We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.
King wrote these words in April 1963 from a jail cell in Birmingham, Alabama, where he had been arrested for leading nonviolent protests against segregation. He was answering clergymen who called his actions untimely and urged him to wait for change through slower means. King's point was that injustice in one city was not a distant problem but a thread pulling on everyone else's life. Today it is a reminder that belonging is not something we choose occasionally; we are already woven into other people's lives whether we notice it or not.
Reflection
My day is full of people whose lives connect to mine in ways I don't always notice. Who is one person I can reach out to today?