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Success Quote by Martin Luther King Jr.

"Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal"

About this Quote

King folds an entire strategy into a single sentence: if your methods are violent, coercive, or humiliating, you have already abandoned the peace you claim to want. The line rejects the seductive logic that history’s “good ends” can redeem ugly tactics. For King, peace isn’t a trophy at the end of struggle; it’s the moral atmosphere you insist on creating while the struggle is still underway.

The phrasing matters. “Not merely” signals he’s arguing with allies as much as opponents - the impatient, the armed, the ones who treat nonviolence as PR. “A means by which we arrive” makes peace procedural, almost logistical: you don’t stumble into a just society by practicing injustice on the way there. The subtext is a warning against contaminating the future with the habits of domination. If you train a movement on retaliation, you don’t end with harmony; you end with new managers of the same machinery.

Context sharpens the stakes. King is speaking from the mid-century civil rights battleground where “order” was used to sanctify segregation and where some activists increasingly questioned nonviolence’s effectiveness. He answers both. To white moderates, he implies that a “peace” bought through repression is counterfeit. To frustrated supporters, he insists that nonviolent discipline is not passivity but a technology of legitimacy: it forces a crisis without dehumanizing the enemy, making reconciliation imaginable rather than rhetorical. Peace, in King’s frame, is the path and the proof.

Quote Details

TopicPeace
Source
Verified source: A Christmas Sermon on Peace (Martin Luther King Jr., 1967)
Text match: 97.25%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
But one day we must come to see that peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but it is a means by which we arrive at that goal. (In book publication: pp. 67–78 (exact page of sentence within that range not shown in the catalog record)). Primary-source context: This line is from Martin Luther King Jr.'s Massey Lecture #5, “A Christmas Sermon on Peace,” delivered/broadcast on December 24, 1967 (from Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta, as part of the CBC Massey Lectures). The Stanford King Institute’s OKRA record documents that it was subsequently published in the first edition of The Trumpet of Conscience (New York: Harper & Row, 1968), on pp. 67–78. The commonly-circulated shorter form (“Peace is not merely…”) is an excerpt that drops King’s lead-in (“But one day we must come to see that…”).
Other candidates (1)
Conflict Resolution Through Non-violence: Science and ethics (K. D. Gangrade, Rameshwar Prasad Misra, 1990) compilation95.0%
... the seminar were Satyagrah as a means to resolve conflict . In the words of Martin Luther King , " One day we mus...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Jr., Martin Luther King. (2026, February 9). Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-not-merely-a-distant-goal-that-we-seek-26576/

Chicago Style
Jr., Martin Luther King. "Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-not-merely-a-distant-goal-that-we-seek-26576/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-not-merely-a-distant-goal-that-we-seek-26576/. Accessed 17 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr. (January 15, 1929 - April 4, 1968) was a Minister from USA.

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