Worship is at the heart of everything we do at Trinity. Through church services, educational programs for all ages, and the shared life of our congregation, we seek lives of deep meaning.
All are welcome at Trinity Church. Everyone, regardless of membership status, is invited to participate fully in our worship services, programs, and community life.
Through revelatory music and groundbreaking conversations with authors and thinkers, Trinity’s free programming brings our audiences new ways of seeing, and being in, the world.
As Christians we face the injustices of the world head-on and respond with love in action. At Trinity, we work to meet the needs right in front of us, here in our Lower Manhattan neighborhood.
Local Solutions, Lasting Change
Halfway through their five-year, $5 million partnership with Trinity, Episcopal Relief & Development is channeling God’s love into service to transform lives and empower communities across the globe.
Trinity Church’s Mission Real Estate Development initiative helps faith-based organizations understand the potential of property to meet critical community needs as well as create financial sustainability.
Visit & History
In 1697, Trinity Church was established at the heart of a burgeoning city — and nation. More than three centuries later, we’re still serving our parish. Visit us to explore our past and present.
For more than 110 years, a one-time Trinity chapel has hosted a festive gathering honoring the creator of the modern-day Santa Claus. Learn about the unexpected connection that inspired the tradition.
Performed for the first time in 1770, Trinity Church's take on the Handel masterpiece has become a holiday institution. But in a city brimming with “Hallelujah” choruses, what sets our version apart?
Robert Fulton, an engineer, technologist, and businessman known for his commercial steamboat business, is one of the famous persons whose final resting place is the Trinity Churchyard.
Spending time at the Trinity Retreat Center for a birdwatching retreat, with our eyes, binoculars, and Merlin apps fixated on the skies above, bird songs and questions swirled: What do birds tell us about the world? How many species will we spot? What can we learn?
Faith EducationFaith Formation and EducationJune 1, 2023
What matters about the Trinity is that God is a relationship. God is a relationship within Godself: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (or Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer). Just as God is relational within Godself, we are called to be in loving relationship with God and one another.
The Philippine Madrigal Singers will perform at St. Paul's Chapel on May 30, 2023. Get a preview of the event from Leo Paolo Leal, manager of the ensemble, and Enrico Lagasca of The Choir of Trinity Wall Street.
Faith EducationFaith Formation and EducationMay 25, 2023
Perhaps our shared spiritual memory is what endures beyond death. The evidence that was both indescribable in human terms and undeniably real was the presence of the inexhaustible Holy Spirit which transcended all barriers and boundaries, including time, place, language, and human condition, and continues to animate the breath, voice, and body of Christ, the Church.
This Sunday is Pentecost, which is celebrated 50 days after Easter every year. The story of the events of the day is just as dramatic as the accounts of the nativity and the resurrection.
On May 11, 2023—the same day the federal government declared an end to the COVID-19 public health emergency—Trinity Church Wall Street hosted its third symposium on mental health, “Intersections Between Spirituality and Mental Health.”
The Rt. Rev. Matthew Foster Heyd, former member of the staff of Trinity Church Wall Street, was consecrated as bishop coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese of New York on Saturday, May 20, 2023.
This is the last Sunday of Eastertide. In preparation for his death, resurrection, and ascension, Jesus promised the disciples he and God would always be with them in holy spirit, with and without visible form.
Faith EducationFaith Formation and EducationMay 18, 2023
On the seventh and last Sunday of Easter, these verses from the Gospel of John give the reader a window into an intimate conversation between Jesus and his Father, a prayer at the end of Jesus’ ministry of revealing God’s love and mercy in human form.
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