[1] As a student at Midland College in the late 50s, I became
aware of the civil rights movement emerging in the South. The
national news carried reports on sit-ins and demonstrations going
on in a number of southern states. Though all this seemed very
distant from northeast Nebraska, my readings of Reinhold
Niebuhr-especially his Interpretation of Christian Ethics-enabled
me to relate at least intellectually with this exciting movement,
whose time had come in America.
[2] After a year on a Fulbright Scholarship in Erlangen, Germany, I
returned to do my graduate work at the University of Chicago
Divinity School. I was drawn to the Ethics and Society Field
to do my M.A. and Ph.D. work, andthere ran into professors and
students that made the distant civil rights movement come much
closer. Al Pitcher not only taught an exciting vision of the
church's role in the civil rights movement, he acted it out in
numerous roles around the city. Al was a key advisor to Dr.
King when his movement came to Chicago. We students were drawn into
the fray, along with many churches and individual Christians in the
Chicago area.
[3] In 1963 Martin Luther King, Jr., brought "the movement"
north to Washington, DC, where he gave his famous "I Have A Dream"
speech to hundreds of thousands of people. In that speech he
fused biblical themes of justice, reconciliation, and nonviolence
with civil religious themes of liberty and equal rights. He
ended the speech with the stirring refrain: "Free at Last,
Free at Last, Thank God Almighty I'm Free at Last!" Then came
strong renditions of the movement's anthem, "We Shall
Overcome."
[4] This movement to overcome overt discrimination has to be
placed into the larger context of the economic and political
context of the early 60s. The country was still experiencing
the great economic expansion of the 50s and large numbers of
American blacks were becoming economically and socially mobile.
They were coming north for education, jobs, and a more open
society. These advances made the discriminatory laws of the
South seem more and more unjust; young black people were rebelling
against them. Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the
bus.
[5] Politically, John F. Kennedy had been narrowly elected and
had brought a fresh new spirit to the country. The coming of
Kennedy's "Camelot" generated an idealism that helped to fuel the
civil rights movement. There was a palpable feeling among
many young people and among many of the institutions of
society-including the mainstream churches-that the great problems
of poverty and racism could be overcome. A new generation
ready to move on these challenges was coming to maturity.
While the Kennedys themselves were not great proponents of the
civil rights movement, they certainly stimulated an optimism about
our country's possibilities to overcome whatever obstacles it
faced, both at home and abroad. "Ask not what your country
can do for you," intoned JFK, "but rather what you can do for your
country." This was uttered without irony or phoniness; such
was the spirit of the time.
[6] After many struggles-and some victories-in the South, the
movement came north. I took my family to a giant rallyat
Soldier Field in Chicago at which 93,000 people came to hear
another stirring sermon by Dr. King. We students marched in parades
into the Loop and some suburbs to demand equal opportunity in
housing. Various organizations were created to carry the
momentum of King's movement into the northern cities.
[7] King selected the young Jesse Jackson, a student (who
flunked homiletics!) at Chicago Theological Seminary to head up
Operation Breadbasket, which was intended to gather black economic
actors into an organization that could bargain with the government
and large private companies to get more business and contracts for
minority businesses. We would gather on Saturday mornings to
hear inspirational preaching from the great black preachers in the
city (and were they inspirational!) and to rally the troops for the
economical bargaining that was going on. King himself
appeared about once a month and preached sermons that made you want
to go out and change the world. Indeed, I got to greet him
and shake his hand a couple of times, a thrilling encounter for a
white boy from Nebraska.
[8] Even the 1963 assassination of John Kennedy-as profoundly
shocking as it was-could not dampen the liberal idealism of the
time. Indeed, Lyndon Johnson, that master politician, took up
the momentum achieved by the civil rights movement and molded it
into the programs of the Great Society and, supremely, into the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. This high-water mark of the civil
rights movement and American liberal idealism was supported by
almost all the churches. It seemed to epitomize the hopes and
dreams of the Kennedy years.
[9] I left Chicago in 1965 to teach for two years at the Rock
Island Campus of the Lutheran School of Theology, which was to open
a new campus in Hyde Park, Chicago, in 1967. But in that two
year interim I was able to bring a fiery vision of the church's
role in overcoming racism and poverty to the students on the Rock
Island Campus. After five years of immersion in the civil
rights and community organization movements on the South Side of
Chicago, I was brimming with ideas about why and how the church
should carry out its transformative mission in the cities of
America. I taught with Michael Harrington's The Other
America in one hand and Gibson Winter's The New Creation
as Metropolis in the other. Over half the seniors whom I
taught in my first year asked to be given assignments in urban
ministry upon graduation. It was a heady time.
[10] The excitement continued when LSTC opened in the fall of
1967. Large incoming classes of students ready to encounter
the challenges of the city continued to respond to the exhortations
to transform church and society. The Operation Breadbasket
movement was outgrowing the cafeteria of Chicago Theological
Seminary so we invited the organization to use LSTC's larger
cafeteria on Saturday mornings. We exposed new LSTC students
to the city and its problems and funneled them into various civil
rights and community organizations. In their senior year we
arranged internships for them with Operation Breadbasket and other
organizations. Themes of justice, liberty, equality, and
social transformation animated a good deal of the life at the
seminary.
[11] An organization of Lutheran pastors, the Northwest Lutheran
Parish, decided to help in the election bid of Richard Hatcher, who
was running for mayor of Gary, Indiana. He was the first
black candidate for mayor of a large American city. On
election day we drove down for a day of poll-watching. We
knew there would be attempts to keep the city in the hands of a
corrupt white machine, and we challenged voters whom we thought
were voting "right and often." A long black limousine
carrying several very heavy, swarthy men dressed in black pulled up
near a group of us and warned us to be out of town by sundown or we
wouldn't get out alive. Tough-looking black guys in beat-up
jalopies came by to check on our safety and then gather us into the
Hatcher headquarters before dark-happily! Never before or
since have I felt protected by such folks. Hatcher won and
blacks gained political power in one of America's industrial
cities.
[12] However, already in 1965 large clouds began to darken the
sun of American liberal idealism. Huge riots broke out in
northern and western cities. The American military build-up
in Viet Nam proceeded apace. The draft was instituted and the
anti-war movement gained enormous strength. Terrible pictures of
the carnage in Viet Nam came into our homes with every installment
of the TV evening news. The anti-war movement melded with the
radical student movement, which soon fractured into many competing
radical groups. The Black Power movement quickly outflanked
the civil rights movement with its commitment to nonviolence within
the system. Even before his assassination in 1968, King was
being upstaged by firebrands such as Malcolm X, Stokley Carmichael,
Angela Davis, and Rap Brown.
[13] Two of our faculty members at LSTC experienced first-hand
the consequences of black and student radicalism. One, who
had taught at the Maywood campus of LSTC, had befriended a young
black man from Maywood, who later became a leader in the Black
Panther organization in Chicago. The young man was killed in
a shoot-out with the police in his Maywood apartment. Another
faculty member's daughter joined the Symbionese Liberation Movement
on the West Coast and was also killed in a shoot-out with the
police.
[14] Nineteen sixty-eight was a dark year in American
history. First, King was assassinated in April followed by
Robert Kennedy in June. Riots in many cities took place after
King's assassination. The National Guard rolled into Chicago
and citizens experienced the traumatic sight of armed soldiers
posted on street corners of many of our cities. The summer of
turmoil was followed by the tumultuous Democratic National
Convention in the fall.
[15] The liberal idealism of the early 60s began to disappear in
the conflict and chaos of the late 60s. Rather than being an
occasion for unified action, the assassination of King became a
point of fragmentation among black leaders. There was a sharp
disagreement over whether Jesse Jackson was really present during
the dying moments of Dr. King. Jackson held his own memorial
service. He broke off from the older compatriots of King and
began his own organization, PUSH. (People United to Save
Humanity.)
[16] Bowing to Black Power pressures, many black organizations
took a separatist turn and whites were no longer welcome in many of
them. Those organizations also became more militant and
radical. Al Pitcher, who had been an advisor to both King and
Jackson, was no longer welcome in Jackson's new organization.
PUSH would no longer take white LSTC students for internship.
Gatherings were now held at PUSH, not at white seminaries.
[17] Again, this turn in the civil rights movement has to be
placed into the dramatically changed context of the late 60s and
early 70s. A huge shift in the perception of the American
project had taken place among many of the elite sectors of American
life, as well as among many leaders of black America and militant
student groups. For many of them the myth of America was
flipped on its head. The myth of American innocent progress
became the myth of American rapacious guilt. Liberal idealism
seemed strangely out of place within this new polarized situation
in which the radicals were leading in one direction and a
conservative reaction was pulling in another.
[18] My idealistic liberalism was soon outflanked by the
radicals who popped up among our students and faculty. "As a
liberal institution, LSTC isn't even worth bombing," offered one of
our student radicals, a Lutheran wrestler from the University of
Iowa, who had been radicalized by the revolutionary student
movement. My reformism looked tame and compromising to such
radicals. I certainly was no longer on the cutting edge.
[19] But what to do? For a while I tried to join the
radicals and get back on the front lines. But it didn't
work. Protest trips to Washington and revolutionary rallies
in the neighborhood turned me off. The radical interpretation
of American society and its institutions, including the church,
seemed grossly exaggerated, if not downright wrong. "Power to
the people," I thought, would mean the election of Richard Nixon
rather than a revolutionary upheaval.
[20] After undergoing serious cognitive dissonance at a
neighborhood rally that featured every imaginable revolutionary
group, I vowed to be more honest with myself and my students.
I told the Dean that he would see some changes in what I
taught. I would begin "calling them as I saw them," not
posturing as some radical I was not.
[21] My membership in the religious left was coming to an
end. There seemed to be no room for the liberal idealism of
the early 60s. Moreover, my disengagement with the left
involved a return to a more solid Lutheran ecclesiology. In
these upheavals I found out how deeply I disagreed with the liberal
Protestant transformist vision, i.e., that the central mission of
the church is to transform society toward the Kingdom of God
through social action.
[22] The last half of the 60s was a tragedy, I believe, for the
civil rights movement. That period saw the movement fracture
into many splinters and it has never recaptured its lost
unity. Traditional organizations such as the NAACP have never
regained their influence among African-Americans or in the larger
culture. Militant organizations were off-putting to whites
and could not gain significant loyalty among blacks. Most have
disappeared. Yet, the movement toward equal rights and liberties in
the 60s has had a deep and positive effect on American life.
Our country came to the full realization that those rights and
liberties were unjustly withheld from black people from the very
beginning of our history. After the 60s it was no longer
possible to defend overt schemes of discrimination; there has been
and can be no turning back. The debate now is how to overcome
residual effects of racism and how to generate a wholesome,
upwardly mobile culture among disadvantaged
African-Americans. Those daunting challenges do not lend
themselves to the straightforward answers that characterized the
early civil rights struggle. We shall have to labor on.