During the 1960s even though Blacks and White shared the same faith, they could not share the same church pew because of the racial barrier that was prevalent in that time between the two races. Churches have always been a safe place for Blacks and Whites to retreat to when needed, but they were never integrated. Blacks went to their churches, and Whites went to theirs. The church was one place where they could sit in peace surrounded by their fellow friends and family, and forget about the brutality happening right outside the doors. Since it was a safe haven the Blacks were not pushing for the churches to be integrated, and the Whites did not want their churches to be desegregated. What the Whites were doing they did not see as discrimination …show more content…
Martin Luther King Jr. spent many of his days inside many different churches. He led many people to their faith, and also led many people to civil rights movements. King wrote a very famous letter from jail called “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”. He was responding to a letter written by white clergymen about racial issues. One main point discussed by Martin Luther King Jr. was religion. King made it prevalent that he did not receive the support he thought white preachers would give him. He was not met with equal support because the white preachers saw him as everything but equal to them. “I have been so greatly disappointed with the white Church and its leadership.” (Letter from a Birmingham Jail). There was already a mindset that was placed in the Whites about the inferior race. Even though it was all the same religion nothing could change that mindset.“I have wept over the church. But be assured that my tears have been tears of love. There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love.” (Letter from a Birmingham Jail). Being a man with only love and acceptance in his heart, King could not understand why Christians would not accept fellow Christians. He had high hopes and dreams that people filled with faith could break the race barrier was handed back broken dreams when they made it clear they could not grow past the