Only passively, if at all. My dad lost all faith in God when his own father died, which was an element of his own PTSD (that and living with his psychologically unstable and emotionally abusive mother). He was a believer whose life experiences had cast doubt on that belief forever. He never emotionally healed from his father's death, not while I was a kid anyway, and maybe not even now. So he was always kind of on the fence - never really tehnically an atheist, never really seriously Christian. But he had all the hangups leftover from the religious upbringing - all the patriarchal entitlement, all of the guilt and shame about sexuality, all of the blind obedience to the standard code of conduct for intolerant white US Christians (which includes at least passive racism, xenophobia, etc.) as well as for whatever temporal laws (he'd swear up and down how he'd never done any illegal drugs, "never touched the stuff," he'd say proudly, even as he was drinking himself into a stupor night after night, convinced that it was OK, because alcohol was, y'know, legal.) He always wanted to be convinced he was checking off all the boxes of what he 'should' do according to some law or laundry list, never once taking the time to really assess where all these choices were taking him and what it was doing to everyone around him.
So: I think religion played a role in my dad's trauma, and that filtered down to me. But directly? my trauma had nothing to do with God or the Church. I answered No.