At world’s end, the enduring dance of prayer.

At fifteen, Martin Luther King Jr. didn’t want to be a preacher—he wanted to be a lawyer, a sharp dresser, and nothing like his father. Stanford scholar Lerone A. Martin joins Mark Labberton to discuss Young King—a revelatory new account of Martin Luther King Jr.’s childhood, adolescence, and calling to ministry. “He’s extraordinary and ordinary and everything in between.” In this episode, Martin reflects on how MLK’s early formation forged the conviction and courage of the man the world would come to know. Together they discuss King’s childhood encounters with racism, the transformative summer in Connecticut where King first preached, his courtship of Coretta Scott, his first sermon at Dexter Avenue, the theology of Personalism, and Martin’s own formation in Black Baptist and Pentecostal traditions.
Mark Labberton hosts the Conversing podcast and is the Clifford L. Penner Presidential Chair Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of Preaching at Fuller Seminary.
Lerone A. Martin is the MLK Jr. Centennial Professor in Religious Studies at Stanford and director of the King Research and Education Institute.
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