Sacred Places Summer 2011 | Page 11

UPDATE on Partners: Chicago Office congregations in one. “People who came on Sunday were not really aware of the people who came on Wednesday,” explains longtime congregation member Paul Geenen. By far, the church’s biggest initiative is the “Bread of Healing Empowerment Ministry” (BOHEM). This signature social program draws 200-300 people to the church’s fellowship hall every Wednesday night for a hot meal, optional Bible study, drug and alcohol support groups, and access to a food pantry. Overall, the ministry is characterized by a comprehensive and holistic approach that not only offers economic, psychological, and spiritual support but also gives the less fortunate the tools to empower themselves. Katherine Anderson, Amy Schachman, and Emily Gigerich (l. to r.) are three of the summer interns in the Chicago Office. They and Duane Hagerty (not pictured) will be working on Partners’ Making Homes for the Arts in Sacred Places program. New Dollars/New Partners Success Story In 2009, Cross Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, WI, went through a New Dollars/New Partners for Your Sacred Place training session led by the staff of the Chicago Office, but held in Milwaukee. The congregation hosted all of the participants for the final module in January 2011. The training encouraged Cross Lutheran to re-examine its ministries, and to expand and extend its long tradition of hospitality. This, in turn, prompted the church to begin a capital campaign for over $2 million to renovate its kitchen and fellowship hall, and construct an addition that will help expand its social service programs. With the aid of New Dollars/ New Partners, the church has been able to outline its need and its goals to donors and funders. For many years, Cross Lutheran served two very different communities: the crowd of about 165 that filled the sanctuary every Sunday for worship, and the roughly 300 people that used the church’s various social services throughout the week. Since there was little, if any, contact between the different populations, the church was actually two BOHEM has been so effective and popular that there was simply not enough room in the fellowship hall to serve the enormous crowds that gathered on a weekly basis. The congregation knew it needed to undertake a large-scale building initiative to address the need for more space and better facilities. The church leaders realized that they had little experience in running a capital campaign, and so decided to participate in the New Dollars/New Partners training. According to Geenen, they “benefited greatly from having someone from the outside” explain what needed to be done. Tom Jackson, another congregation member who participated in the training, noted that it “was most helpful in putting together case statements and the public value of our ministries.” The team was able to make the case for their church as a community asset in empirical terms. For example, over 600 volunteer hours per month were devoted to the church’s various service programs. This figure and others were a major source of enthusiasm for the congregation as they conveyed the importance of the weekday ministries to the Sunday worshippers and inspired many to become more involved. With new skills and an infectious enthusiasm, the capital campaign team set to work. The congregation Sacred Places • Summer 2011 • 10