McCormick’s Trauma Healing Initiative is dedicated to fostering a compassionate, trauma-informed culture in theological education. With a heart for community, it strives to strengthen connections with faith groups and partners, equipping them with valuable resources to effectively address and heal from institutional, historical, collective, and personal trauma.

Together, we can create a supportive environment for all!

POSSIBILITY

||

CREATIVITY

||

IMAGINATION

||

POSSIBILITY || CREATIVITY || IMAGINATION ||

The initiative focuses on education about what trauma is, where it comes from, how and when it reveals itself, and offering programming dedicated to equipping pastoral leaders to help communities heal when traumatic events occur or recur. Healing-centered engagement with trauma recognizes that church and community leaders are not usually clinically-trained therapists or counselors but, in their roles, they often find themselves attending to those struggling to cope with trauma. Pastors and other leaders can draw on cultural and spiritual resources for grounding and centering the community. A unique characteristic of healing-centered engagement is that it pays close attention to the well-being of caregivers. Leaders come to recognize that their health and well-being are tied to the health and well-being of the communities they lead and serve. THI will contribute to the broad-based formation of pastoral leaders to respond to trauma by focusing on trauma-informed pedagogy and public facing education about best practices for trauma-informed ministry.

The program is being funded through a grant from the Lilly Endowment’s Pathways to Tomorrow Initiative.

[APRIL 1, 2024]
An Invitation to be Restful

The theme for Formation Week 2024 emerges in response to the rapid pace and the busyness of life that has become a (too) familiar part of modern life. Our students carry the fullness of this life -- the weighty sense of call that brought them to seminary alongside the mounting everyday demands of academic, financial, ministerial, and familial/communal responsibilities. 

Yet, such rapid cadences are interrupted by refrains in biblical passages like Psalm 46:10a that attest: Be still and know that I am God.

Learn More

[MAY 6, 2024]
Durbin, Hospital Leaders Release Year 5 Report On Chicago Heal Initiative To Address Gun Violence

U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) today joined hospital leaders and the Illinois Health and Hospital Association (IHA) to unveil the five-year report of the Chicago HEAL Initiative. Launched in 2018 by Senator Durbin and 10 of the largest hospitals serving Chicago, the HEAL Initiative is a collaboration to address the root causes of gun violence through economic, health, and community projects in 18 of Chicago’s neighborhoods with the highest rates of violence, poverty, and health disparities. Today’s report highlights significant progress made by the hospitals in local hiring, job training and mentorship, and trauma-informed care and youth mental health activities. As part of today’s report, Durbin also announced $4.35 million in new federal funding to support these hospital-led efforts to break the cycle of violence through community programs.

Read More