I came to Trinity Heights incredibly suspicious of Christianity and, as a relatively contented agnostic, I approached church apprehensively. Now, a year later, I look to it’s community as a wellspring of growth, knowledge and encouragement.
Trinity heights is a warm, welcoming community with a shared...
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I came to Trinity Heights incredibly suspicious of Christianity and, as a relatively contented agnostic, I approached church apprehensively. Now, a year later, I look to it’s community as a wellspring of growth, knowledge and encouragement.
Trinity heights is a warm, welcoming community with a shared sense of exploration. The church leadership takes care to foster this even further, with guest speakers and round table discussions at the end of each sermon series. The sermons themselves are thought-provoking, artful, and accessible from many directions, engaging with Christian theology in ways historical, biblical and cultural while seamlessly pulling from a wide array of literary, pop cultural and anecdotal references. Dostoyevsky or Nietzsche, C.S. Lewis or George Lucas might aid the illumination of a complicated theological concept on any given Sunday.
Thoughtfully and carefully constructed, Trinity Heights is conscious of the many backgrounds that make up it’s constituents, and promises to engage and challenge everyone: the skeptic,
the long-time church go-er, the first time attender, the academic, the literary lover, even—occasionally—the Star Wars fan.