People on either side of a long table pack bagged lunches for the Compassion Meals program.

Community

As Christians we face the injustices of the world head-on and respond with love in action. At Trinity Church, we steward our resources to meet the needs right in front of us, here in our Lower Manhattan neighborhood. Loving our neighbors is how we follow Jesus. 

How We Work

Trinity Church uniquely serves as both a grant-maker and an organization providing support to those in need.

How to Get Help

Mother and child pack carrots and potatoes into a cardboard box.

Food Assistance

Free meals and groceries
Trinity Youth at the Trinity Retreat Center

Youth & Afterschool

Tutoring and test prep, music and dance, athletics, and more
Housing Court Help flyer

Legal & Housing Resources

How we can help protect your rights
Baptismal candle of Poppy Rohde

Women & Children

Resources, mentorship, childcare
The shadow of a person standing in front of a door.

Mental Health

Support groups and professional contacts
Neighborhood Support staff restock Compassion Market inventory.

Asylum Seekers

English language classes, legal aid, job readiness

How We Partner

At Trinity Church, we use the tools of philanthropy, our convening power, and the expertise of our staff and partners to help build healthy neighborhoods, generations of leadership, and the financial capacity to support those goals.
Members

Neighborhood Council

Community organizers, policy makers, and other stakeholders in lower Manhattan help us better serve our neighborhood.
Two priests talk to one another while seated at a table.

Leadership Development

We work with seminaries, education programs, and nonprofits to expand opportunities for faith leaders.
September 27, 2023, Mental Health Symposium

Convenings

We bring together the people and organizations best equipped to help solve problems in our community.
A row of elderly Asian people are seated facing left.

St. Margaret’s House

An affordable housing community for seniors and mobility-impaired individuals in Lower Manhattan.
A woman wearing a clerical collar smiles in a crowd

CDSP

An Episcopal seminary in Berkeley, CA., Church Divinity School of the Pacific forms leaders called to find new ways to create Christian communities and share God’s love.

How We Give

At a time of great and increasing need in our neighborhood, and across the world, our faith calls us to use our gifts to help all people, advancing equity and justice in the here and now — and hopefully for generations to come. Since 2020, Trinity has granted $180 million to more than 400 organizations.
Grantees, including Cheavanese Diedrick (at center), gather at last year's racial justice convening in November 2019.

Grants

The work we fund and how to apply
backpacks

Gifts

See how we donate to our community

All Community Content

384 results
Pádraig Ó Tuama
FeaturedJames MelchiorreNovember 6, 2020

Neighbors Without Borders

Pádraig Ó Tuama notes that when he thinks about the term social justice, he concentrates on “social.” And it is through that lens that he presented an online retreat, titled “Social (In)Justice," for Trinity Church Wall Street on Halloween.
FeaturedOctober 28, 2020

The Great Fight to Win the Vote with Elaine Weiss

The Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas spoke with Elaine Weiss, author of The Women’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote, a riveting account of the final fight to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment in Tennessee in 1920.
Brown bags of groceries full of shelf-stable healthy food such as pasta and canned goods.
Parish LifeJames MelchiorreOctober 12, 2020

A Visit to the Compassion Market

Trinity Church Wall Street's Compassion Market offers enough shelf-stable groceries for fifteen meals.
FeaturedJuly 21, 2020

Faith Communities for Just Reentry Vigil

Our coalition of interfaith leaders calls on Mayor Bill de Blasio to help those trapped in a cycle of incarceration and homelessness. Together, we can help our justice-involved neighbors find and sustain a place they can call home.
Parish LifeTrinity YouthJuly 1, 2020

Trinity Youth Statement

A statement by the Trinity Youth on racial justice moving forward after the killing of George Floyd
Faith EducationJune 11, 2020

Truth, Then Reconciliation

Sheila Walker, a black woman, and Chester Johnson, a white man, are both Arkansas natives, born in the same decade, with family ties to a race massacre that killed more than a hundred African Americans a century ago.
History and ArchivesJames MelchiorreJune 11, 2020

The Elaine Race Massacre: Truth Before Reconciliation

An announcement of the publication of the book "Damaged Heritage: The Elaine Race Massacre and a Story of Reconciliation" by Trinity Church Wall Street parishioner J. Chester Johnson

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