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Saturday, February 7, 2026

Walking more humbly. A spiritual discipline for Justice Warriors

  

Walking more humbly.

 

 

A spiritual discipline for Justice Warriors

 

 

By Darrell Wolfe

 

 

 

 

Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the course The Theology and Ethics of Martin Luther King, Jr.: ET543

 

Professor Phillip Allen

 

 

Friday, January 30, 2026


 

Sermon – “Walking more humbly… a spiritual discipline for Justice Warriors.”

“He has told you, O mortal, what is good, and what does Yahweh ask from you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8, LEB).[1]

Introduction

I really like to argue. This is not to say that I enjoy the academic pursuit of laying down premises followed by evidence-based conclusions that follow logically from the data. No, I mean I like to post things to my social media pages that will intentionally stir ‘the other side’ to rage and then engage them in my comments section with escalating vitriol and mutual disrespect. For years, my more pastoral friends, my counselor, and my wife all lamented this habit. In my calmer moments, I lament this habit as well. My autistic over-active sense of justice rages against injustices and then I find myself taking extreme positions against the extreme abuses I witness in the world. I’ve made repeated attempts to change. Yet, I find myself falling back into the habit repeatedly. One of the truly great ironies about this habit is that I have changed my own understanding and stances largely through the academic pursuits I first mentioned. The very stances I argue against today, inciting rage-filled rebuke by some of my friends and acquaintances are the stances I used to support while these same friends and acquaintances yelled “Yeah, you tell them!” Why do I engage in this online behavior when my true core-self would rather I not? I have come to learn it is (in part) related to low dopamine from Autism and ADHD, and it is a dopamine seeking behavior. I still wanted to address the atrocities and injustices, but it was time for a change in approach.

Exposition

            Let us start by looking to Micah for guidance. The setting of Micah’s prophetic writing is the northern Kingdom of Isreal just prior to its destruction by the Assyrians (~ 722 BCE).[2] In chapter six, Micah begins a divine court case against Israel, “Arise! Plead our case…” (Micah 6:1),[3] and then he begins to speak for Yahweh with his indictment against his own people. Yahweh, via Micah, reminds Israel how he birthed them as a nation and gave them their code of honor, “do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God” (Micah 6:8, LEB). Some of the things Yahweh calls Israel out for are:

·         Rich taking advantage of people and causing violence.

·         Lies are commonplace among people of the nation.

·         Deceitful weights (social and economic coercion of the powerless by the powerful).

·         Aligning their thoughts with evil leaders who should have been examples to avoid.

Micah knew something about extreme injustices committed by people who claimed to be Yahweh’s people. In recent years, and more markedly recent weeks, the United States of America and the US-American White Evangelical Church have been looking an awful lot like the northern Kingdom of Isreal just prior to its destruction. While I want to use the term ‘they’, it is ‘we’. For I was them, and they were me, and we failed to see the heart of Yahweh and the heart of Jesus for social justice, mercy, kindness, understanding, humble approaches to knowledge, and the highest command to love even our enemy. As recent marches, protests, and violence spiked, I found myself lamenting for my part of the cause in the decades leading up to this cultural moment. I grew and changed through deconstruction and reconstruction of my worldview through academic biblical studies; by adopting a humble seeker mindset; and through the patience of professors, professionals, pastors, and new friends.

            In a similar cultural moment, in 1955, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addressed a crowd of Black-Americans who were angry at the injustices caused against them by the dominant culture, and the most recent injustice of the arrest of Rosa Parks for choosing not to give up her seat to a white passenger. They performed a successful one-day boycott of the public bus system with close to one hundred percent participation from all the black citizens of the city. Following this day of success, the instigators of the boycott determined that one day would not be enough, it was time to organize a movement. In his impromptu speech given in a small church in Alabama, Dr. King inaugurated a new organization and set the tone of the movement going forward by affirming their collective anger at injustice and their responsibility to act in opposition to it while also noting that Jesus said to love your enemies,[4] and he quoted Booker T Washington “Let no man pull you down so low as to make you hate him.”[5] Rather than leading violent protests, which was advocated by some other movements, the people of Montgomery, Alabama sustained a city-wide boycott of the public bus system for one year, leading to multiple wins for the community and culminating in a US Supreme Court decision against segregation. While my over-active sense of justice wanted to take the more violent approach while reading about those days, I am forced to admit that the peaceful protests ultimately won the day.

This week something wonderful happened in my approach to interacting with opposing views. A former colleague reached out to tell me how I had fallen from grace for now supporting the opposing side, and he tried to shout me into submission to his way (my old way) of thinking using name calling and coded language. For a micro-moment, I considered engaging him in the way I always have, both of us feeding each other’s need for a dopamine fix. Then I found there was nothing in me that wanted to pursue this path. I had no pull toward this awful habit.

Meditating on the way of love and Dr. King’s approach snuffed out this flame, at least for this interaction. I wanted an effective strategy that could open the door for authentic exploration. I attempted to lead the conversation into evidence, data, and facts. But rather than simply give that data to an unwilling participant as pearls to be trampled,[6] I challenged him to find data related to his chosen topic. He immediately tried to change the topic, but I refused to follow him to the new topic, insisting instead that he look up the data, evidence, statistics, and facts of the situations around which his chosen topic revolved, and then we could have a discussion. I let him know I would move on to other topics when we fully explored this topic together calmly using data. Ultimately, he was unwilling to engage in data-driven analysis, and the conversation ended with no dopamine fix for either party.

What I walked away with was a sense of peace. I sowed the seeds for peace and the opportunity to grow, learn, and resolve in discussion (not argument). The door remains open without burned bridges or blocked profiles. My goal was to move the conversation toward a productive dialogue that could have given us both an opportunity to widen our perspectives and move toward Justice, Kindness, and a Humble walk with God. It was a good start to a new way of interacting with the world for my part, following Dr. King’s lead.

            In my view, Micah is a clarion call to Yahweh’s heart, and Jesus’s message to love our enemies is a furthering of that goal. Had the northern Kingdom of Israel heeded this call, they may have survived for at least another generation. You cannot stand by and allow the rich to abuse the poor if you are loving your enemies. Dr. King’s approach followed Micah’s direction to “do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God” (Micah 6:8). The boycott, lasting one year, did not incite riots (though they had a model to do this in the white pro-segregation organization they were compared with). They did not burn bridges; rather, Dr. King actively made his audience aware that the goal was reconciliation and not further division. His approach was one of active participation while employing humility in approach. Sadly, this is not the way I (we) often engage with high-tension topics, especially in social media. I find a model for this in my former counselor Bob Hamp, whose posts always account for the pain points both ‘sides’ of a contentious topic may feel while calling both to a higher way of thinking. It is my hope to inspire that way in myself and in my audience.


 

COMMENTARY

            My intended primary audience are (1) fellow arguers – keyboard warriors – those of us who feel the need to shout against injustice, and (2) those of us who came out of the majority white evangelical culture, deconstructed, reconstructed, and now feel passion to see our former friends and acquaintances make the same changes to fight against injustice. As a writer, first and foremost, I will be posting this on my website(s); however, if I ever found the occasion to give a public address, speech, or sermon, I may pull this from my archives and use this material as a jumping off point. When I read Dr. King’s recounting of his impromptu message, and the way he juxtaposed active resistance with loving both the harmed and those causing harm (actively or passively), it challenged me. I saw in him the balance of the two ideals, which he himself said, “With less than fifteen minutes left, I began preparing an outline. In the midst of this, however, I faced a new and sobering dilemma: How could I make a speech that would be militant enough to keep my people aroused to positive action and yet moderate enough to keep this fervor within controllable and Christian bounds?”[7]

As I read this, Micah 6:8 came flooding to mind, and I got to seeing his movement and ethos in terms of Micah’s words. Dr. King actively and consciously stoked the fires of the people to resist injustice (do justice) but he balanced this with loving kindness toward all involved. This approach is one of humility and not pride. Pride did enter the movement at one point, a man felt slighted for having been passed over for a leadership role, and he put out false accusations against the movement. This threatened to quickly derail the cohesion and momentum. Dr. King left his vacation in another state, leaving behind his wife and child, to return home and handle the conflict before it escalated. Here again, Dr. King resisted the injustice while remaining in loving kindness towards the man and those he felt wronged him. This humble approach led the man to repent and healed the rift. Micah 6:8 may be the “how-to” to Jesus’ ethos to “love your enemies”.


 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

King, Martin Luther, Jr. A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr. HarperOne, 2003.

The Lexham English Bible (LEB), Fourth Edition. Logo Bible Software. Harris, W. H., III, Ritzema, E., Brannan, R., Mangum, D., Dunham, J., Reimer, J. A., & Wierenga, M. (Eds.). Lexham Press, 2010. http://www.lexhampress.com.

Walton, John H., Victor Harold Matthews, and Mark W. Chavalas. The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament. InterVarsity Press, 2000.

 



[1] The Lexham English Bible (LEB), Fourth Edition, Logo Bible Software, Harris, W. H., III, Ritzema, E., Brannan, R., Mangum, D., Dunham, J., Reimer, J. A., & Wierenga, M. (Eds.) (Lexham Press, 2010), Micah 6:8, http://www.lexhampress.com.

[2] John H. Walton et al., The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament (InterVarsity Press, 2000), sec. Micah: 1:1-16 Judgment Coming to Samaria and Jerusalem.

[3] LEB, Micah 6:1.

[4] Martin Luther King Jr., A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr. (HarperOne, 2003), 436; LEB, Matt 5:43-44; Luke 6:27-35-- ““You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor’ and ‘Hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,” (Matthew 5:43–44, LEB); ““But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you,” (Luke 6:27, LEB); “But love your enemies, and good, and lend expecting back nothing, and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked.” (Luke 6:35, LEB).

[5] King, A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr., 436.

[6] LEB, Matthew 7:6.

[7] King, A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr., 434.



Shalom שָׁלוֹם: Live Long and Prosper!
Darrell Wolfe
Storyteller | Writer | Thinker | Consultant | Freelancer | Bible Nerd *Written withs some editing and research assistance from ChatGPT-4o