My View from the Spy Tree

Living the Social Gospel

by John A. Collins

My View from the Spy Tree
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My View from the Spy Tree

Living the Social Gospel

by John A. Collins

Published Oct 08, 2021
307 Pages
5.5 x 8.5 Black & White Paperback
Genre: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Religious


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Book Details

A life at the intersection of justice and peace

Reverend John A. Collins grew up in the all-white Chicago neighborhood that stoned Martin Luther King, Jr. when he led a march for fair housing there in 1966. Yet he was to devote his adult life to the support for racial justice, and as a white clergyman who served Black churches in the inner-city, he was beloved by his parishioners. It was not until his mid-thirties, however, that he found his calling, after having served as a Navy lieutenant aboard an aircraft carrier in the Korean War and two years as a lawyer in Chicago. But his ministry was not confined to the pulpit. As a founder of the Student Interracial Ministry, it would take him into the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South, into support for Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty, and into the campaign against redlining and the deindustrialization of the Midwest. This military veteran would also become an ardent peace activist, leading an effort to stop U.S. deployment of cruise missiles in Europe; and as a founder of Witness for Peace he would lend his support to victims of the U.S.-funded Contra War in Nicaragua. While a young boy summering at his parents’ cottage among the Indiana Dunes on Lake Michigan, he would often climb a tree he called his “spy tree” to look out over the world he knew then: his neighborhood of small cottages and down to the lake. Little did he know then that his neighborhood would expand beyond the perimeters of a boy’s vision to encompass so much of the world.

We all hear the great names in the civil rights, peace, and poor people’s movements, but it is often those whom we do not know that have the greatest and most lasting impact. John Collins is such a one, and his story deserves to be heard. Here he has told it humbly and well, often enlightening the reader by setting the record straight on wrongly maligned programs. But perhaps above all, he reminds us how justice can never be separated from community and care. That he considers himself, first and foremost, a pastor and caregiver says much, not only about the man, John Collins, but also about what, in the end, matters most.
—Mark Davies, retired Executive Director, New York City Conflicts of Interest (ethics) Board

Reverend John Collins is one of the last living icons of the Civil Rights Movement. He has consistently and fearlessly given his best efforts to effectuate social change in America. It has been an honor to call him friend, and to partner with him in Prison Ministry as he continues the fight for Equity and Justice for all.
—Reverend Dr. John L. Scott, pastor, St. John’s Baptist Church, Harlem and former Director, SCLC Operation Breadbasket of Greater New York