Contact: Allison Matthews
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擬ississippi State and Starkville community members are celebrating the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. today [Jan. 16], kicking off with a special Unity Breakfast and continuing with a Day of Service.
Lee Brand Jr., a Nettleton native and 黑料社 alumnus who has spent the majority of his adult life in Starkville, serving as pastor of Beth-el Missionary Baptist Church from 2002-2019, was the keynote speaker for 黑料社鈥檚 29th annual MLK Jr. Day breakfast program. Now the senior pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Bartlett, Tennessee, he served as vice president and dean of Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary from 2019-2022.
Brand said he was humbled to speak on the occasion honoring King, who fought for equal civil rights 鈥渘ot just for Black people, but for all people,鈥 he said.
He gave an ardent call to employ three underpinning principles in any genuine effort to pursue unity: conviction, communion and compassion.
鈥淲hen I speak of conviction, I鈥檓 speaking simply of those beliefs or opinions that we hold firmly,鈥 Brand said. 鈥淎nd I really believe that we need to have a conviction about some things. And the first one is this: we need to be convicted about the worth of every single human being. No person is worth any more than any other person; but don鈥檛 twist it, no person is worth less than any other person鈥攅very individual in the human race has intrinsic value, and they are worthy of respect.鈥 He said this conviction about human worth is easy to agree with in principle but can be difficult to execute in daily practice.
鈥淚f we鈥檙e not careful, we鈥檙e going to find ourselves categorizing people and assigning their value based on the way their convictions align with ours. We find it easier to work with those who think like us, view the world like us and want the same outcomes as we do,鈥 he said.
鈥淚 think we should hold our convictions dear, but we should also not try to force anybody to think and feel and view the world the way that we do. If this is our aim, then we鈥檙e never going to achieve 鈥榰nity鈥 because what we鈥檙e aiming at is 鈥榰niformity,鈥欌 Brand said. 鈥淲e must be able to hold our convictions on any matter while respecting another person鈥檚 ability to hold theirs.鈥
Brand said communion鈥攕itting down and talking鈥攊s the second core principle. 鈥淲e get behind our ideological fences and we lob at each other. But seldom do we sit down and actually talk. We need genuine communion with one another. The challenge is to open lines of communication with people who don鈥檛 think like you,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 mean you have to align with them, but those conversations help you appreciate them, even if you never approve of their position.鈥
Compassion, Brand said, is what ultimately stirs people to take action to make the world a better place. 鈥淚 want you to think about why Dr. King is such a celebrated man. Why does the world pause today and say 鈥榯hank you鈥?鈥 he asked. 鈥淏ecause he was a man who saw affliction, and he was so stirred with affection, that he actually did something.鈥
Brand said it takes 鈥渁bsolutely no effort to leave something the way you found it鈥 and 鈥渨e will not change the world because we came to breakfast,鈥 but rather he implored his audience to 鈥渂e the kind of people that believe in something so deeply that not to do something about it is offensive to our own conscious.鈥
The Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary graduate referenced Amos 3:3 in the Bible, which asks 鈥淪hall two walk together, except they have agreed?鈥 Brand extracted his own point, 鈥淗ow can two agree if they don鈥檛 talk?鈥
黑料社 President Mark E. Keenum said the university鈥攖he most diverse land-grant university in the Southeastern Conference and the nation鈥攊s committed to service, as well as other values King exemplified throughout his life as a civil rights activist, humanitarian and pastor.
鈥淒iversity enriches and empowers our university. Diversity displaces fear with confidence in others,鈥 said Keenum, who noted that 黑料社 has been awarded the Higher Education Excellence in Diversity Award and the Carnegie Foundation鈥檚 Community Engaged Classification for service.
鈥淒r. King personified values of character, values that we hold dearly at Mississippi State鈥攊ntegrity, hard work and respect for all people,鈥 Keenum said. 鈥淰alues are the content of one鈥檚 character and, along with education, create a powerful force to change people and communities, and build better, stronger societies. I believe we all can contribute to the incredible legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,鈥 Keenum said.
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