The Rev. Kristin Kaulbach Miles, who leads Pastoral Care at Trinity Church Wall Street, and Jessica Heller, of Psychotherapy and Spirituality Institute, talk about the many ways grief burdens our lives, especially in this current moment.
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.
Six students, three from China and three from India, arrived in New York in August 2019 as the second cohort of the Trinity Union Fellows. They anticipated a year of study and new experiences in the United States, a year that was dramatically altered by the novel coronavirus pandemic.
The Rev. Matt Welsch hoisted the Pride Flag, and offered a prayer, to signify June as Pride Month at Trinity Church Wall Street and St. Paul’s Chapel. The Pride Flag symbolizes Trinity’s Core Value of Inclusiveness.
“We will continue to come together as a wondrously multiracial Christian community to worship and give praise to the God who made each of us, and who also didn’t feel like our claim to humanity was limited by the color of our skin.”
Ascension Day, which comes forty days into Eastertide, is a major feast of the Church with historic significance for the parishioners of Trinity Church Wall Street.
A short sermon, attributed to St. Francis of Assisi, dates from 1220, exactly eight centuries from this year. Read by Joseph Rose, executive director of programming at Trinity Retreat Center.
Easter is the primary holiday of the Christian calendar, so important that one 24-hour day is not enough to celebrate it. So Eastertide, the festival, or season, of Easter, lasts for 50 days.
Watch the recent rejuvenation of the nave in the 174-year-old Trinity Church, thousands of photographs and 20 months of work, in a 2 minute timelapse video.