I'm sure many folks are familiar with Thurman, but I had only vaguely heard of him as a Civil Rights leader. I had never read him. For those like me who were unaware, Thurman was a mentor to MLK, who carried this text with him in his pocket during the Birmingham Bus Boycott. He is a known advocate of nonviolence (hung out with Gandhi), but I found his words about Jesus (the human) as it relates to race, class, and social justice from the Greco-Roman empire to the 1950s USA to be very relevant.
This was a personal, beautiful, and uplifting read. Also shockingly anti-religious (at least in my interpretation of it). And it's barely 100 pages. I read it, and then started listening to it in podcast form in his voice (which is tremendous, as he was a remarkable orator with wonderful interactions with the audience that are not captured in the book).
It was a nice reminder that ...
a) The current state of our nation is not uniquely terrible and our country has been really, really terrible before
b) To some extent, I can control my emotional reaction to the intentional chaos and fear being rained upon me
c) organized religion has always been used as a tool of division, and calling that out when it happens is powerful