Funders

Trinity Church Wall Street

Trinity Church Wall Street is a growing and inclusive Episcopal parish that seeks to serve and heal the world by building neighborhoods that live Gospel truths, generations of faithful leaders, and sustainable communities. It is guided by its core values: faith, integrity, inclusiveness, compassion, social justice, and stewardship. Members come from New York City and surrounding areas to form a racially, ethnically, and economically diverse congregation. Trinity Church and St. Paul’s Chapel are the cornerstones of the parish’s community life, worship, and mission.

Worship is at the center of parish life, with multiple services offered every week, many of which are streamed online and viewed by hundreds of thousands worldwide. As historic buildings and active churches, Trinity Church and St. Paul’s Chapel also welcome more than three million visitors and pilgrims from around the world every year. Now in its fourth century of ministry, Trinity works daily to build generations of faithful leadership, to build up neighborhoods, and to build financial capacity for holy service in New York City and around the world. Trinity’s outreach in downtown New York City includes worship services six days per week at Trinity Church and St. Paul’s Chapel, a food program that serves people experiencing food insecurity seven days a week; the Trinity Commons, our new community space; the Trinity Retreat Center in West Cornwall, Connecticut; St. Margaret’s House, a 251-unit subsidized apartment building on Fulton Street for elderly and disabled residents; and many additional ministries that promote social justice, confront racism and inequality, and build neighborhoods and community.

In all its ministries, Trinity endeavors to be good stewards of the gifts it has been given and embody compassion, integrity, and all of its core values. Trinity Church Wall Street Philanthropies, the church’s grantmaking arm, made more than $46M in grants in 2021 to fund leadership development, mission driven development for faith-based organizations, racial and criminal justice reform initiatives, and combat the city’s housing and homelessness crises.