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International LightWorkerS

Marin Luther King Initiation


LightWorker™ Series

Non-violence is a powerful and just weapon


which cuts without wounding and enables
the man who wields it”

Channelled by Dr. David Joshua Stone


Manual written by Lisa Center & Amanda Center with
Instruction and Design by Jens Søeborg
Rosa Parks Initiation (LightWorker™ Series)
This initiation is one of the many, channelled by Dr. Joshua David
Stone, shown on the picture to the right. They are from a numbered list
of 303 initiations. I have sorted them differently, but I have kept the
number as well, but skipped the "The" in front of all names. Dr. Stone is
giving them free as true gifts from our eternal and infinite Spirit,
coming directly from the Absolute Source of Divine Light and Divine
Love.

I will do simple manuals to them when I have time, mainly with


material from Wikipedia. And remember they are all free of any charge
and obligation. You are free to copy and pass on. I will send copies to
Dr. Joshua David Stone, and if you translate, then please pass a copy to
both of us: drstone@best.com, MaLadywolf@aol.com and
enseikoshiro@yahoo.com.

LightWorker™ Remarkable Persons Initiations 1 (Dr. Joshua David Stone)


Abraham Lincoln Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 98) (LightWorker™ Series)
Albert Einstein Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 110) (LightWorker™ Series)
Andres Segovia Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 40) (LightWorker™ Series)
Benjamin Franklin Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 192) (LightWorker™ Series)
Bill Clinton Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 167) (LightWorker™ Series)
Carl Jung Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 100) (LightWorker™ Series)
Christopher Columbus Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 185) (LightWorker™ Series)
Confucius Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 191) (LightWorker™ Series)
Dalai Lama Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 135) (LightWorker™ Series)
Edgar Cayce Initiations 1-2 (Dr. Joshua David Stone 85+149) (LightWorker™ Series)
Elizabeth Kuebler-Ross Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 152) (LightWorker™ Series)
Franklin Delanor Roosevelt Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 196) (LightWorker™ Series)
Fritz Perls Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 104) (LightWorker™ Series)
Gloria Hoppala Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 109) (LightWorker™ Series)
Helen Keller Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 181) (LightWorker™ Series)
Jack La Lane Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 41) (LightWorker™ Series)
John F. Kennedy Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 99) (LightWorker™ Series)
John Paul II Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 186) (LightWorker™ Series)
Joshua David Stone Initiations 1-2 (Dr. Joshua David Stone 115+224) (LightWorker™ Series)
Ken Keyes Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 146) (LightWorker™ Series)
Leonardo DaVinci Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 132) (LightWorker™ Series)
Martin Luther King Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 97) (LightWorker™ Series)
Meyer Baba Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 143) (LightWorker™ Series)
Michaelangelo Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 102) (LightWorker™ Series)
Nelson Mandela Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 183) (LightWorker™ Series)
Nikola Tesla Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 111) (LightWorker™ Series)
Norman Cousins Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 147) (LightWorker™ Series)
Norman Vincent Peale Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 144) (LightWorker™ Series)
Omar Arabia Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 226) (LightWorker™ Series)
Paul Solomon Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 145) (LightWorker™ Series)
Plato Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 206) (LightWorker™ Series)
Pythagoras Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 205) (LightWorker™ Series)
Ram Dass Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 151) (LightWorker™ Series)
Robert Schuller Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 198) (LightWorker™ Series)
Roberto Assagioli Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 128) (LightWorker™ Series)
Rosa Parks Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 180) (LightWorker™ Series)
Rudolf Steiner Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 142) (LightWorker™ Series)
Sai Baba Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 80) (LightWorker™ Series)
Socrates Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 204) (LightWorker™ Series)
Sri Yukteswar Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 119) (LightWorker™ Series)
Swami Vivekananda Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 140) (LightWorker™ Series)
Theodore Roosevelt Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 179) (LightWorker™ Series)
Virginia Sattir Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 108) (LightWorker™ Series)
William Shakespeare Initiation (Dr. Joshua David Stone 148) (LightWorker™ Series)

LightWorker™ Remarkable Persons Initiations 2 (Other founders)


Leif Ericson Initiation (Jens Söeborg) (LightWorker™ Series)
Mother Teresa Initiation (Charmaine Söeborg) (LightWorker™ Series)

Receiving the Initiation


I once asked a teacher the difference between an empowerment and an initiation. With
empowerments we are seeking to empower ourselves with the attributes of a specific person or
thing. Initiations are more of feeling what it is like to be that person. This world would be a
greater place indeed if we all strived to become more like Martin Luther King Jr. We can begin
that process in our hearts.
Start with Gassho (prayer posture). Meditate on the light and love energies around you, above
you and inside of you. Ask the help of your higher self and others of your helpers such as the
mighty I AM presence, the angels and archangels, masters and Mahatma Guides of meditation,
ascension and initiation. Accept receiving the initiation from your teacher. Sense the energies!
Enjoy! Expand! Relax…

If you receive more than one initiation, then please remember to take deep breaths in-between
initiations.

Passing on the Initiation


To pass the initiation to others do the same process as above. Make it your intention to pass this
on to another and read it aloud waiting for a few moments in-between initiations, sensing the
energies running and the spiritual shifts. Trust in the Higher wisdom and Power. Enjoy!
Expand! Relax…

Foreword (Lisa Center)


I am an American and proud that I am able to speak my
mind in a country where people agree on very little. The
statue of Liberty that stands in New York harbor
representing the welcoming words of “give us your tired,
your poor” is no longer a truth. We do not all care about the
homeless people that continue to live under bridges and in
city alleys or sleep over the heating grates in our nations
capitol to keep warm at night. We do not all care about the
Mexican peoples that are working in our country and have
achieved a home and the dream we all seek as we petition to
strike them from our Social security retirement and
Medicare system. We do not all care about the poor that lay
dying in their homes from illness that could be treated, or at
least given ease, because they have no health insurance. We do not all care that some of our
nations people have to hide who they are in fear of societal retribution. When you look at the
fear some still have towards people who are HIV positive, we have not come very far. Our
humanity is still lacking and there are far too many hearts that are filled with rage and hatred
for anything they do not understand.
I was raised Southern Baptist in a seaport in Virginia, United States. I can remember water
fountains marked colored and white and always wondering why the colored water was not
colored. I expected rainbow water and was greatly disappointed. When I would ask my
Grandmother why the water was not colored she would grab my arm leading me away telling me
to stop asking questions.

I stayed with an African American woman after school every day


as I was too young to stay alone. We sat in her kitchen and
listened to the speeches of a Baptist minister from Alabama on
the radio. Sometimes she would vocally agree with the man’s
words with an “Amen.” Other times her eyes would fill with tears.
I would sit quietly and try to understand. I would take questions
about what I had heard to my Grandfather.

I don’t think he told my grandmother where we were going on


that August morning, 1963. We drove to Washington. D.C. and at
ten years old there were more cars and people than I had ever
seen. He took my hand and led me towards the Lincoln memorial.
I recognized the power of that familiar voice immediately. My
Grandfather lifted me up on his thin shoulders so I could see the
man behind the voice. I listened with thousands and watched as
others cheered and cried.

I knew he was worried about what was happening but in my young mind I could not understand
the force and importance of the man and the crowds. Up until that day I did not know that
anyone was treated unjustly. I can only imagine how difficult it was for my grandfather trying to
answer my questions on the way back home. I cried for the people I knew that may have had
terrible things happen to them that I would not even know about. I cried because it was “mean
and wrong and not what Jesus taught.” He understood me on a level my grandmother could not
since she was diligently trying to shelter and protect me. The trip to D.C was our secret for
many years. Looking back at that trip with a man who spoke very little to others, I see it as a
turning point and deciding factor in my life.

I believe as Martin Luther King did on the day his home was threatened as he fell to his knees in
prayer, God has a plan for us. Martin wrote that God told him. ”Martin Luther, stand up for
righteousness, stand up for Justice, stand up for the truth. And lo I will be with you, even until
the end of the world.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. was born to a Baptist
minister and his wife on January 15, 1929. He grew
up in the church and attended public schools. He
received his Bachelors degree in Sociology from
Morehouse College in 1948. Continuing his education
he also received a Bachelors of Divinity from the
Crozen Theological Seminary in Chester, Penn-
sylvania in 1951 and his PhD. in Systematic Theology
from Boston University in 1955. He married Loretta
Scott on June 18th 1953 and they eventually had four
children: two sons and two daughters. In 1955 he
accepted pastorate of the Dexter Avenue Baptist
Church in Montgomery, Alabama. His sermons were
impassioned with his views on the rights of others
and the injustices of the world.
It was a natural progression for him to be a member of the executive committee of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). In 1955, he led his first nonviolent
demonstration. When Mrs. Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on the bus to
a white man, Martin, along with two other pastors in the city, decided to protest with a
boycotting of the bus system. The boycott lasted 382 days and led to the desegregation of the
public transit system. December 21, 1956 the Supreme Court declared bus segregation as
unconstitutional. During the long days of the boycott, he and his family’s lives were threatened,
his home was bombed and Martin was arrested.

It was not to be the last time he spent time in jail as he ended up


being arrested many times on charges that ranged from
obstructing the sidewalk to going five miles over the speed limit.
Following an arrest for failure to obey an officer in September of
1957, the police Commissioner immediately paid the fines,
against Dr King’s wishes and he was released. After his arrest in
Birmingham, Alabama at a peaceful protest against segregation,
a few clergymen openly criticized him. They felt Martin should
“stay out of the streets and let the courts decide how to handle
things.” This provoked the now famous letter from a
Birmingham City jail
(http://www.nobelprizes.com/nobel/peace/MLK-jail.html).
The entire letter can be read on this site.

Dr King and his wife were guests of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in February 1959 in India.
He gladly welcomed the opportunity to study Gandhi’s March techniques of nonviolence as he
had been employing methods from his study of Gandhi in the past.

Violent acts upon Dr King continued as he was stabbed in Harlem, New York and stoned in
Chicago, Illinois. Through all the anger he incited, there was a larger measure of respect. He
received the Nobel peace prize December 10, 1964 at 39 years of age making him the youngest
person to ever receive this honor. He also received the following honors:

• Doctor of Humane Letters from Morehouse College


• Doctor of Laws from Howard University
• Doctor of Divinity from Chicago Theological Seminary
• Doctor of Laws from Morgan State University
• Doctor of Humanities from Central State University
• Doctor of Divinity from Boston University
• Doctor of Laws from Lincoln University
• Doctor of Laws from University of Bridgeport
• Doctor of Civil Law from Bard College
• Doctor of Letters from Keuka College
• Doctor of Divinity from Wesleyan College
• Doctor of Laws from Jewish Theological Seminary
• Doctor of Laws from Yale University
• Doctor of Divinity from Springfield College
• Doctor of Laws from Hofstra University
• Doctor of Humane Letters from Oberlin College
• Doctor of Social Science from Amsterdam Free University
• Doctor of Divinity from St. Peter’s College
• Doctor of Civil Law from University of New Castle, Upon Tyne
• Doctor of Laws from Grinnell College .
Per J. Edgar Hoover (Director of F.B.I.) instruction, the Federal Bureau of Investigation kept
very close tabs on Dr. King. They bugged his home and followed him wherever he went. There
were even reports of Hoover trying to force King to commit suicide following his winning the
Nobel peace prize. Dr King had given the entire prize monies of $54,123 to the Civil Rights
Movement.

Words from the heart


Dr. King had the ability to speak to the heart of a
people who knew injustices prevailed. His famous “I
had a dream speech” can still inspire with it’s reso-
nance of truth.

August 28, 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln


memorial in Washington, D.C.

“I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up


and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold
these truths to be self-evident: that all men are
created equal." I have a dream that one day on the
red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and
the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit
down together at a table of brotherhood. I have a
dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a
desert state, sweltering with the heat of injustice
and oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of
freedom and justice. I have a dream that my four
children will one day live in a nation where they will
not be judged by the color of their skin but by the
content of their character. I have a dream today.”
www.summit.mccsc.edu/mlk2k6/Martin%20Luther%2...

One year before his death, he began to speak out against the war in
Viet Nam. In retrospect many people believe these speeches are the
“last stand” that led to his untimely demise.
“King delivered Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence. In the
speech he spoke strongly against the U.S.'s role in the war, insisting
that the U.S. was in Vietnam "to occupy it as an American colony"
and calling the US government "the greatest purveyor of violence in
the world today." But he also argued that the country needed larger
and broader moral changes:
A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring
contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will
look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West
investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out
with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: "This is not just."

"True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it comes to see that an edifice which
produces beggars needs restructuring." From Vietnam to South Africa to Latin America, King
said, the U.S. was "on the wrong side of a world revolution." King questioned "our alliance with
the landed gentry of Latin America," and asked why the U.S. was suppressing revolutions "of the
shirtless and barefoot people" in the Third World, instead of supporting them.”
www.wikipedia.com (image courtesy of Rob Surrette - world’s fastest portrait artist)
In April 3, 1968, at Mason Temple (Church of God in Christ, Inc. - World Headquarters) King
prophetically told a euphoric crowd during his "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speech:

It really doesn't matter what happens now.... some began


to... talk about the threats that were out—what would
happen to me from some of our sick white brothers.... Like
anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its
place, but I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to
do God's will. And He's allowed me to go up to the mountain!
And I've looked over, and I've seen the Promised Land. I may
not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that
we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land. And so I'm
happy tonight. I'm not worried. My eyes have seen the Glory
of the coming of the Lord!”

Dr Martin Luther King was assassinated the next day, April


4, 1968, as he stood on the balcony outside of his room at the
Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. Members of the
Federal Bureau of investigation were immediately on the
scene. It was noted that they were posted across the street in
a warehouse where they continued their watchful eye. Riots broke out in more than 60 U.S.
cities following his death. More than 300,000 people attended the funeral.

I end with the words of yet another man in honor of this great man. The following words are
from a song by James Taylor:“Let us turn our thoughts today to Martin Luther King, and
recognize that there are ties between us, all men and women, living on the earth, Ties of hope
and love, sister and brotherhood, That we are bound together with a desire to see the world
become a place in which our children can grow free and strong.”

Proclaiming a holiday in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., President George W. Bush receives a portrait of the civil rights leader
from his wife and children in the East Room Jan. 21, 2002. Photographed from left to right are Coretta Scott King, the President,
Rev. Bernice King and Martin Luther King III. WHITE HOUSE PHOTO BY TINA HAGER.

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