'Find some meaningful way to give back': Pastor Greg Young on processing trauma
By:
Mike Strehlow
Posted: Nov 28, 2021 1:15 PM CDT

-
2:43
Schlesinger’s Saturday Showcase (7/5)...Plenty of post 4th...
-
2:26
Saturday’s heat, humidity will break on Sunday with a cold...
-
1:46
100 holes of golf in one day? A Wisconsin golfer says it’s...
-
2:55
Happy Independence Day! Overview of celebrations happening all...
-
2:07
’ Milwaukee family celebrates their 100th Independence Day...
-
3:10
Family mourns 34-year-old woman killed in Shorewood shooting
-
2:44
Meet CBS 58’s Pet of the Week: Bandz
-
2:18
Stormy start to Independence Day then mostly dry but hot and...
-
1:06
4th of July Milwaukee Lakefront shenanigans to start the weekend!...
-
3:39
First Milwaukee Lakefront drone show in the books
-
0:28
Milwaukee community leaders and MPD rally together to denounce...
-
4:08
Spurred by Trump budget bill, Wisconsin cashes in on hospital...
WAUKESHA, Wis. (CBS 58) -- The horrific events from last Sunday and how people have come together in grief, support and healing since, will most certainly be on the minds of churchgoers and in the sermons of faith leaders at services this month including Greg Young's. He's not only the pastor of Our Savior's United Church of Christ in Germantown, but also a chaplain for the Germantown Fire Department, the FBI, and provides crisis response training for various agencies.
On CBS 58 Sunday Morning, Mike Strehlow spoke with Young about what's to come for survivors and first responders as they process the trauma of the Waukesha parade tragedy.
Sign up for the CBS 58 Newsletter