Lewis V. Baldwin is emeritus professor of religious studies at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. His works include, from Fortress Press, There Is a Balm in Gilead: The Cultural Roots of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1991); To Make the Wounded Whole: The Cultural Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1992); and Never to Leave Us Alone: The Prayer Life of Martin Luther King, Jr. (2010). Victor Anderson is Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at Vanderbilt Divinity School. He is also the Associate Professor of African American Studies and Religious Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Description
Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword Stephanie Y. Mitchem Introduction Lewis V. Baldwin and Victor Anderson Chapter 1: Blessed Assurance: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Consolation Of the Soul, Victor Anderson Chapter 2: A Great Cloud of Witnesses: Martin Luther King, Jr. and African American Religious and Spiritual Traditions, Diana L. Hayes Chapter 3: The Promptings of Some Beneficent Force: Dimensions of the "Spiritual" in the Life and Language of Martin Luther King, Jr., Victor Anderson and Lewis V. Baldwin Chapter 4: The Manifestations of an Immanent God: The Holy Spirit in the Theology of Martin Luther king, Jr., Aaron J. Howard Chapter 5: Cosmic Companionship: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Lived Theology, Stewart Burns Chapter 6: The Attuning of the Spirit: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Circle of Prayer, Lewis V. Baldwin Chapter 7: To Tell the Truth: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Preaching and Spirituality, Mervyn A. Warren Chapter 8: A "Spirituality of Improvisation": Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a DreamAE in Rearticulating American National Identity, Nichole R. Phillips Chapter 9: Transformed Nonconformity: Martin Luther King, Jr. on Spirituality, Ethics, and Leadership, Walter Earl Fluker Chapter 10: The Heart of a World Citizen: Martin Luther King, Jr. as Social Mystic, Beverly J. Lanzetta Chapter 11: A New Spirit Among Us?: The Spirituality of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Spiritual Non-Conformity of the Black Lives Matter Movement, Michael Brandon McCormack Afterword Barbara A. Holmes

