As we approach this coming weekend and the days ahead, as a nation, we are asked to remember the life and legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. As people of faith, and even more importantly as a community of faith, we cherish his legacy and his vision for our world. In particular, we are called to consider the church's role in helping to move the world and our lives to more closely embody that vision.
I believe that when Dr. King offered this prayer for the church, likely over sixty years ago, he was praying for us.
Lord, We thank you for your church, founded upon your Word,
that challenges us to do more than sing and pray,
but go out and work as though the very answer to our prayers
depended on us and not upon you.
Help us to realize that humanity was created
to shine like the stars and live on through all eternity.
Keep us, we pray, in perfect peace.
Help us to walk together,
pray together,
sing together,
and live together
until that day when all God’s children
will rejoice in one common band of humanity
in the reign of our Lord and of our God, we pray.
Amen.
His prayer makes it clear that the church is called to work together on issues of justice and compassion, to recognize all people's full humanity, and to be an agent of transformation in the world. This Sunday, following worship, you are invited to join us in Congregational Hall to participate in an ongoing discussion about what that actually means in both broad strokes and in the day-to-day work of Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church.
As we continue to live into the Belonging and Inclusion Statement approved by the Session last spring, you are invited to be a part of helping us implement not just that statement’s goals for our community but the vision that Dr. King continues to challenge us with today.