

He delivered some of his most enduring sermons for the first time at Ebenezer, including “The Dimensions of a Complete Life,” “What Is Man?” and “Loving Your Enemies.”Īfter King accepted the pastorate at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, members of Ebenezer’s congregation attended his October 1954 installation service, prompting King to express his gratitude: “Your prayers and words of encouragement have meant a great deal to me in my ministry and you can never know what your presence in such large numbers meant to me at the beginning of my pastorate. While in seminary, King often preached at Ebenezer. King, Jr., later described how his earliest relationships were formed at church: “My best friends were in Sunday School, and it was the Sunday School that helped me to build the capacity for getting along with people” ( Papers 1:359). With King, Sr., as pastor and his wife, Alberta Williams King, serving as musical director, the King family spent much of their time at Ebenezer. After the death of Williams in 1931, King, Sr., who had married Williams’ daughter Alberta in 1926, became pastor.

In March 1914 the Ebenezer congregation celebrated the groundbreaking for its new building. Williams moved the church twice before purchasing a lot on the corner of Auburn Avenue and Jackson Street and announced plans to raise $25,000 for a new building that would include an auditorium and gallery seating for 1,250 people. Under Williams the church grew from 13 members to nearly 750 members by 1913. In 1894 Adam Daniel Williams, King, Jr.’s maternal grandfather, became Ebenezer’s second pastor. The church was founded in 1886 by its first minister, John Andrew Parker. He returned as co-pastor with his father, Martin Luther King, Sr., serving from 1960 until his assassination in 1968. King went on to serve as Ebenezer’s associate minister during his breaks from Crozer Theological Seminary and from his doctoral studies at Boston University through early 1954.
#Founding pastor meaning license
Ebenezer’s congregation voted to license King as a minister soon afterward, and he was ordained in February 1948. In the fall of 1947, Martin Luther King delivered his first sermon at the pulpit of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. Bob Fitch photography archive, © Stanford University Libraries
