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What if MLK, Reagan, and Jesus Conversed over Coffee?

By John Elton Pletcher

Explanation: This article was crafted using my imagination, wordsmithing, and discerning use of both ChapGPT and Copilot tools.

One evening, they sat round a simple wooden table, its surface worn smooth by years of use. No news media or audience of constituents—only a quiet room, mugs, and three men whose words had already traveled farther than their feet ever could.

Martin Luther King Jr. leaned forward, his hands folded, his voice carrying the familiar cadence of the pulpit. Ronald Reagan sat back, attentive, genial, a storyteller’s smile waiting at the corners of his mouth. Jesus of Nazareth, calm and unhurried, looked at them both as though he had all the time in the world. After all, wooden tables, careful words, and coffee beans had been Christ’s original inventions eons ago.

Theirs was a conversation crafted not of new declarations, but of old echoes—concepts drawn from sermons, speeches, parables, and letters that had shaped centuries.

On Power and Moral Law

King was first to break the silence.

“Power,” he said, “is not evil in itself. It becomes dangerous when it is divorced from love and justice.” It was a thought he had returned to often in his sermons: power at its best is love implementing the demands and opportunities of justice.

Reagan nodded. “I’ve always believed government should be strong enough to protect freedom, but humble enough to remember it exists because of the people,” he replied. The President was echoing his frequent warnings against centralized power and his faith in the moral capacity of individuals. “When power forgets its limits, it forgets its purpose.”

Jesus listened, then spoke softly. “You both speak of power as something to be restrained and directed,” he reflected. “I have said that the greatest among you must be a servant. Power that does not serve well—grounded in genuine love—always seeks to selfishly rule others.”

The room settled into that idea. King saw in it the backbone of nonviolent resistance. Reagan heard a reminder that authority without virtue corrodes from within.

On Freedom

Reagan took his turn. “Freedom is fragile. It’s never more than one generation away from extinction. It has to be defended—not just with strength, but with conviction.”

King answered without hesitation. “And freedom,” he said, “is not simply the absence of chains. It is the presence of dignity. A man is not free if he is humiliated by law or custom, even if no one is holding him down.”

Jesus traced a finger along the grain of the table. “You speak of freedom in the world,” he said. “And I speak of freedom of the heart. Human hearts need forgiveness. People may live under empire and yet be free; another may rule kingdoms and still be enslaved—to fear, to wealth, to hatred.”

Reagan smiled faintly. “That sounds like a warning against what happens when prosperity becomes the only measure.”

Jesus met his eyes. “It is a warning against forgetting what prosperity is intended to accomplish.”

On Love, Conflict, and Enemies

King’s voice grew more intense, though never harsh. “We cannot drive out darkness with darkness,” he said, drawing from the core of his philosophy. “Hate cannot defeat hate. Only love can do that. But love is not passive. It resists evil without becoming evil.”

Reagan considered this. “I spent a lifetime opposing systems I believed were wrong,” He was recalling his Cold War speeches about tyranny and freedom. “But I also believed people on the other side were still people. That’s why words matter. If you call your enemy a monster long enough, you forget they’re human.”

Jesus nodded. “Love your enemies,” he said simply, repeating a command that had confounded listeners for two millennia. “Not because they are right, but because love changes the one who gives it—and sometimes, the one who receives it.”

King smiled at that. “That’s the heart of nonviolence,” he said. “It seeks not to defeat or humiliate, but to awaken.”

On Hope and the Future

For a moment, the conversation turned quiet. Reagan took another sip of coffee, then spoke again, his tone lighter but no less serious.

“I’ve always been an optimist,” he said. Both King and Christ gave a knowing chuckle. “I believe tomorrow can be better than today, not because history guarantees it, but because people can choose it.”

King responded with familiar confidence. “The arc of the moral universe is long,” he said, “but it bends toward justice—because people bend it. Progress doesn’t roll in on the wheels of inevitability. It comes through sacrifice.”

Jesus smiled at them both. There was no urgency in his voice. “Hope,” he said, “is faith made visible in action. You plant seeds whose shade you may never sit under. That is enough.”

Leaving the Table

When they finally rose, nothing had been formally resolved. No manifesto was signed. No single philosophy had conquered the others.

But something had happened.

King carried with him a renewed assurance that love could confront power without surrendering to it. Reagan left with deeper conviction that freedom and forgiveness require moral grounding and bold courage.

And Jesus—unchanged yet ever present—left behind the reminder that words, when joined to humility and service, can outlive empires.

The table and mugs remained, empty now but not silent. Both were still echoing with ideas—about justice that loves, freedom that serves, and hope that acts.

Capitol violence, MLK, and the Gospel of Peace

In the wake of the rioting and insurrection on January 6, I’m still trying to sort through the melee. My own soul needs calmed related to the unrest and violent actions. On this day as we remember Dr. Martin Luther King, we all hope, long, and pray for cooler heads, calmer hearts, and a peaceful inauguration week.

Plenty of people are denouncing what transpired at the U.S. Capitol and saying, “Enough is enough. The hate must stop!” Voices are gathering and calling for more voices of peace.

I’ve been wrestling with an antithetical concept: I think we need a stronger hatred. I’m serious. Please hear me out. Consider the Apostle Paul’s engaging words:

Don’t just pretend to love others. Really love them. Hate what is wrong. Hold tightly to what is good. Love each other with genuine affection,and take delight in honoring each other. Never be lazy, but work hard and serve the Lord enthusiastically.Rejoice in our confident hope . . . Bless those who persecute you. Don’t curse them; pray that God will bless them. Be happy with those who are happy, and weep with those who weep. Live in harmony with each other. Don’t be too proud to enjoy the company of ordinary people. And don’t think you know it all! Never pay back evil with more evil. Do things in such a way that everyone can see you are honorable. Do all that you can to live in peace with everyone . . . Don’t let evil conquer you, but conquer evil by doing good. Romans 12:9-21 (NLT)(emphasis mine)

Here is a foundational concept on our way to peace. It’s essential to “hate well.”[1] Hating well means we despise and push back all that is evil in our own hearts and in our collective consciences. It means starting right here in my chair, I vehemently combat the attitudes and actions that promote rank racism, self-consumed vengeance, and violence toward those of a different political persuasion. If there’s any real war to be waged, it must start in my own heart, to push back my own self-consumption.

St. Paul insists that we all CAN work for peace. He calls for genuine love, enthusiastic service, blessings instead of cursing, real-time empathizing, intentional harmonizing, and an everyday willingness to hang out with ordinary people. In these ways and more, we actively “hate evil” and “work for peace.”

Do we grasp the deeper purpose of peace? Additional biblical passages relate the necessity of serious action for Christ-followers, even employing the language of work. Consider these:

Turn away from evil and do good. Search for peace, and work to maintain it.

Psalm 34:14 (NLT)

And work for the peace and prosperity of the city where I sent you into exile. Pray to the Lord for it, for its welfare will determine your welfare. Jeremiah 29:7 (NLT)

God blesses those who work for peace, for they will be called the children of God. Matthew 5:9 (NLT)

Do these Scriptures have non-violence and the peaceful resolution of conflict in view? Absolutely. Are these truths applicable for both personal relationships and international affairs? Most certainly!

But is some passive posture all they have in view? Absolutely not. The core biblical idea behind peace is the robust Hebrew ideal of shalom. Christ’s peace is vitally related to the idea of actively working for human flourishing.

Richard Foster correlates: “Shalom embodies the vision of a harmonious, all-inclusive community of loving persons. The great vision of shalom begins and ends our Bible . . . The messianic child to be born is the ‘Prince of Peace,’ and justice and righteousness and peace are to characterize his unending kingdom (Isa. 9:6-7). Central to the dream of shalom is the magnificent vision of all nations streaming to the mountain of the temple of God to be taught his ways and walk in his paths.”[2]

Such Christ-honoring, grace-fueled call to “work for peace” supplies the basis for SO MUCH grace-based work that is happening already. Christ’s church today is being moved toward—

Stronger collaboration

Rather than rushing to join the saber rattling on “the left” or “the right,” more churches are working harder to actually communicate for positive change. Stephen Graves affirms: “Collaboration can be a freeway system for the gospel to travel. Non-collaboration can be a disappointing dead end or stifling roadblock.”[3]

Such collaboration begins with a highly personalized, one-person-at a time, heart-by-heart approach. Let’s admit it. We all have an encrusted aversion toward those people who are “the others”—those souls and skins who seem so antithetical to our own likes, loves, dislikes, and preferences. In great contrast, collaboration means I cultivate a holy hatred for my personal arrogance, laziness, and disgust for “the others.” Then I more deliberately love those people with different perspectives, different skin color, and the plethora of different cultural preferences that so often fuel my prejudices. We can each choose to host a meal, join others for coffee, and intentionally respond to their active overtures for mutual togetherness.

Strategic innovation toward greater flourishing

More churches are working toward Gospel-proclaiming and innovative community development. Such development aims for redemptive relationships leading toward economic growth and an overall shalom that’s grounded in saving grace. Where this is happening, both globally and in communities near our churches, such innovative work supplies a beautiful picture of counter-intuitive kindness (Romans 12:20). Through creative discipleship groups, brighter business plans, and expanding social justice in communities, Christ’s gospel is helping more people experience greater flourishing—real peace with God and peace with one another![4]

Herein lies the vibrant, Christ-like ideal of working to evoke positive change, forward momentum in the lives of people who are in need spiritually, socially, emotionally, and financially. We dare not forget, such need includes you and me! We are each impoverished, in need of God’s grace.

The local church with which I serve has certainly not arrived on these issues. Like most churches, we still have miles to go. But we are actively teaching, promoting, and mobilizing for greater one-on-one peace-making as well as stronger regional impact and more thoughtful global impact. After all, such healthier hatred of what’s wrong in our world and more loving pursuit of peace is rooted deeply in Jesus’ kingdom agenda for Gospel work.

Let’s hate what is wrong in our world and continue overcoming that evil with grace-motivated good works—all for Christ’s glory. On this historic week and in the wake of the so-sad events at the Capitol, we can all take steps to work for peace.


[1]Life guru Henry Cloud expounds this concept in 9 Things You Simply Must Do to Succeed in Life and Love. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2004), 139.

[2]Streams of Living Water (New York: Harper One, 2001), 171.

[3]The Gospel Goes to Work: God’s Big Canvas of Calling and Renewal (Fayetteville, AR: KJK Inc, 2015), 122-123.

[4]For just one regional example, see http://www.celebratecolumbia.com and on the global front, see the amazing work of www.hopeinternational.org