Special Chapel Service
You are invited to attend a special weekly chapel service today, Tuesday, February 17, 2026, at 11:00am, honoring the life and legacy of Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. The service will take place at Central Presbyterian Church, 318 W. Kentucky Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40203.
During the service, attendees will observe a special moment of prayer in memory of Reverend Jackson and engage in the National Black Litany, “I Am Somebody,” created by Reverend Jackson as a responsive reading to affirm dignity, purpose, and worth.
Honoring His Legacy
The passing of Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson, Sr. marks the end of an era in American public life. For more than half a century, his voice rang out in pulpits, on picket lines, in the halls of Congress, and on the global stage—calling the nation to live up to its highest democratic and moral ideals. He stood in the long arc of the Black freedom struggle as both heir and architect, carrying forward a tradition of prophetic protest that reshaped the conscience of America.
From the streets of Chicago to presidential campaigns that expanded the boundaries of political possibility, Reverend Jackson transformed moral conviction into organized action. He gave language to the hopes of the marginalized, insisted on the visibility of the poor, and challenged systems of exclusion wherever they appeared. His ministry fused faith and public life, reminding the nation that civil rights was not merely a political movement, but a sacred struggle rooted in human dignity.
Institutions, communities, and generations of leaders were shaped by his courage and clarity. His life embodied a relentless belief that justice must be pursued not only in moments of crisis, but as a daily discipline. It is within that historical and moral context that Simmons College of Kentucky joins the nation in mourning his passing and honoring his enduring legacy.
Statement from President, Kevin W. Cosby



LOUISVILLE, KY (Feb. 17, 2026)
“We are deeply saddened by the passing of Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., a towering figure in the American civil rights movement and a lifelong champion for justice, equity, and human dignity.
Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson was the last of the great civil rights warriors of the 1960s who emerged from the radical Black liberation church, a tradition shaped by Frederick Douglass and the abolitionist movement of the nineteenth century. That stream of faith and freedom also produced pioneers such as William J. Simmons. As scholar and Grawmeyer Award winner Gary Dorrien has noted, William J. Simmons stood among the early architects of that movement. Simmons College of Kentucky proudly bears his name, linking our institution to that enduring legacy of prophetic witness and intellectual leadership.
As a protégé and student of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., no one advanced Dr. King’s agenda of social justice with more persistence and public visibility than Reverend Jackson. From the Poor People’s Campaign to Operation PUSH and the Rainbow Coalition, he translated moral vision into political action. He pushed this nation to expand voting rights, increase economic opportunity, and defend the dignity of the poor and marginalized.
Simmons College of Kentucky and the Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson, Sr. Center for Racial Justice are united in honoring and advancing his legacy. With Reverend Jackson’s help and support, we established and named the Center in his honor as a living commitment to the work he championed. Together, Simmons and the Center will continue to educate communities about social and systemic racism, advocate for just laws, policies, systems, and structures, and challenge those who legislate by working to improve public policy so that our nation moves from disparity to equity. In doing so, we carry forward the moral clarity and courage that defined his life.
We extend our deepest condolences to the Jackson family and to all who were shaped by his leadership. His life strengthened the moral spine of this nation. His voice stirred conscience. His example will continue to guide our work at Simmons College of Kentucky and beyond.”
