Embracing Sacrificial Love: Lessons from Dr. King

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### Quotes for outreach

1. "Dr. King was so struck by this particular story because the Samaritan was a different kind of people from the man who was injured and left for dead on the side of the road. And that didn't matter to him. The Samaritan saw someone who was hurting, who was bleeding, who had been stripped of their clothing, and the Samaritan stopped, saw the need, saw the suffering, put aside his own plans." [44:01] (39 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "And being an extremist for love means giving up sometimes what we want to do to help those who have less than we do who are on the margins who need help and care and love and it's not about just liking the person because as Dr. King talks about at one point there's another place where he says I don't think of love in this context as emotional bosh." [53:11] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "I believe the only way this can happen is for us to surrender into God, higher power, spirit, Jesus, however you name the sacred, however you name the divine, that it is through the sacrificial love that our higher power, our creator, has for us, that we... that we are able to step into this kind of sacrificial love that can, as another story of Jesus says, move mountains that we otherwise cannot believe are able to be moved." [56:29] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "So may we be extremists for love, extremists for love in the way that Jesus was, that Dr. King was, and may we learn to live into what Dr. King and Jesus both said, how we can learn to love our enemies, bless them that curse us, and pray for them that curse us." [58:25] (20 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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### Quotes for members

1. "Dr. King here points to a kind of love that transcends the easy kind of love. kind of love that we have for the people we like, the people that make us laugh, the people that are nice to us, the people who look like us, the people who maybe come from similar backgrounds as us, and the people who are kind to us." [44:01] (33 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "Those of us who have privileges that give us certain kinds of power, we have to sacrifice. We have to sacrifice that for those who do not. We have to, like the Samaritan in this story, sacrifice sometimes our plans for what we think we want to do for our own selves, for our own lives. Sometimes we have to give that up, to postpone that, to reach out and help someone like the Samaritan did, to help alleviate the suffering that we see." [51:01] (38 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "And honestly, I think that takes power beyond our own power to do by ourselves. And that's where I think this relation, the fact that so much of the civil rights movement was grounded in faith don't know that it could have happened in some of the same ways if so many people who are so critical to the movement if it hadn't been grounded in a spirituality that helped them see beyond their own needs to the greater good, to the larger good, to the hope that someday there would be greater freedom for more people." [54:42] (44 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "And as Dr. Douglass said, and as Dr. King was an extremist for love, so too are we called to be extremists for love of the sacrificial kind for... And as I said, this can only happen, I believe. We can't do it on our own. When we do it on our own, we become self-righteous, we can become resentful, we can become angry, and it can... We can be counterproductive to what we're trying to achieve." [55:32] (38 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "And it's not about just liking the person because as Dr. King talks about at one point there's another place where he says I don't think of love in this context as emotional bosh I love that as emotional boss I don't think of it as a weak force but I think of love as something strong and that organizes itself into direct powerful direct action you come to the point of being able to love that the person that does an evil deed in the sense of understanding and all of you它是一个 Epistema t android你从elenirtési为自己 and you can hate the deed that the person does, but you can love the person themselves. that takes discipline. That takes work." [53:11] (52 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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