These letters from Pastor Harry and church leaders explore the challenges we face as people of faith in a complicated and fearful world, not unlike the world that Paul faced, and not unlike the world that Dr. King faced down.
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January 18, 2025
Dear Saints in Santa Fe, and other far-off places:
Greetings in the name and spirit of Jesus Christ!
Been to the Mountaintop.
Yes, when I was five. It was my first time being up so high and looking down, something small town Ohio did not offer. But a trip to California changed that in the summer of 1964 when Dad began his doctoral program at San Francisco Seminary. One evening at dusk my family and I drove up to Mt. Tamalpais when the sun was dropping behind the Pacific.
We looked south upon the flickering lights of San Francisco. I was mesmerized. I had never seen that kind of beauty before. Mom held the family instamatic camera, the one with the bulb on the top that afforded you four flashes, twisting as one click went to the next till it was used up.
Worried that she had waited too long to capture the moment as the light-speckled valley below was turning dark, she asked, “Do you think it would help if I used the flash?” I thought it was a pretty good idea, being five, but my dad and brothers laughed and soon we were all laughing at the thought that a little camera could light up the entire Bay area.
I still think it’s a good idea.
As Monday approaches when we observe both Martin Luther King, Jr. and the inauguration I recall King’s final speech delivered the day before he was assassinated. He spoke to an audience in Memphis and described how far the Civil Rights movement had come but that there was still more work to do.
At the end of his speech, King described the scene in Deuteronomy 34 where Moses had led the Israelites through the Wilderness and now, atop Mount Nebo, God showed him the Promised Land below. King said he had caught a glimpse of the Promised Land—a future where all people were free, where injustice had ended, and a racial divide no longer separated people so all people would finally be treated as equals, with dignity and respect. It is the Bible’s vision of justice and unity and King found hope in that.
We are still far from that vision today. As new leadership takes office this week the question remains how far away is that vision and when will we ever see it? Moses never did, he died right there on the mountain. King never did. He was killed by an assassin’s bullet the next day.
But when I was five I had been to the mountaintop. I thought I was seeing the Promised Land. There was no reason not to believe that then, that a small flash of light, of compassion, of inclusion, of equality, could illuminate the whole world.
I still hold out hope that it will.
Grace and peace,
Harry