Al Owski’s Reviews > Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Love > Status Update

Al Owski
is on page 187 of 304
“And so this is the distinction that I want you to see this morning. And on all other levels we have a need love, but when we come to agape, we have a gift love. And so it is the love that includes everybody. And the only testing point for you to know whether you have real genuine love is that you love your enemy.”
— Sep 27, 2025 04:14AM
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Al Owski
is on page 255 of 304
“The gospel at its best deals with the whole man, not only his soul but also his body, not only his spiritual well-being but also his material well-being. A religion that professes a concern for the souls of men and is not equally concerned about the slums that damn them, the economic conditions that strangle them, and the social conditions that cripple them, is a spiritually moribund religion.”
— 2 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 254 of 304
“I had almost despaired of the power of love to solve social problems. The turn-the-other-cheek and the love-your-enemies philosophies are valid, I felt, only when individuals are in conflict with other individuals; when racial groups and nations are in conflict, a more realistic approach is necessary.”
— 6 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 251 of 304
“Death is inevitable. It is a democracy for all of the people, not an aristocracy for some of the people–kings die and beggars die; young men die and old men die; learned men die and ignorant men die.”
— 10 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 251 of 304
“Religion endows us with the conviction that we are not alone in this vast, uncertain universe. Beneath and above the shifting sands of time, the uncertainties that darken our days, and the vicissitudes that cloud our nights is a wise and loving God."
— 12 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 248 of 304
“We are afraid of the superiority of other people, of failure, and of the scorn or disapproval of those whose opinions we most value. Envy, jealousy, a lack of self-confidence, a feeling of insecurity, and a haunting sense of inferiority are all rooted in fear. We do not envy people and then fear them; first we fear them and subsequently we become jealous of them.”
— 18 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 248 of 304
“What then is the cure of this morbid fear of integration? We know the cure. God help us to achieve it! Love casts out fear.“
— 21 minutes ago

Al Owski
is on page 246 of 304
“Third, fear is mastered through love. The New Testament affirms, "There is no fear in love; but perfect love cast out fear." The kind of love which led Christ to a cross and kept Paul from bitterness amid the angry torrents of persecution is not soft, anemic, and sentimental.”
— Oct 08, 2025 06:41AM

Al Owski
is on page 246 of 304
“Courage breeds creative self-affirmation; cowardice produces destructive self-abnegation. Courage faces fear and thereby masters it; cowardice represses fear and is thereby mastered by it. Courageous men never lose the zest for living even though their life situation is zestless; cowardly men, overwhelmed by the uncertainties of life, lose the will to live.”
— Oct 08, 2025 06:38AM

Al Owski
is on page 245 of 304
“In his Journal Henry David Thoreau wrote, "Nothing is so much to be feared as fear." Centuries earlier, Epictetus wrote, "For it is not death or hardship that is a fearful thing, but the fear of hardship and death." Courage takes the fear produced by a definite object into itself and thereby conquers the fear involved.”
— Oct 07, 2025 07:39AM

Al Owski
is on page 244 of 304
“Second, we can master fear through one of the supreme virtues known to man: courage. Plato considered courage to be an element of the soul which bridges the cleavage between reason and desire. Aristotle thought of courage as the affirmation of man's essential nature. Thomas Aquinas said that courage is the strength of mind capable of conquering whatever threatens the attainment of the highest good.”
— Oct 07, 2025 05:14AM