Celestine Stewart sings with the Sister Thea Bowman Choir of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., during a prayer service April 4 commemorating the life and mission of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. at St. Agnes Cathedral in Rockville Centre. The service was held on the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Rev. King in Memphis, Tenn. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz, Long Island Catholic) See MLK-ANNIVERSARY-ROUNDUP April 4, 2018. Celestine Stewart sings with the Sister Thea Bowman Choir of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., during a prayer service April 4 commemorating the life and mission of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. at St. Agnes Cathedral in Rockville Centre. The service was held on the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Rev. King in Memphis, Tenn. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz, Long Island Catholic) See MLK-ANNIVERSARY-ROUNDUP April 4, 2018.

Rallies, prayer services recall legacy of slain civil rights leader

By Richard Szczepanowski

Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON — Fifty years after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. — he was gunned down April 4, 1968 — the great civil rights advocate continues to be an outstanding example of how to live the Gospel message, according to Catholic clergy and others.

“This tragic loss (of Rev. King) did not still his voice — it continues to ring out and inspire new generations in confronting the challenges of prejudice, injustice and division today,” Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl of Washington wrote in an April 4 blog.

At dawn, several people gathered at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial near the National Mall in Washington for a silent prayer to remember the life and legacy of Rev. King.

Various faith leaders, including Washington Auxiliary Bishop Roy E. Campbell, led a rally on the Mall prior to prayer at the memorial. The Archdiocese of Washington sponsored a “Catholics Against Racism” banner at the rally with local Catholics marching behind it. Some participants carried small signs with the same message.

Toward evening, churches across the country planned to toll their bells 39 times, symbolizing the civil rights leader’s age when he was killed in Memphis, Tennessee.

Numerous U.S. Catholic churches and schools planned to participate in the tolling of bells. The Chicago Archdiocese asked all its churches and schools to ring their bells 39 times, and Chicago Cardinal Blase J. Cupich was to preside at an evening ecumenical service at a Catholic church.

Other churches ringing their bells included St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. Near the shrine are the headquarters of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which announced it joined in solidarity in the shrine’s tribute to Rev. King’s “legacy and his many contributions including the principle of nonviolent resistance.”

In Memphis, Bishop Martin D. Holley, a former Washington auxiliary bishop who now heads that diocese, celebrated Mass in that city’s Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and then joined Catholic and other religious leaders in a march to the National Civil Rights Museum. The museum includes the Lorraine Motel where Rev. King was shot, and the nearby boarding house from which Ray fired the fatal shots.

Across the country, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone said that as the nation marks this 50th anniversary, “we recognize that too much of our present reality is not so different from that of 1968. Many in our country continue to suffer from racism, violence and discord — accompanied by feelings of hopelessness and dismay.”

“We can make an invaluable contribution simply by living the civility that is within is,” the archbishop said in a statement. “Our times are plagued by rancor, name-calling, detraction and polarization.

“Let us draw strength, guidance and inspiration from Dr. King by being civil with each other, especially with those we dislike and with whom we disagree. This is how we live his witness to nonviolence in everyday life, and so prove ourselves worthy of his legacy.”

In Washington, Msgr. Raymond East, pastor of St. Teresa of Avila Parish, recalled how the nation’s capital was among cities across the country that saw rioting, the burning of buildings and other violence as people reacted to the news of Rev. King’s death.

Such events “are remembrances that are really fresh” for some of his parishioners, he told the Catholic Standard.

Msgr. East, who was a senior in high school in San Diego at the time, recalls not only the protests following Rev. King’s death, but also “the great feeling of sadness and looking for direction on how to peacefully bring about change.”

“Fifty years later, what has become clear is the vision Dr. King had of the ‘beloved community’ as a place, a condition of the world in which we reflect what we pray in the Lord’s Prayer — ‘thy kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven,’” Msgr. East said.

The Baptist preacher used “beloved community” in his speeches to denote a society in which racism and discrimination is ended by nonviolent means and reconciliation.

“We have to keep that goal always in front of us,” Msgr. East said. “It is kind of keeping the dream alive when we take the idea of ‘beloved community’ as our ideal.”

The priest said Rev. King “taught us to care about each other and he taught and spread the good news of Jesus Christ.”

“When his family was threatened — his wife and children were spit upon and threatened — he still loved. That is proof of his idea of the suffering servant,” Msgr. East said. “His faith was put to the test, but he met the test with the grace of God.”

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