Sacred Places Fall 2013 | Page 12

UPDATE on Partners: Chicago Office This past October, the Chicago Office celebrated its fifth anniversary! In five years, the office has built strong relationships within the faith community, as well as with local philanthropists and community development leaders. Partners has launched several programs and trainings locally and regionally, received the Chicago Landmarks Preservation Excellence Award, recorded its first public policy victory with the City of Chicago, partnered with local universities and seminaries, and worked with more than 500 community-serving congregations across the City. audience as well. In 2013, the congregation coordinated the World of Women Praying Convocation, which attracted more than 2,500 women from across the globe. While Partners celebrates its achievements, the best testaments to its impact in Chicago are the achievements of congregations and parishes it has served. In recognition of the office’s fifth anniversary, Partners’ staff reached out to five congregations and asked them to describe their top five achievements since working with the organization: Congregational Growth – The church’s membership has increased from less than 30 to more than 300. Quinn Chapel AME Church, in danger of closing when the Reverend James Moody and his wife, Corlis, were assigned to the congregation, was part of the first New Dollars/New Partners class in Chicago, and has put those lessons into action to achieve: Community-Wide Capital Campaign – Quinn successfully completed the first phase of a multimilliondollar capital campaign to restore its historic Gothic Revival facade and interior, receiving grants from private foundations and the local and federal government. Celebrating its Heritage – When the Governor of Illinois was looking for a venue to host the state’s official celebration of the 60th anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s historic “I Have a Dream” speech, he called on Quinn – a wonderful testament not only to its rich history of African American legacy, but also to the role it plays in serving the local community and living out Dr. King’s legacy. The Second Presbyterian Church of Chicago, just down the street from Quinn Chapel AME, graduated from one of the first New Dollars/New Partners trainings in the Midwest. The congregation and its affiliated Friends of Second Presbyterian have leveraged the lessons of New Dollars (and the first local Arts in Sacred Places training) to explore and expand their role in the future of the City’s South Loop: National Register Listing – In 2013, the congregation received formal recognition as a National Historic Landmark. South Loop Concert Series – Not only did this series of concerts attract prominent musicians, but it has been a critical tool for community building in the rapidly changing Preservation as Job Training for Ex-Offenders – The congregation used the occasion of its restoration as an opportunity to develop an innovative and award-winning job training and placement program that helps ex-offenders find work in the construction and building trades. Under the supervision of a certified architect and foreman, local gang members were recruited to paint, strip, and plaster the building. With the lessons learned, several of these individuals have graduated from the program and found full-time work – many have also joined the congregation, and continue to pay it forward. Thinking Locally, Acting Globally – Quinn’s reach is first and foremost in its community, but it brings its local ethos and mindset to a global FOCUS at Greater Bethesda Missionary Baptist provides clothing and offers referrals for social services through its annual Social Service Fair. 11 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Fall 2013