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How Martin Luther King Jr. foresaw Mississippi’s new Episcopal Black bishop

by California Digital News


(RNS) — In his “I Have a Dream” speech delivered at the March on Washington 61 years ago, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. vividly described Mississippi as a place “sweltering with the heat of injustice” and “sweltering with the heat of oppression.”

In May of that year of 1963, amid the campaign to register Mississippi’s Black voters, the home of organizer Hartman Turnbow, north of Jackson, was firebombed. In June, the state’s NAACP field director, Medgar Evers, was shot and killed outside his home, and when 150 Black voters tried to register en masse in Itta Bena to commemorate Evers, they were tear-gassed by Ku Klux Klan members.

King’s mention of Mississippi valorized this struggle for civil rights in some of the most racially segregated and oppressive areas of the South, where African Americans faced extreme disenfranchisement, segregation and brutality and which had become symbolic of the worst conditions that African Americans were enduring. King used it to contrast his optimistic vision of transformation where “freedom and justice” would eventually prevail.

It’s a testament to King’s vision that on this past July 20, the Episcopal Diocese of Mississippi consecrated the Rt. Rev. Dorothy Sanders Wells the first Black and the first female Episcopal bishop in the Diocese of Mississippi. Bishop Wells’ elevation represents not just a singular milestone, but a testament to the substantive, albeit slow, progress that has been made since King’s stirring words, a profound symbol of reconciliation and healing in a community that once exemplified racial segregation and discrimination.



Religious institutions, especially in the South, have played a critical role in the United States’ racial history, both perpetuating and combating racial injustices. Southern churches, most often segregated, reflected and reinforced the broader norms of racial division. Wells’ consecration is an acknowledgment of these past wrongs and represents a commitment to new paths of inclusivity and equality.

The symbolism of this moment reminds us that the journey from King’s dream in 1963 to its fulfillment is not complete. While significant progress has been made, the dream of equality and justice remains a work in progress. But Wells’ consecration underscores the hope that everywhere, our religious and moral consciousness can evolve. As we did in Mississippi, all of us can foster leadership that embodies the principles of justice and equality that King envisioned.

King anticipated this day, when Mississippi would be “an oasis of freedom and justice,” but he knew that the fight for civil rights and equity requires persistent efforts from our institutions and in our society. As individuals and as communities, we must continue to break down long-entrenched barriers with vigilance and a relentless commitment to justice. 

Wells’ consecration offers a tangible model for other regions with deeply rooted histories of discrimination, an example of how to begin to rewrite their narratives through deliberate actions that promote justice and representation. Mississippi’s transformation shows the potential for change and the possibility of progress in the most unlikely places.



King’s hope for Mississippi and the consecration of Wells should be understood as a single narrative, one that testifies to the relevance of King’s dream more than half a century later. It reminds us of the enduring spirit of human rights advocacy and the critical importance of our own current and future efforts toward a more equitable, inclusive and just society.

(Joe McDaniel is a member of the Episcopal Church’s Executive Council and serves as co-chair for the Commission on Racial Justice & Reconciliation for the Episcopal Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)



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