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Daily Inspiration Quote by Martin Luther King Jr.

"There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love"

About this Quote

Disappointment, in King’s framing, isn’t a weakness to be managed; it’s evidence. The line turns a normally private feeling into a moral credential: if you are crushed, it’s because you were invested, and that investment was love. Coming from a minister who made public disappointment a recurring political condition, the sentence works like pastoral triage for activists and congregants alike. It refuses the easy American fix of “lower your expectations.” Instead, it dignifies expectation as an ethical stance.

The subtext is tactical. King knew despair could curdle into cynicism or violence, and he also knew how often opponents tried to paint nonviolent movements as naive when they suffered setbacks. By tying “deep disappointment” to “deep love,” he reframes suffering as the cost of attachment to people and to a vision of justice, not as proof that the vision is foolish. It’s a psychological move that keeps the movement’s center of gravity anchored in agape: love as discipline, not sentiment.

Rhetorically, the sentence is almost geometrically simple: “no X where not Y.” That structure grants it the authority of a law of nature, as if heartbreak obeys the same rules as gravity. The twist is that the “law” flatters the listener into endurance: your pain isn’t pointless; it testifies that you have not detached from the world. In the long arc of King’s ministry and organizing, that’s not comfort for comfort’s sake. It’s a way of keeping love operational under pressure.

Quote Details

TopicLove
Source
Verified source: Letter from Birmingham Jail (Martin Luther King Jr., 1963)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love.. This sentence appears in Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” dated April 16, 1963. For *first publication* (not just composition date), the Stanford King Institute notes the letter was published in multiple early 1963 venues, including as a pamphlet published by the American Friends Service Committee in May 1963 (“Letter from Birmingham City Jail”) and in periodicals such as Christianity and Crisis (May 27, 1963), The Christian Century (June 12, 1963), and Ebony (August 1963). The Stanford page provides bibliographic footnotes for these early printings, but does not provide a page number for the quoted sentence within the pamphlet/magazine printings.
Other candidates (1)
BITTERED AND BUTTERED (CHARLES SAM, 2024) compilation95.0%
CHARLES SAM. to see it succeed . Because you care deeply about the mission of your work . As the saying goes , " Ther...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Jr., Martin Luther King. (2026, February 9). There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-can-be-no-deep-disappointment-where-there-26592/

Chicago Style
Jr., Martin Luther King. "There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-can-be-no-deep-disappointment-where-there-26592/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There can be no deep disappointment where there is not deep love." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-can-be-no-deep-disappointment-where-there-26592/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Deep disappointment and deep love - MLK Jr.
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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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