Trinity Leadership Fellows
Join a diverse cohort of emerging leaders on a two-year journey of faith-inspired, values-driven, and community-oriented learning and mentorship.
The Trinity Leadership Fellows Program is for individuals seeking to deepen the faith-inspired and values-driven mindsets and skills needed to effectively lead organizations and serve communities in contemporary society, while also building lifelong supporting peer and mentoring relationships.
This non-residential, fully funded program will prepare professional and community leaders who are people of faith, as well as ordained leaders across faith traditions with the mindsets and practical skills they need to energize and empower their congregations and communities in ways that heal divides and disrupt injustice, as compelled by the Spirit and the Gospel. The experience will offer fellows an opportunity to learn from leading scholars from Harvard, experts in the field, and mentors interconnected through their faith and Trinity’s core values. Fellows will build life-changing relationships with like-minded peers who share the passion for faith-driven leadership that produces positive change in our world.
In this special message, the Most Rev. Bishop Michael Bruce Curry welcomes all to apply for the opportunity to become “an instrument of God’s love, justice, and compassion, inspired by our faith and enabled by practical methods.”
Trinity Leadership Fellows: Seeking the Next Generation of Faith Leaders
Trinity Leadership Fellows 2023 Q&A Session
Watch the recording of our January 13, 2023 virtual Q&A session with Trinity's Robert Garris, PhD., Executive Director, Trinity Leadership Fellows, and the Rev. Tony Tian-Ren Lin, PhD., Program Director, Leadership Development to learn more about the application process.
Meet the Trinity Leadership Fellows
These faith leaders come from across the globe, from various faith traditions and vocations.
Program Overview
The program consists of a learning phase and an implementation phase.
- September 2024: During this initial weeklong in-person gathering at Trinity Church Wall Street in New York City, fellows will meet their mentors and instructors. This convening will include a workshop on discerning your leadership path in terms of your faith and values. This discernment will shape the rest of the curriculum for fellows. The week will also include a course on community organizing.
- September 2024–August 2025: Fellows will engage in live online learning sessions with leading scholars and experts on core competencies for effective leadership. These include courses on adaptive leadership, conflict transformation, change management, church and non-profit management, and social entrepreneurship, all taught from a faith perspective and informed by individual fellows’ discernment exercises and formation goals.
- September 2025: Fellows will reconvene for a weeklong gathering to meet the next cohort of fellows and present implementation projects.
- September 2025–August 2026: Fellows will implement their programs with the assistance of their peers and mentors, meeting with their cohort for continuous support.
- September 2026: Induction of the cohort into the Trinity Society of Fellows.
Instructors' biographies can be found below.
Fellows will have the opportunity to access:
Guided discernment to identify faith-anchored leadership goals
Online learning modules taught by leading experts and scholars
Implementation projects for personal growth or institutional change
In-person retreats and conferences
TLF Advisory Committee Members
- Rt. Rev. Mary Gray Reeves (College of Bishops, TEC)
- The Rt. Rev. Kirk S. Smith, PhD (Church Divinity School of the Pacific)
- The Rev. Canon Chuck Robertson, PhD (Canon to Presiding Bishop, TEC)
- Ms. Anne B. Evans (Ashoka)
- The Very Rev. Cynthia Briggs Kittredge, ThD (Seminary of the Southwest)
- Kimberlyn Leary, PhD (Harvard School of Public Health)
Core Instructors
Víctor Pérez García
Adaptive Leadership and Systems Thinking
Víctor Pérez García is the Co-founder and Managing Partner at DialogueLabs, a consulting firm that helps organizations lead change and manage conflict effectively. He specializes in conflict resolution and has worked as a strategy and economic development consultant for clients in the public and private sectors in Europe, East Asia, North & South America. At Harvard University, he was a Teaching Fellow of adaptive leadership, a Fellow at Harvard Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, and led political dialogue initiatives in India, Pakistan, and Spain.
Inmaculada Macías Alonso, Ph.D.
Adaptive Leadership and Systems Thinking
Inmaculada Macías Alonso is the Co-founder and Managing Partner at DialogueLabs, a consulting firm that helps organizations lead change and manage conflict effectively. She specializes in gender and diversity. She has worked in the areas of ethical finance and the economic integration of women for universities, companies, and governments in Europe, the Middle East, North & South America. At Harvard University, she was a Teaching Fellow of behavioral science and a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Harvard Women and Public Policy Program, where she worked in women’s leadership and mentorship projects.
David Anderson Hooker
Conflict Transformation
David Anderson Hooker is Founder and Principal Narrator for CounterStories Consulting, LLC. CounterStories was established to advance narrative approaches to transforming historical harms and supporting community and organizational transformation. From 2016-2021, Hooker served as Associate Professor of the Practice of Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding at the University of Notre Dame’s Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, an integral unit of the Keough School of Global Affairs. Since 2001, his research and practice have focused on the role of narratives in cultural trauma, the multigenerational transmission of trauma, and the role of narrative in identity construction in post-conflict contexts.
Kevin Jones
Social Entrepreneurship
Working with his wife and business partner, the Rev. Rosa Lee Harden, Kevin Jones has had a number of successful startups, in the media, information, and events businesses. Starting as a country weekly newspaper editor in the poorest county in Mississippi, his reporting put a sheriff in prison on 53 counts of fraud. He went on to write for the New York Times and was a columnist for Forbes. They sold their dot-com business and co-created SOCAP, the world’s largest impact investing and social enterprise conference. He has been working on events, new financial instruments, and an online community focused on re-engaging people of faith in creating a network of interdependent, neighborly economies. He is co-founder of a community equity fund that is solving the problem of friends and family funding for Black and Brown entrepreneurs who don’t have a rich uncle.
De'Amon Harges
Social Entrepreneurship
De’Amon Harges—faculty member of the Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) Institute, Community Organizer, Creator of the Learning Tree, chairperson of the Grassroots Grantmakers Association Board, and featured in the new documentary “The Antidote: On Kindness in America”—is a frequent speaker on ABCD in secular and religious groups around the world, and is a layperson at Broadway UMC, Indianapolis, IN. De’Amon's role is to listen and discover the gifts, passions, and dreams of citizens in his community, and to find ways to utilize them in order to build community, economy, and mutual “delight.” The bulk of De’Amon’s work is based on the principles and practices of the Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) that brings neighbors and institutions together to discover the power of being a good neighbor. De’Amon builds on what is already present and in place in the neighborhood, using those formally undiscovered assets to connect and empower rather than working only from the community’s needs and deficits.
Rev. J. Elise Brown, Ph.D.
Change Management & Organizational Development
Rev. J. Elise Brown, Ph.D. believes every congregation has a mission and every community needs a powerful and progressive faith witness in it. Her passions and skills include helping congregations and organizations create ministry plans that work, and then working the plans to produce abundance and fruitfulness. Having worked in diverse communities throughout her 20 years in ministry, she understands the factors needed to move congregations toward greater, more authentic, diversity and mission impact. She is an ordained clergyperson of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and rostered in the Metropolitan New York Synod.
Jacqueline Ballou
Non-Profit & Church Administration
In 2017, Jacqueline Ballou was appointed as the Vice President for Finance and Operations (i.e., the Chief Financial Officer) at Virginia Theological Seminary (VTS). Her responsibilities at that time included Financial Management, Information Technology, and Facilities Management (maintenance, grounds, space, and capacity planning), as well as all construction projects. In 2020, she also assumed responsibility for Human Resources, the child-care center, and all external contracts (food services and cleaning). With an operating budget of $18 million, over a hundred employees, an endowment of approximately $200 million, she manages a complex internal financial system. She is a member of the leadership team at the Seminary, and she participates fully in the worshipping life of the Seminary.
Brad R. Fulton, Ph.D.
Community Organizing
For 15 years as a university chaplain, community organizer, and ministry leader, Brad Fulton led diverse teams of staff and volunteers to minister on college campuses and in their surrounding communities at institutions ranging from Stanford University to Compton Community College. Trained as a sociologist of religion, race, and politics, Fulton became a professor of nonprofit management and social policy at Indiana University. His research draws on theological insights, organizational scholarship, and critical theory to examine the social, political, and economic impact of faith-based organizations. He directs the National Study of Community Organizing and is the co-author of A Shared Future: Faith-Based Organizing for Racial Equity and Ethical Democracy.
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