Serving Opportunities
As you get to know people at Trinity Heights you will discover the numerous ways they are serving and volunteering in New York.
Volunteer at our church:
At Trinity Heights there are many ways to serve on a Sunday morning through welcome, hospitality, AV, children’s ministry and music ministry. To find out how you can get involved please check the areas of service that interest you and we will be in touch with more information.
Volunteer with our partners:
ALARM: African Leadership and Reconciliation Ministries works in eight African Countries, training pastors and other community leaders to bring peace, reconciliation and much needed aid to communities that have been afflicted with war, violence and corruption. Trinity Heights partners financially with ALARM giving a percentage of our annual income to their ministry.
Health & Hope works in western Myanmar, envisioning and empowering remote communities to become thriving and self-developed. Our work is centred around three key areas of health, education and food security.
As a new church we have sought out an opportunity to serve and build relationships in our immediate neighborhood through Lily. There are many elderly people who have lived most of their lives in Morningside Heights but who with the onset of years find themselves increasingly isolated. Lily seeks to connect volunteers with the elderly to bring them back into community.
IJM: International Justice Mission protects the poor from violence by rescuing victims, bringing the criminals to justice, restoring survivors to safety and strength, and helping local law enforcement build a safe future that lasts. Their long-term vision is to rescue thousands, protect millions, and prove that justice for the poor is possible.
Trinity Heights Church is part of Redeemer’s City to City church planting incubator. City to City recruits, trains, coaches and funds leaders who start gospel movements in cities through church planting.
Team TLC NYC assisting NYC-based Asylum Seekers & Migrants. Their services include and not limited to The Little Shop of Kindness which is a donation-based store, located at 12 W. 40th St.
Do For One is a relationship-building program that brings isolated people into greater community life. They selectively match one person with disabilities (‘Partner’) with another person who enjoys a more socially included life (‘Advocate’).