the Montgomery bus boycott, “Stride Toward Freedom,” asking for an autograph. That night King retired to his room at the Willard Hotel. There FBI bugs reportedly picked up 14 hours of party chatter, the clinking of glasses and the sounds of illicit sex–including King’s cries of “I’m f–ing for God” and “I’m not a negro tonight!”
Martin Luther King was having sex with three White women, one of whom he brutally beat while screaming the above mentioned quotes. Much of the public information on King’s use of church money to hire prostitutes and his beating them came from King’s close personal friend, Rev. Ralph Abernathy, in his 1989 book, “And the walls came tumbling down.”
Judging King on the content of his character we can only conclude that he was a beast.
But y’all go ahead and celebrate him and his pukey speech.
To serious Christians, it was not his sexual immorality, nor his Commie politics, that were the worst thing about MLK, but his Christ-denying heresies:
https://twitter.com/VirtueApplied/status/1566206029175705607
God’s glory above all else. MLK presented himself as teacher of God’s word, and therefore his judgment shall be all the harder (James 3:1).
Viisaus,
You are correct… and of course sexual immorality and commie politics must be included among his many Christ-denying heresies.