MLK’s Faith Crisis Sparked His Fight For Justice

“More and more I could see a gap between what I had learned in Sunday school and what I was learning in college.”

Jon Ogden
4 min readJan 17, 2022

Martin Luther King, Jr. went to college at the young age of 15 and was immediately enthralled with the conversations he encountered there. “My days in college were very exciting ones,” he writes. “There was a free atmosphere.”

It was there he found Henry David Thoreau’s essay on civil disobedience that would shape his worldview for the rest of his life. King writes, “I was so deeply moved that I reread the work several times.”

But King also encountered ideas that troubled his faith — ideas that shattered his former beliefs. As he tells it: “My college training, especially the first two years, brought many doubts into my mind. It was then that the shackles of fundamentalism were removed from my body. More and more I could see a gap between what I had learned in Sunday school and what I was learning in college. My studies had made me skeptical, and I could not see how many of the facts of science could be squared with religion.”

I could not see how many of the facts of science could be squared with religion.” — Martin Luther King, Jr.

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Jon Ogden

Co-founder of UpliftKids.org, a lesson library and curriculum to explore values at home.