Discovery Archive
Discovery Summer Sundays 2024: The Book of Ruth
From June 2–August 25, Discovery Summer Sundays will feature a community-led discussion of the biblical Book of Ruth, in which we’ll explore the meaning of love in times of division.
Winter–Spring 2024 Discovery Courses
January 7–14: On Waiting and Longing for God
How do we “find” God when it feels like God is absent? How do we continue to seek God’s voice, even when it feels like our prayers go unanswered? Join the Rev. Dr. Mark Bozzuti-Jones and Dr. Kathy Bozzuti-Jones of Trinity Church Wall Street in cultivating practices — prayer, contemplation, and compassionate listening — that help us hear the “still, small voice of God.”
January 7: On Longing for God with Dr. Kathy Bozzuti-Jones
Watch the recording
January 14: On Waiting and Longing for Justice with the Rev. Dr. Mark Bozzuti-Jones
Watch the recording
January 21–February 11: The Ties That Bind — Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Readings of Genesis
The story of God’s promises to Abraham and his descendants in the book of Genesis is a central narrative for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In this series, join religious leaders and thinkers from all three faith traditions as we encounter Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Ishmael, and Isaac in a new light.
January 21: Abraham’s Family in Jewish Readings with Rabbi Darren Levine
Rabbi Darren Levine is the founder of Tamid: The Downtown Synagogue, which meets at St. Paul’s Chapel, and the author of Positive Judaism: For a Lifetime of Well-Being and Happiness.
January 28: Abraham’s Family in Islamic Readings with Imam Ammar Abdul Rahman
Imam Ammar Abdul Rahman is a distinguished figure in the realm of Islamic education and community leadership, with a wealth of experience spanning over a decade. Imam Ammar is an inspiring educator and community builder. Grounded in a strong foundation of Islamic theology and jurisprudence, Imam Ammar has dedicated his career to imparting the teachings of Islam to the youth. He currently serves as a deputy Imam at Masjid Al-Haram USA in The Bronx.
February 4: Abraham’s Family in Christian Readings with Dr. Nyasha Junior
Nyasha Junior is an associate professor in the Department for the Study of Religion at the University of Toronto. She is a biblical scholar and holds a Ph.D. in Old Testament from Princeton Theological Seminary. Her teaching and research focus on biblical texts and their reception.
February 18–March 17: In God’s Image: The Presence of God in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament
How does God present God’s self in the Bible? Does God have a body? What does God look like? In this series, we will be joined by leading scholars and art historians to consider how God appears to people in both the Old and New Testaments, and the ways that artists in different cultures have envisioned God’s presence.
February 18 & 25: Encountering God’s Presence in the Hebrew Scriptures with Benjamin Sommer
Watch the February 18 recording
Watch the February 25 recording
Benjamin Sommer is Professor of Bible at the Jewish Theological Seminary and Senior Fellow at the Kogod Center for Contemporary Jewish Thought of the Shalom Hartman Institute. His book, Revelation and Authority: Sinai in Jewish Scripture and Tradition, received the Goldstein-Goren Prize in Jewish thought and was a finalist for a National Jewish Book Award. The Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz described Sommer as “a traditionalist but an iconoclast – he shatters idols and prejudices in order to nurture Jewish tradition and its applicability today.”
March 3: Images of Jesus with Dr. Anna Swartwood House
Watch the recording
Anna Swartwood House is an art historian (Ph.D., Princeton *11) whose research focuses on Renaissance cross-culturalism, the art of Venice 1400–1600, artists’ biographies, and the reception of art. Currently she serves as Associate Professor of art history in the School of Visual Design at the University of South Carolina. Her book Antonello da Messina and the History of Art, which was supported by a Samuel H. Kress Fellowship in Art History from the Renaissance Society of America, is forthcoming this year from Routledge.
Dr. Swartwood House’s essay “The Long History of How Jesus Came to Resemble a White European,” published on www.theconversation.com in 2020, has received over one million views and has been republished in French, Spanish, Japanese, and Indonesian translation.
March 10: Images of Mary with Dr. Susan Ward
Watch the recording
Susan Ward is Professor Emerita in the department of Theory/History of Art/Design at the Rhode Island School of Design. She received BA with honors from Connecticut College with a double major in English and Art History and her A.M. and Ph.D. degrees from Brown University. She taught at RISD for over thirty years retiring in June 2022. Her scholarship centers on medieval sculpture and the meaning of medieval art. She was a co-director of the Census of Gothic Sculpture in America, a survey of gothic sculpture in American public collections. Volume III the Museums of New York and Pennsylvania appeared in 2016. She was also a core member of the Working Group on Medieval Sculpture: A Transatlantic Dialogue. She has given papers at many American venues as well as in France, England, Germany and Israel. Her recent articles include, “Visual Environment of Jewish Learning in Twelfth-Century Rouen,” Images: A Journal of Jewish Visual Art and Culture 11/1 (Dec. 2018), a commemorative volume for Margaret Olin and “The South Portal of Le Mans Cathedral as a Processional Objective,” in Art, Architecture, and the Moving Viewer, c. 300-1500 CE: Unfolding Narratives,edited by Gillian B. Elliott and Anne Heath. She is completing a book, Stories in the Door: Archivolt Narrative in the Royal Portal, that considers how stories are told in twelfth-century portal sculpture.
Susan Ward and her husband David have been parishioners at Trinity since 1999. She has been a past congregational council member, including a term as president, and is presently serving on Trinity’s vestry.
April 7–14: Rumi — Poetry, God, and Love
Andrew Harvey, Director of the Institute for Sacred Activism, will speak on what he calls the “the healing, wild and gorgeous world” of the work of 13th century Sufi mystic Jalāl al-Dīn Muhammad Rūmī, and Dr. Kathy Bozzuti–Jones will explore how Rumi’s poetry addresses our longing to know and love God.
April 7: The World of Rumi with Andrew Harvey
Andrew Harvey is an internationally acclaimed writer, poet, translator and mystical teacher. He is the author of over 40 books, including Son of Man, The Hope, Love is Everything, Turn Me to Gold, Engoldenment and Radical Regeneration with Carolyn Baker. He has taught all over the world, given over 20 courses for the Shift Network and is the founder of the Institute for Sacred Activism.
April 14: Rumi and Poems on Longing for the Beloved with Dr. Kathy Bozzuti-Jones
Kathy Bozzuti-Jones, PhD, is Trinity Church Wall Street’s Associate Director for Spiritual Practices, Retreats and Pilgrimage. She is a spiritual director, retreat leader, and faith formation specialist. Her training is in Theological Social Ethics, Christian spiritual direction, and interfaith spiritual counseling and supervision. Kathy is a certified mindfulness meditation teacher and has been an adjunct professor in spirituality and practice at General Theological Seminary and One Spirit Seminary. Kathy enjoys sharing her deep sensibility of God's presence through her involvement in Faith Formation and Education programming.
April 21–May 12: A Deep Dive into the Book of Common Prayer
This Eastertide, join us for a deep dive into the Book of Common Prayer. Trinity’s clergy and staff, along with scholar Janet MacMillan, will explore the history of the BCP, its use in our liturgies and communities, and how we might find it a resource for daily spiritual practice.
- April 21: What is the Book of Common Prayer? with the Rev. Elizabeth Blunt | Watch the video
- April 28: The Book of Common Prayer in Our Liturgical Life with the Rev. Michael Bird | Watch the video
- May 5: The Book of Common Prayer and our Baptismal Covenant with the Rev. Michael Bird | Watch the video
- May 12: The History of the Book of Common Prayer with Janet MacMillan
Fall 2023 Discovery Courses
Freedom and Interpretation: Exodus and the Canaanites
September 24–October 22
In the first session of the fall, we’ll explore the biblical books of Exodus and Joshua and consider how these narratives of freedom for God’s people can be understood in the context of the ancient Near East. In conversation with scholars and clergy, we will also consider how these texts have shaped both African American and Indigenous interpretations of the Bible in the United States.
October 1 and October 8: The Exodus and African American Interpretations
with the Rev. Judy Fentress-Williams, Ph.D.
Judy Fentress-Williams is in bi-vocational ministry in Alexandria, VA as the Professor of Old Testament at Virginia Theological Seminary and the Senior Assistant to the Pastor for Teaching and Preaching at the Alfred Street Baptist Church.
October 15: Indigenous Readings of the Bible and the Book of Joshua
with Dr. T. Christopher Hoklotubbe (Choctaw), Assistant Professor of Religion at Cornell College
Watch the 9am presentation on Indigenous Readings of the Apostle Paul
Watch the 10am presentation on Indigenous Readings of the Bible and the Book of Joshua
T. Christopher Hoklotubbe (hawk-low-tub-ee) is a scholar of the New Testament and Early Christianity and holds a joint appointment as the assistant professor of Classics at Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa, and the Director of Graduate Studies at NAIITS: An Indigenous Learning Community. NAIITS is proud to be the first Indigenous designed, developed, and delivered seminary to offer theological education to a global student body.
October 22: An Exploration of the Book of Joshua's Context and Reception History
with Dr. L. Daniel Hawk, Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at Ashland Theological Seminary
Watch the October 22 presentation
L. Daniel Hawk (Ph.D., Emory University) is Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at Ashland Theological Seminary in Ashland, Ohio, and an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church.
The Episcopal Church and Indigenous Voices
October 29–November 19
Join noted clergy and Indigenous scholars for a three-week series exploring the historical and contemporary relationship between The Episcopal Church and Indigenous communities.
October 29: The Episcopal Church and Indigenous Communities
with the Rev. Dr. Bradley S. Hauff (Oglala Sioux), Episcopal Church Missioner for Indigenous Ministries
Watch the October 29 recording
The Reverend Dr. Bradley S. Hauff is the Indigenous Missioner for the Episcopal Church, a member of the Presiding Bishop’s staff.
November 12: Perspectives on the Church in Navajoland
with the Rt. Rev. David Bailey, Bishop of Navajoland (retired)
Watch the November 12 recording
Bishop David Bailey graduated from Seminary of the Southwest in 1979 and became Curate, then Rector, of St. Stephen’s Parish in Phoenix, Arizona from 1979 to 1998. He was invited to the Diocese of Utah from the summer of 1998 to December of 2009 as Canon of Ministry then as Canon to the Ordinary and Executive Officer. In August of 2010 he was consecrated as Bishop in Navajoland where he served until August of 2023.
November 19: Considering Indigenous Communities and the Doctrine of Discovery
with Sarah Augustine (Pueblo (Tewa)), author of The Land Is Not Empty: Following Jesus in Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery
Watch the November 19 recording
Sarah Augustine is the Executive Director of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, a national coalition with global reach. From 2007-2022 she directed a Dispute Resolution Center in Central Washington. She has served on the faculty at Heritage University, Central Washington University and Yakima Valley College, and has served as Adjunct faculty at Goshen College. She is the Author of The Land is Not Empty (Herald Press, 2021).
New Perspectives on Women in the Bible
December 3–17
Watch the December 3 recording
Watch the December 17 recording
The Rev. Dr. Julie Faith Parker leads us in an exploration of her new book, Eve Isn’t Evil: Feminist Readings of the Bible to Upend Our Assumptions. Intertwining academic analysis and theological insight with personal stories drawn from her own life, Dr. Parker’s work helps us consider the stories of women in the Bible in a new way.
The Rev. Dr. Julie Faith Parker is a Visiting Scholar at Union Theological Seminary and Biblical Scholar in Residence at Marble Collegiate Church, both in New York City. She is the author or editor of eight books, including most recently, Eve Isn’t Evil: Feminist Readings of the Bible to Upend Our Assumptions (Baker, 2023).
Fall 2021–Spring 2023 Discovery Courses
Identity, Race and Reconciliation in a Divided America
February 6–27, 2022
February 6 Join the Rev. Canon Stephanie Spellers as she speaks about her book, The Church Cracked Open: Disruption, Decline, and New Hope for Beloved Community. Following Canon Spellers’ talk, the Discovery community will engage in a three-week discussion of her book.
February 13, 20, and 27 Community response discussion on The Church Cracked Open.
The Book of Job: Where is God when We Suffer?
March 6–April 3, 2022
March 6 Dr. Choon-Leong Seow, Professor of Hebrew Bible at Vanderbilt Divinity School, discusses the book of Job in the Hebrew Bible, and the ways in which Job’s story of suffering continues to speak to us today. Watch the recording.
March 13 Dr. Choon-Leong Seow discusses the book of Job and its images through visual art. Watch the recording.
March 20 Rabbi Darren Levine of Tamid: The Downtown Synagogue, speaks about the book of Job in Judaism. Watch the recording.
March 27 Summerlee Staten, Executive Director for Faith Formation and Education, moderates a discussion on the book of Job with the Discovery community.
April 3 Marilyn Green and members of Trinity’s Movement Choir, share the inspiration behind their Sacred Dance piece, “The Book of Job.” Watch the recording.
The Parable of the Talents: Introducing Trinity’s New Stained-Glass Window
April 24–May 29, 2022
April 24 Join Dr. Susan Ward, Professor of Art History at Rhode Island School of Design and Trinity parishioner, as she teaches on the history of stained glass in religious settings. Watch the video.
May 1 Dr. Susan Ward discusses the stained glass at our own beloved Trinity Church. Watch the video.
May 8 The Rev. Phillip Jackson discusses the new stained glass window and how the Parable of the Talents speaks to Trinity’s context specifically. Watch the video.
May 15 Join Dr. Susan Ward as she leads an in-person and virtual tour of select stained-glass windows at Trinity Church.
May 22 Join Summerlee Staten, Executive Director of Faith Formation, for a Bible study on the Parable of the Talents as Trinity celebrates the newest stained-glass window. Watch a clip.
May 29 Join Summerlee Staten as she moderates a discussion about renowned stained-glass artist Thomas Denny, the designer of Trinity’s new stained-glass window, as we learn about his artistic process and the meaning of this new work for Trinity’s community and beyond.
A Study of Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians
June 19–August 28, 2022
This summer, Discovery will explore Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians with insights on Paul’s views of love, spiritual gifts, and resurrection, from Dr. Lisa Bowens, Professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. Each month will feature one “Bible toolkit” session with Dr. Bowens followed by parishioner-moderated discussions.
Section One: Introducing the Corinthians
June 19 Bible Toolkit with Dr. Lisa Bowens, Professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. The Bible toolkit helps us explore Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians in its ancient Near Eastern context, its place in the Biblical canon, and how it still speaks to us today.
June 26 Chapter Two— Parishioner-moderated discussion
July 3 Chapter Three— Parishioner-moderated discussion
July 10 Chapter Four— Parishioner-moderated discussion
Section Two: Spiritual Gifts, Love, and Community
July 17 Bible Toolkit with Dr. Lisa Bowens, Professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. With special focus on Paul’s understanding of spiritual gifts and love, Dr. Bowen will help explore Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians in its ancient Near Eastern context and how it still speaks to us today.
July 24 Chapter 12— Parishioner-moderated discussion
July 31 Chapter 13— Parishioner-moderated discussion
August 7 Chapter 14— Parishioner-moderated discussion
Section Three: What is the Resurrection?
August 14 Bible Toolkit with Dr. Lisa Bowens, Professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. With special focus on Paul’s understanding of resurrection, Dr. Bowen will help us explore Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians in its ancient Near Eastern context and how it still speaks to us today.
August 21 Chapter 15—Parishioner-moderated discussion
August 28 Chapter 16— Parishioner-moderated discussion
Ordinary and Extraordinary Saints
September 25–October 16, 2022
We often think of saints as perfect and one dimensional. In this series we learn about the lives of people who served, sacrificed, and followed their faith calling and explore what they can teach us about our own life of faith.
September 25
Elizabeth Burrow, courageous journalist in Arkansas, fought segregation in the 1950s and was close friends with Dorothy Day. Join the Rev. Elizabeth Edman, Burrow’s grandniece, to learn how these two ordinary saints dug deep into their faith and stood against injustice.
October 2
Edith Cavell was a WWI nurse who tended the war injured and helped soldiers escape on both sides of the conflict. Her bravery is depicted in artist Brian Whelan’s “The Stations of Edith Cavell.” Ruth Frey, from the faith formation team, will discuss Cavell’s life and invite the Discovery community to contemplate Whelan’s Stations.
October 9
The Rev. Pauli Murray had a profound impact on the judicial system and racial equity in this country. Join Barbara Lau, Executive Director of the Pauli Murray Center, to learn about Murray’s life and legacy. Watch the video here.
October 16
Join the Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas, Dean of the Episcopal Divinity School at Union Theological Seminary and Trinity’s Theologian-in-Residence as she discusses the spirituality of the Rev. Pauli Murray and how her faith fueled her work for justice. Watch the video here.
Creation, EarthCare and Environmental Justice
October 23–November 20, 2023
When God began to create the heavens and the earth, the earth was complete chaos, and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from Godswept over the face of the waters. Then God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. –Genesis 1:1-3
October 23
Summerlee Staten, Executive Director for Faith Formation and Education, speaks to Discovery about the Tree of Life, and the inter-connected story of the Bible and Creation.
November 6 and 13
Dr. Ellen Davis, Professor of New Testament at Duke Divinity School, joins Discovery for a two-week discussion on the Bible and ecology.
November 20
Eco-Philosopher and writer Lyanda Haupt, joins Discovery to talk about her acclaimed book Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature and Spirit.
Hospitality of the Table and Food Justice: How are we Physically and Spiritually Fed?
December 4–December 18, 2022
God said, “See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food.” –Genesis 1:29
December 4
Join Trinity’s Program Coordinator for Outreach, Metha Balasquides, as he talks about Trinity’s current Food insecurity initiatives and ways you can get involved in caring for those in Trinity’s neighborhood.
December 11
Regina Jacobs, Chair of Trinity’s Hospitality Committee, will speak to Discovery about hospitality of the table.
December 18
Lyla June, Indigenous public speaker, artist, scholar, and community organizer, talks to Discovery about Food justice and indigenous food sovereignty.
God, Love, Eros, and Incarnation: Considering the Song of Songs
January 8–29, 2023
The Song of Songs gives a blueprint for love and companionship. See how poets and artists and the writer’s contemporaries explored relationships in this Scripture.
January 8
Hide and Seek: Reading the Song of Songs with Poets with Nate Wall, Scholar-in-Residence at Church of the Redeemer, Toronto. Watch the video.
January 15
Love in the Hebrew Bible and the Song of Songs with the Rev. Beth Blunt, Director of Congregational Life and the Arts, Trinity Church Wall Street. Watch the video.
January 22
Visual Art and the Song of Songs with Dr. Susan Ward, retired professor of Art History, Rhode Island School of Design
January 29
The Song of Songs and the Return to Eden with Summerlee Staten, Executive Director of Faith Formation & Education, Trinity Church Wall Street
Spiritual Friendship:
God’s Love in Community
February 5–19, 2023
In this series we’ll explore God’s love in community, with special emphasis on the relationship between Teresa of Ávila and St. John of the Cross.
February 5
The Practice of Spiritual Friendship with Dr. Kathy Bozzuti-Jones, Associate Director, Spiritual Practices, Retreats and Pilgrimage, Trinity Church Wall Street
February 12 and 19
Spiritual Friendship and Mysticism: Teresa of Ávila and St. John of the Cross with Mirabai Starr, teacher and author of Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce and Tender Wisdom of the Women Mystics.
Watch the February 12 video.
Watch the February 19 video.
Unity, Forgiveness, and Talking Across Difference
February 26–March 26, 2023
How do we resolve conflict and act as one body when we’re so different from one another?
February 26
A Forgiveness Toolkit: How do We Forgive? How are We Forgiven? with the Rev. Dr. Mark Bozzuti-Jones, Director, Spiritual Formation, Trinity Retreat Center. Watch the video here.
March 5
Conflict, Forgiveness, and Poetry with theologian and poet Pádraig Ó Tuama, author of Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your World, host of the Poetry Unbound podcast, and subject of this recent New Yorker piece. Watch the video here.
March 12
Conflict, Forgiveness, and Poetry with poets Pádraig Ó Tuama and Dr. Peter Ajer, Professor of New Testament at the University of San Francisco. Watch the video here.
March 19
Conflict, Forgiveness, and Unity with The Rev. Kristin Miles, Priest and Director for Pastoral Care and Community, Trinity Church Wall Street. Watch the video.
March 26
Spiritual Unity with the Rev. Michael A. Bird, Vicar, Trinity Church Wall Street. Watch the video.
Lamentation and Joy in the Bible
April 16–May 21
The Bible mirrors our own lives, including the highs and the lows. Explore joy and lamentation in the Bible in this series, with a special session with pilgrims returning from Greece and Rome.
April 16, 23, and 30
Lamentations in the Bible with the Rev. Beth Blunt, Director of Congregational Life & Liturgy, and the Rev. Yein Kim, Congregational Life & Liturgy, Trinity Church Wall Street
Watch the April 16 video, the April 23 video, and the April 30 video.
May 7 and 14
Joy in Paul’s Letter to the Philippians with Summerlee Staten, Executive Director of Faith Formation & Education, Trinity Church Wall Street
May 21
In the Footsteps of Paul with the Trinity Pilgrims back from travels to Greece and Rome.
Spirituality, Christian Identity and Leadership: The Worldview of Desmond Tutu
The Very Rev. Dr. Michael Battle, Professor of Church and Society and Director of the Desmond Tutu Center at The General Theological Seminary, recently joined the Trinity community for a three-week series based on his new book, Desmond Tutu: A Spiritual Autobiography of South Africa’s Confessor.
Watch the recording of session one.
Watch the recording of session two.
Watch the recording of session three.
The Very Rev. Dr. Michael Battle
Currently appointed as Herbert Thompson Professor of Church and Society and Director of the Desmond Tutu Center at General Theological Seminary in New York, the Very Rev. Michael Battle, Ph.D. has an undergraduate degree from Duke University, a master’s of Divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary, a master’s of Sacred Theology from Yale University, and a PhD in theology and ethics, also from Duke University. He was ordained a priest by Archbishop Desmond Tutu in 1993.
Battle has published eleven books, including his latest, Desmond Tutu: A Spiritual Biography of South Africa’s Confessor. You can learn more about his academic, parish, and peace work at his website, michaelbattle.com.
Prayer, Liturgy, & Contemplative Practice: Finding Our Footing in a Changed World
Watch recordings of Trinity clergy and special guest Lindsay Boyer as they discuss forms of contemplation and how contemplative practice can benefit all aspects of our lives.
September 26 Join Trinity’s Vicar, the Rev. Michael Bird, as he considers what it means to worship in this time and the place of contemplation within the Eucharistic liturgy. Watch the recording.
October 3 The Rev. Beth Blunt, Trinity’s Priest and Director for Congregational Life & Liturgy, discusses the Daily Office and its relationship to the rhythms of prayer in our lives. Watch the recording.
October 10 An introduction to lectio divina with Dr. Kathy Bozzuti-Jones, Trinity’s Associate Director, Spiritual Practices, Retreats, and Pilgrimage. Watch the recording.
October 17 The Rev. Phil Jackson, Trinity’s Priest-in-charge, discusses the life of Howard Thurman, Thomas Merton, and the Spiritual Path. Watch the recording.
October 24 Contemplative teacher Lindsay Boyer, the author of Centering Prayer for Everyone, talks about prayer practices to deepen our daily spiritual life. Watch the recording.
The Ministry of Hospitality at Trinity and in our Neighborhood
What does it mean to welcome friends and visitors, to provide hospitality? In these three sessions, hear perspectives rooted in scripture and expressed in Trinity’s current practice of hospitality in our hybrid world.
November 7 Summerlee Staten, Executive Director of Faith Formation and Education, shares what the Hebrew Scriptures teach us about the importance of hospitality in our own lives.
November 14 New Testament scholar, Dr. Deirdre Good, discusses the “hospitality of the table” in the New Testament. Watch the recording.
November 21 Congregational Council member Regina Jacobs leads us in a discussion about practices of hospitality at Trinity, in our neighborhood, and in a hybrid world.
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