from the site :
Philos Project
published at Real Clear Politics
January 17, 2015
 
 
 
What Martin Luther King Got Wrong about the  World


 
Next week Americans will celebrate the life of a Baptist pastor from 
Atlanta  who singlehandedly transformed a generation. Through patience, 
eloquence, 
and  sheer personal virtue, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ushered in an era of 
 coexistence between black and white that was unprecedented in the history 
of  this country. His memory continues to inspire us, and the holiday 
bearing his  name serves a rallying point for all who care about justice. 
Yet even the great Dr. King made mistakes. And April 1967 marked his  
greatest one. 
Exactly one year before his death, in what was undoubtedly the most  
controversial _speech_ 
(http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/encyclopedia/documentsentry/doc_beyond_vietnam/)
   of his career, King took the rostrum at 
Riverside Church in New York City and  blasted the U.S. government for invading 
Vietnam and daring to decide what was  best for its future. Rebuking “
deadly Western arrogance” and calling his  government “the greatest purveyor of 
violence in the world,” King vehemently  denounced the war and demanded its 
immediate cessation. He called on Americans  to shirk their military duty 
and press for dramatic reforms in their nation’s  foreign policy. 
The last point is key. It would have been one thing if King had limited  
his comments to President Johnson’s policies in Vietnam. Such talk was not  
uncommon, and many good people disagreed and continue to disagree over the  
tactical wisdom of America’s sojourn in Southeast Asia. But because King went 
so  far (as the title of his speech implied) and because he mounted such a 
vicious  attack on the general nature of US conduct around the world, it is 
imperative  that we examine his vision and measure it against both Christian 
values and  the real world of public affairs. 
It’s difficult to criticize a giant like Dr. King. But no mortal is  above 
criticism, and King would have likely been the first to admit that. 
So what exactly was the nature of his vision? 
First, King wanted an immediate end to the war and acceptance of  Communist 
rule in Vietnam. He also recommended that the United States pay war  
reparations, grant asylum to any Vietnamese person who wished to flee, and  
provide medical care to anyone in-country who desired it. In the meantime,  so 
long as Johnson remained bent on violence, King urged churches and  synagogues 
to “seek[] out every creative method of protest possible.” 
More importantly, King wanted a complete volte face in  America’s 
engagement abroad. The war in Vietnam was merely the “symptom of a far  deeper 
malady 
within the American spirit” – a malady that could only be cured by  a “
true revolution of values” based on the “brotherhood of man” and  “
all-embracing and unconditional love for all mankind.” The end goal must be the 
 
creation of a “worldwide fellowship” in which “every nation [would] develop an  
overriding loyalty to mankind as a whole in order to preserve the best in 
their  individual societies.” His was a far-reaching view of international 
relations  based on the concept of love – a virtue that King believed “all of 
the  great religions have seen as the supreme unifying principle” in human  
affairs. 
The first step was to abolish war since “this way of settling  differences 
is not just.” Only then could a “positive thrust for democracy” and  “new 
systems of justice and equality” take root. King did not deny that America  
had enemies, but he attributed their animosity to the despicable nature of  
America’s own conduct. If America stopped running roughshod over the world,  
enemies would become friends. “[C]ommunism is a judgment against our 
failure to  make democracy real and follow through on the revolutions we 
initiated,
” he  proclaimed. Neither communism nor any other threat would be “
defeated by the use  of atomic bombs or nuclear weapons.” No solution would 
succeed 
until “some  attempt is made to know them and hear their broken cries.” 
How to initiate such a dramatic rearrangement of American priorities?  For 
that King turned to the revolutionary tide that was already sweeping the  
world. Men everywhere in the late 1960s were throwing off oppressive  
governments. The West needed to support them. “Our only hope today lies in  our 
ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit,” King said, “and go out into  a 
sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and  
militarism.” Only this way could the “pending cosmic elegy” of humanity be 
 turned to a “creative psalm of peace.” Only then would “justice roll down 
like  waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.” 
Near the end of his speech, King delivered a grave ultimatum. “We still  
have a choice today: nonviolent coexistence or violent coannihiliation,” he  
said, warning that if Americans chose the latter they would find  themselves 
damned to “the long, dark, and shameful corridors of time  reserved for 
those who possess power without compassion, might without morality,  and 
strength without sight.” 
Fearful imagery, to be sure. 
Any critique of King’s vision should begin where his critique of Vietnam  
ended. Weighing the actions of one’s government in a theater of war is not  
wrong, and when done properly, squares well with both Christianity and  
democracy. Unfortunately King framed his otherwise legitimate criticism in  
inflammatory terms, comparing the United States to Nazi Germany at least three  
times in the course of his speech. 
But the real flaw in King’s vision stemmed from a fundamental misconception 
 about how the world works and how God operates within it. He misread human 
 nature, the role of church and state, the nature of international society, 
 and the distinction between spiritual and temporal things. These errors  
made faulty pillars for his grand theory of history, and it’s no  surprise 
that King’s sweeping predictions about the future  ultimately crumbled under 
the weight of reality. 
Human Nature 
The most obvious flaw in King’s worldview was his naïve and unbiblical  
view of human nature. He invoked ideas of universal brotherhood and  
pan-religious love, and based his entire vision on the truth of these claims. 
He  
seemed to think that if men could topple all oppressive regimes, peace  would 
come at last. If Americans could reign in their  rebellious government, 
enemies would start to like us. The universal love  lying beneath the surface 
would inevitably rise into view. 
But neither human experience nor holy writ affirms King’s suppositions. The 
 annals of mankind are plagued by warfare, and violent men have had their 
way  wherever good men have remained silent. Scripture tells the story of a 
race  bound by common blood but torn by irredeemable depravity outside the 
bounds  of divine grace. “Human nature,” wrote Augustine, “ indeed  was 
created at first faultless and without any sin. But  that human nature in which 
everyone is born from Adam now wants  the Physician, because it is not sound.”
 The idea that all men are equally  enthralled by love and the desire to 
coexist is a gross assumption  expressly contradicted by reason and 
revelation. 
Roles of Church and State 
King’s emphasis on unconditional love resonates deeply with how the church  
views the world. But his attempt to universalize that view and apply it to  
government fails on every level. The state is not the church and the church 
is  not the state. God didn’t ordain governments to love people – he  
ordained the church for that. According to the Apostle Paul, God  instituted 
the 
state to execute justice and “bring punishment on the  wrongdoer.” The 
Apostle Peter describes its job as “punish[ing] those  who do evil and 
prais[ing] those who do good.” 
Viewed in light of these New Testament texts (not to mention an Old 
Testament  rich with war and statecraft), King’s call for President Johnson to 
lay  
down his arms and join a worldwide brotherhood seems irresponsible at best 
and  heretical at worst. Blessed with salvation and defended by almighty 
God, the  church can afford to love unconditionally. But the state is not 
designed for  that and never was. 
Everyone wants justice. But justice is impossible without law, and law is  
impossible without coercive power. States must bear the sword and  
Christians must be thankful for it. King’s demand for “new  systems of justice 
and 
equality” ignored the obvious questions that any  rational person would ask: 
How will these systems be implemented? How will  they be defended against 
violent men? And how will they be maintained over the  long-term? 
Like it or not, the answer is physical power. And interestingly enough, the 
 New Testament sees a role for that. 
International Society 
Dr. King took for granted the world in which he lived, not realizing it was 
 the product of a distinct international society created by the very powers 
he  wished to dethrone. Lofty concerns about love, fraternity, and 
universal human  rights had not been norms in history. They were commodities of 
Christian and  post-Christian Europe that had only lately been exported to the 
isles of the  world. King’s longing to displace the guarantors of that 
culture – the  United States and its progenitors, Great Britain and the 
Netherlands – seems odd  given his desire to disseminate it. 
There was once a medieval king who gained peace in his realm by doggedly  
punishing vice and promoting virtue as far as his rule would reach. But down 
in  the village lived a man who held the king and his castle in derision. “
This  land is safe and happy,” he said to his neighbors, “and we’d be much 
better  off without such an ugly monument to power. The king should tear down 
his  turrets and come live in the village like everyone else. Were it not 
for  him and his army, we could join with other villages around the world — 
even  those on our borders that want to attack us — and bring all mankind 
into an  age of prosperity. Our enemies are our enemies only because the king  
is arrogant. His arrogance undermines peace.” 
The mistake of confusing present conditions for permanent ones and  
imperfect justice for abuse of power is not uncommon. That Dr. King fell  into 
it 
is not a surprise. But given his remarkable clarity on so  many other issues, 
his misread of Communist intentions and third world  ambitions is puzzling. 
Regardless of how he viewed America’s containment strategy in Vietnam,  
King would have hopefully agreed that broader confrontation with Communism  was 
necessary. This was a titanic struggle for virtue; not a  misunderstanding 
that Communists wanted to “talk out” with the  West. Indeed, if Johnson and 
other Cold War presidents had taken  King’s advice and laid down their 
arms, there is no doubt that the  Kremlin and its allies would have razed the 
Anglo-American order to the ground,  and with it, the entire project of 
freedom. 
Power of the Gospel 
Perhaps the biggest problem with King’s global vision, at least from the  
stance of orthodoxy, was his conflation of things spiritual with things  
temporal. Seeing political revolutions sweeping the globe, King described the  
revolutionaries as “people who sat in darkness [who] have seen a great  light.
” He urged his colleagues to embrace this revolutionary spirit  and help “
speed the day when ‘every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain  and 
hill shall be made low; the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough  
places plain.’” Looking toward the future he said, “[W]e will be able to  
transform…our world into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood…and speed up the  
day…when ‘justice will roll down like waters, and righteousness like a 
mighty  stream.’” 
Any Christian familiar with these texts will recognize them as messianic  
portents of the coming eschaton. King’s use of them to describe  
post-colonial uprisings substituted the power of the gospel  for the power of 
social 
action. King forgot that true peace and justice are  impossible under the 
curse, and that all men are gone astray. He forgot that  “the whole drama of 
human history,” as Reinhold Niebuhr once put it, “is under  the scrutiny of a 
divine judge who laughs at human pretensions[.]” And he forgot  that this 
judge, and only this judge, will decide when mountains are  leveled and crooked 
paths are made straight. 
Confusing redemption of the soul and recreation of the cosmos with Marxist  
uprisings in the third world betrays a deeper problem in  King’s theology. 
Christians who wait for the cosmic restoration of all  things must not be 
lured by these kinds of utopian promises rooted in  the present world. Working 
to promote human rights and minimize violence  between Christ’s two advents 
is one thing; affixing messianic  labels to carnal events is quite another. 
King’s grand dichotomy between nonviolent coexistence and violent  
coannihilation was, like so many dichotomies, a false one. America was not  
facing 
such a dramatic moment, and subsequent events demonstrated that we were  not 
destined for either path. 
But that doesn’t mean America’s victory over Soviet Communism was  
inevitable or easy. It was the product of many small acts, many hard choices,  
and 
many lost lives. Ultimately it was the result of sustained  strength over 
time. Early on, keen minds recognized that  this battle went far beyond a 
simple struggle over territory  and markets. This was a war of ideas, and the 
United States  staked its future and the future of the free world on a 
strategy to  win. 
The same year King delivered his speech at Riverside, British philosopher  
Philippa Foot invented the famous ethical dilemma that became known as the  
Trolley Problem. Should one steer a runaway train off course to avoid 
killing  five workers on the track if doing so means killing one worker on 
another 
 track? People will die either way, but who dies and who decides?  Should 
one act boldly to save as much life as possible, or  refrain from acting and 
let fate decide? 
States face trolley problems every day, and America faced them often during 
 the Cold War. Was it better to invade a small country in order to preempt 
a much  larger (but not totally certain) war with Moscow? Was it better to 
bomb a  village where suspected Vietcong were hiding amongst civilians, or 
was it  better to pull back and protect the civilians, hoping that more lives 
would  be saved than those taken later at the hands of the guerrillas? 
These choices are not easy and thankfully most of us don’t have to make 
them.  But God expects states to make them and holds rulers accountable for 
making  them wisely. 
The church should work tirelessly to bring a Christian  conscience to all 
matters of state, both foreign and domestic, and help our  leaders discern 
right from wrong as those terms are defined by our moral  tradition. That’s 
something the church can do, especially in a democracy.  And we can disagree, 
even vehemently, with government policies that  contradict our principles. 
But we must be careful not to  make impossible demands of an institution 
erected by God to  make tough choices on our behalf. While we cannot give to 
Caesar what  is God’s, neither can we condemn Caesar for his want of godlike  
perfection. 
Americans should celebrate Martin Luther King for everything he did  to 
challenge racism and poverty in this country. He was a shining star of our  
times, and perhaps of all time. 
But we must recognize that his grand vision for world affairs was faulty  
and to be avoided at all costs, not because it was rhetorically  unimpressive 
but because it was essentially untrue. The malady of pride that  King hoped 
to eradicate from U.S. policy was a malady of the human spirit, and  
nothing can truly cure it apart from the power of the gospel fully realized  in 
a 
city whose builder and maker is God.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to