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.
Education is the most reliable pathway towards generational success. Here’s how Trinity’s Racial Justice initiative is dismantling inequities for students of color in New York City.
“Born to an ordinary young woman, God in Jesus walks beside us, taking on creaturely flesh,” writes Summerlee State. “God, in other words, incarnates and experiences as we do the pangs and joys of what it means to be human.”
The Congregational Nominating & Leadership Development Committee is pleased to place on the ballot the persons listed below for election to five positions on the Congregational Council.
As in the Book of Acts on that first Pentecost, the Spirit revives us, breathing new life into our community and in our beautiful church home from which we have been absent for so long.
Over four weeks this spring, a small group logged on to a Saturday morning art workshop to learn the basics of clay sculpture, deepen their understanding of creativity, and enjoy time together.
“Being with someone who is dying and witnessing them being here and yet already there” is how the Rev. Phillip Jackson describes our encounter with Jesus in today’s Gospel reading.
A church is much like a home in that we surround ourselves with pictures of the people we love and find rest, forgiveness, and nourishment at God’s “kitchen table,” the altar.
The Rev. Dr. Mark Bozzuti-Jones explains Ascension Day, a major feast day of the Church and the anniversary of the 1846 consecration of the current Trinity Church building.