Dr. Rose’s book aims to fill an important gap in the literature on Martin Luther King Jr. by exploring King’s notions of political service. While historians, political scientists, theologians, and scholars in a myriad of other fields have examined King’s theology, ideas on nonviolence, and his organizing activities, there is no book length treatment on how King secularized and politicized Christian notions of service in constructing his political ideology. Rose thus calls for scholars to take King just as seriously as a political thinker as they’ve taken him as a religious intellectual. Doing so will enhance our scholarly understanding of King but will also provide a service to contemporary social and political activists, who can draw from King’s ideas on service in constructing political ideologies and movements today.