Troy Jackson is Director of the Ohio Prophetic Voices campaign, an initiative to gather more than 500 clergy in Ohio to organize for racial and economic justice.

Troy has been involved in community organizing for four years—first as a volunteer leader and then as a faith organizer in Cincinnati and throughout Ohio. He has been actively involved in calling for comprehensive immigration reform and the Dream Act, and recently finished serving as faith outreach director for the highly successful We Are Ohio campaign that led to the repeal of Ohio Senate Bill 5 by a 61-39 margin. 

In addition to his organizing work, Troy formerly served as senior pastor of University Christian Church (UCC) in Cincinnati, Ohio for 19 years. UCC is a part of the Christian Community Development Association, a network of churches and organizations working to reshape urban neighborhoods. Under Troy’s leadership, UCC established Rohs Street Café, a seven-day-a-week community coffee shop committed to community engagement, the arts, and social justice.

Troy is a graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary and earned his Doctor of Philosophy degree in U.S. history from the University of Kentucky. Troy’s book Becoming King: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Making of a National Leader (The University Press of Kentucky, 2008) explores the critical role the grassroots Montgomery Movement played in the development of Dr. King. His other publications include his work as an editor on The Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr. Volume VI: Advocate of the Social Gospel (September 1948-March 1963) (University of California Press, 2007). He is also a regular blogger on the God’s Politics blog. Troy lives in Cincinnati with his wife Amanda and their three children Jacob, Emma, and Ellie.

Posts By This Author

Human Beings Matter More Than Analogies

by Troy Jackson 12-15-2010
Last week, I joined a conservative talk show in Cincinnati to talk about Bernard Pastor, the 18-ye

Undocumented Young People Need the DREAM

by Troy Jackson 12-07-2010
Last Wednesday, December 1 marked the 55th anniversary of the beginning of the Montgomery bus boycott and a movemen

Courage in a World of Labels

by Troy Jackson 12-03-2010
Children's author Madeline L'Engle argues in her book, http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0865474877?ie=UTF8&tag=sojourners-20&li..."

Pray for Bernard, Pray for the DREAM

by Troy Jackson 11-30-2010
On Tuesday November 16, hundreds of Christ-followers around the nation prayed and fasted in solidarity with immigrants in

Stephen Colbert for the Least of These

by Troy Jackson 09-27-2010
Last week more than 500 people gathered in Washington, D.C. to lobby for the DREAM Act.

The Legacy of Martin Luther King: A Watering Hole Moment

by Troy Jackson 08-24-2010
[Editor's Note: In anticipation of the anniversary of the March on Washington on August 28, 1963, God's Politics will featu

Mosques, Churches, Terror, and Love

by Troy Jackson 08-17-2010
Sometimes space is warranted. We need boundaries when relationships are difficult.

Our Response to Immigrants: A Blaring Horn or a Beautiful Song?

by Troy Jackson 08-05-2010
"I'm against you guys." A middle-aged man from Cincinnati proudly wearing an American flag on his T-shirt defiantly uttered these words to me a few weeks ago in Columbus, Ohio.

Goodbye, Styrofoam Jesus

by Troy Jackson 06-21-2010
Last Monday evening, a massive storm front hit southwestern Ohio.

Faith & Justice Networks: New Wineskins for Justice

by Troy Jackson 06-15-2010
Over the past decade, discussions about justice have reached a tipping point in the evangelical world.

Time to Declare a Mission Trip Moratorium

by Troy Jackson 06-02-2010
Like many Christ-followers in the United States, I have participated in my fair share of mission trips to the Caribbean and Central and South America over the past few decades.

Finding Watchtowers and Blind Spots in Bethlehem

by Troy Jackson 03-26-2010

From the window of my hotel room in Bethlehem, I could see the "security" wall that separates the West Bank from the rest of Israel.

A Moment or a Movement? Sustaining Momentum after the Mobilization to End Poverty

by Troy Jackson 05-05-2009

Last week my son and I spent three days in Washington, D.C., as part of the Mobilization to End Poverty. We heard challenging speakers.

The Collapse of Evangelicalism?

by Troy Jackson 03-17-2009
In the March 10 edition of The Christian Science Monitor, Michael Spencer predicts "the coming evangelical collapse." Much

Rare Repentance: John Lewis Receives Apology from Attacker

by Troy Jackson 02-17-2009

I have been studying the civil rights movement for over a decade, and continue to be amazed by the stories of courage and sacrifice that marked that heroic era in United States history.

Remembering Merton on the 40th Anniversary of His Death

by Troy Jackson 12-10-2008
1968 was a year filled with tragic deaths, of young leaders lost.

Lewis and McCain: When Heroes Collide

by Troy Jackson 10-16-2008
John McCain is an American hero. In 1967, after his plane was shot down over Hanoi in Vietnam, an injured McCain parachuted into a lake.

Why My Church is Hosting a Poverty Sunday

by Troy Jackson 09-11-2008

Vote Out PovertyTwo of the mantras that my evangelicalism has taught me over the years are these:

1. Be True to Scripture
2. Avoid Politics

The heart for God's Word is not all that surprising, given the "Sola [...]

Speeches are Fine, but Real Change Takes a Movement

by Troy Jackson 09-04-2008

It was a warm spring afternoon when Martin Luther King addressed tens of thousands gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial, the largest gathering to date in the growing struggle for civil rights.

King rallied the crowd with his stirring refrain: "Give us the ballot!" He called for the government, white liberals, white Southerners, and finally the African-American [...]

Honoring MLK by Changing the Wind

by Troy Jackson 04-03-2008

Friday, April 4, 2008, marks the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He was 39-years-old, yet had already spent 15 years in a grassroots movement that radically reshaped the racial landscape in the U.S. He was not only a great preacher and civil rights leader, a Nobel Peace prize winner, and a courageous voice for peace and justice - King was also a [...]