AMAZING STORY 
		
		Called to Carry the King Family Legacy 
		
		By Annika Young
	    The 700 Club
    
		
		
		 
		CBN.com -A  man protesting in Ferguson, Missouri asked, “How can we begin to heal something  that people don’t acknowledge that it’s broke?”
        The  events in Ferguson, Missouri have sparked a wildfire of protests and outcries  against social injustice. 
        Some  have responded with violence. A delegation from the King Center came with a  message of peace. It was led by CEO, Bernice King, the daughter of Doctor  Martin Luther King, Jr.
        “We  call it Nonviolence 365. Nonviolence  is a way of life for courageous people. Nonviolence seeks to win friendship and  understanding. Nonviolence seeks to defeat injustice and not people.  Nonviolence chooses love instead of hate. That’s my father’s philosophy and  methodology of nonviolence.”
        Like  her father, Bernice says she was called to the pulpit and the forefront of  social activism. 
        “I  was just being obedient to what I believed was the voice of God calling me into  ministry. As I’ve gone through this maturation in Christ and in my ministry, drawing  closer to my father’s legacy, I’ve come to understand that I have a profound  responsibility to carry the next phase of that.” 
        She  believes affecting positive, social change begins and ends with the church. “Our  role and responsibility is to really set the tone and direction of society and  culture. I tell people all the time that the movement that was led by my father  was a spiritual movement. It wasn’t a civil rights movement. It impacted civil  rights. But it was a spiritual movement and its assignment was to civil rights.”
        Personal  memories of her father are few. She was only five when he was  assassinated.  Much of what she’s learned  has come from his personal writings, documentaries, news clips, and her mother,  Coretta Scott King. Over the years Bernice realized her mother was as crucial  to the civil rights movement as her father. 
     
  “She  didn’t get as much accolades, because if you ask me, of course Coretta Scott  King needed Martin King in order to do what she did. But Martin King needed Coretta  Scott King in order for him to become the icon that he is in the world today.”
        As  Bernice came into her own as a minister, her mother often told her that she was  a lot like her father.
        “When  I would prepare to preach or even speak, I would tell her, ‘I’m not feeling  good. I don’t have anything to say.’ She said, ‘You know, that’s interesting.  Your Dad used to say that. He would do all this preparing and say, “I don’t  have anything to say to the people.’ She said, ‘But, if you just open your  mouth, God will speak.’ That’s what she used to tell me.”
   
          Coretta  Scott King dedicated her life to furthering her husband’s work. She founded the  King Center in 1968.
        “We  had a joke. The King Center was her fifth child. So I thought I was the baby,  but it was really the King Center. That’s why we have her side-by-side with  him. Where else could she be buried?”
        Today  Bernice carries on both of her parents’ work as CEO of the King Center. Still,  she knows she has her own path to follow.
        “I’m  trying to figure out what my legacy is, but I do know that I have been called  to represent a standard of excellence and integrity. I see that we live in a  world where there’s almost no standards. It’s like, ‘Whatever works for you.’  And we say, ‘As long as it doesn’t hurt anybody else’ but what does that really  mean? As Daddy said, ‘We’re caught in an inescapable network of mutuality tied  in a single garment of destiny. And what affects one directly, affects all  indirectly. I can’t be all that I ought be until you are all that you ought be  and you can’t be all that you ought be until I am all that I ought be.’ We  impact each other.”
        Regardless  of what her legacy might be, the end goal is no different than it was 60 years  ago. 
        “'Begin,’  as Stephen Covey would say, ‘begin with the end in mind.’ Because you always  want to preserve the possibility of reconnecting the brokenness in communities.  That’s Christ. And He has given to us the ministry of reconciliation. And  that’s what this Nonviolence 365 is  really about.”
        
		
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