Dr. Martin Luther King's "Letters from Birmingham Prison" is the defense of non-violent direct actions promoted and used by the King during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. This is an objection to the disapproval of the bishops of Birmingham, Alabama, and it is obviously written in such a way as to appeal to these audiences. Using the knowledge of these audiences, Kim designed a very targeted discussion, chose the relevant historical example for quoting, using his personal experience in writing sermons and speech Strengthen his claim.
If you think about this, the reader will waste your power in the golden age of your life - your glorious youth - office's boring restrictions, until your aging and silver hair to your prison days I extend to the year. There is no hope of liberation or breathing; life forget or forget something like a holiday, remember them, but as a childhood privilege, so you can only appreciate my salvation. I lived for 50 years, but I am deducting them from the time I live with other people, not myself. This is the only real time so I can call myself all about myself, for myself, in a sense, he may say that he is alive, but it is someone's time He is not. Even though my poor days, no matter how long or short, it has at least tripled my body. If I had been stretching over the past 10 years, it will be as long as the previous 30 years.
What art do you admire in your grace and talent? Are you proud of yourself, Do you have a holy frame and sweet experience? Remember you, reader, you also have a kind of destruction. Your poor poppy's pride is eradicated, your mushrooms will die with the heat of burning and your self-sufficiency will be feces straw. If we forget to live in the deepest soul at the foot of the Cross, God will not forget that we will be smarter under his staff. It is impossible to destroy your soul, but excessively noble believers destroy your happiness and your comfort will destroy you. Therefore "that glory is to receive glory in the Lord."