Rev. Marcia Stanford, of the Macedonia United Methodist Church, and Ocean City Police Sgt. Tyrone Rolls were honored for their community contributions.
By Donald Wittkowski
Gospel music, prayers and expressions of hope filled the auditorium Saturday during Ocean City’s 27th annual celebration of the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
But the keynote speaker, the Rev. Darwin Ransom of the St. Paul Baptist Church in Vineland, delivered cautionary remarks about economic and racial equality in America by repeatedly asking the question, “Are we there yet?”
“I like what I see here in Ocean City. This should be a beacon for others,” Ransom said while looking at the racially mixed audience and a diverse group of political, religious and civic leaders on stage at the Hughes Performing Arts Center at Ocean City High School.
Ransom quoted from scripture and King’s historic “I Have a Dream” speech from 1963 while calling for peace, racial harmony, justice and economic equality.
“Even though we still face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream,” Ransom said.
Rev. Darwin Ransom, of the St. Paul Baptist Church in Vineland, said more needs to be done to achieve Dr. King's "dream."
He denounced the wave of police shootings of unarmed black men across the country as well as alleged racially biased legislative efforts in the South to suppress the voting votes of minorities.
He said now is the time to lift the nation out of the “racial quicksand” that continues to hinder African Americans and other minorities from achieving economic and judicial parity with whites.
“Heaven’s not segregated, the last time I read the Bible,” Ransom said amid applause from the audience.

Rev. Marcia Stanford, of the Macedonia United Methodist Church, and Ocean City Police Sgt. Tyrone Rolls were honored for their community contributions.
Honors were also given to Ocean City Intermediate School students Grace Thompson, Samantha Wagner and Erik Wagner for their winning essays about King’s life.
Reading from her essay, Samantha Wagner, said that King left everyone with “an imprint of peace and justice.” In his essay, Erik Wagner, who is not related to Samantha Wagner, spoke of the personal freedoms espoused by King and how the civil rights leader’s legacy has influenced his life. Thompson was not at the ceremony.
The program closed with the St. James AME Church Combined Gospel Chorus and Friends of Atlantic City leading the audience in a rendition of “We Shall Overcome,” which served as the anthem of America’s civil rights movement.
On Monday, Ocean City will mark the formal Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday with its traditional communitywide cleanup from 9 a.m. to noon. Volunteers who want to participate in the cleanup are asked to meet at the Ocean City Community Center at 18th Street and Simpson Avenue at 9 a.m. for their assignments.