Willow Creek Community Church Unveils Massive $10M Care  Center
60,000 Square-Foot Facility Offers Grocery  Store-Styled Food Pantry, Car 
and Dental Services






 
By _Nicola Menzie_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/nicola-menzie/)  , 
Christian Post  Reporter
June 13, 2013




 
Willow Creek Community Church, founded nearly 40 years ago by Senior Pastor 
 Bill Hybels as an "Acts 2 church," has opened the doors of its new 60,000  
square-foot, $10 million Care Center in South Barrington, Ill., to provide  
thousands of local families continued access to a grocery store-styled food 
 pantry, car repair and donation services, dental and optometry clinics, 
legal  assistance and a whole lot more. 
The Care Center, launched on June 3 after 10 years of planning, has been  
called "a Christian Walmart for the poor" by one publication due to its 
approach  and layout, which resembles more of a high-end shopping mall than a 
thrift shop  or traditional food pantry, according to _The Chicago Tribune_ 
(http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-06-05/news/ct-x-0605-willow-creek-care-
center-20130605_1_food-pantry-church-requests-church-members) . 
While Willow Creek typically identifies Acts 2:42-47 as its key biblical  
inspiration, the newly-expanded Care Center points to verse 45 as the 
foundation  for its vision: "They (a community that believed in Jesus as Lord 
and 
Messiah)  sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need." 
Previously housed off-campus, the Care Center has moved its food pantry and 
 Christian Auto Repairmen Serving (C.A.R.S) Ministry to Willow Creek 
Community  Church's main South Barrington campus, where likely more than the 
17,000  families assisted last year will continue to be served by 2,000 
volunteers. In  addition to the self-access food pantry, described by another 
local 
publication  as "a giant warehouse for...more than 4 million pounds of food," 
there is also a  children's clothing store where gently-used items can be 
retrieved for a  suggested donation of $5, ESL and GED instruction, 
employment workshops, and  other services. Planned for later this year is a 
computer 
lab and meeting spaces  for workshops and computer training classes. 
Willow Creek Community Church Media Relations Director Susa DeLay (with the 
 help of Josie Guth, director of the Care Center, Nicole Burt, director of 
Care  Center operations and Heather Larson, director of Compassion & Justice 
 Ministries which oversees the Care Center) fielded a few questions via 
email  from The Christian Post regarding the South Barrington, Ill., 
megachurch's new  facility. 
CP: Please tell me a little about the new Care Center. 
Follow us  
DeLay: The new Care Center is located on the church  property and offers 
resources that help to meet immediate needs: food, clothes,  transportation, 
housing (PADS), and also that help address some of the  underlying needs of 
poverty — employment, legal (and) health services,  education. 
The Care Center began as a food pantry years ago, but at the new Care 
Center,  the Food Pantry offers a full-choice grocery area where people can 
select the  food they want. 
CP: In what ways does the Care Center change how Willow Creek is able  to 
meet community needs? 
DeLay: We found 6,000 families a month were coming to  the Care Center, so 
based on that level of need, we stepped back and asked  ourselves how we 
could do more. While the central campus of Willow is located in  a fairly 
affluent area of Chicagoland, there is still poverty here. Poverty used  to be 
seen as primarily an urban issue, but that has changed. In the suburbs,  
transportation adds complexity to the issue of poverty — people need  
transportation in order to get and keep jobs. Repairing a vehicle can be  
devastating 
on a family's budget, and our C.A.R.S. Ministry is able to help  people in 
our church with those needs. 
One of the biggest things we strive to do is offer dignity-based solutions 
to  poverty. One of Willow's core values is dignity. We went to experts in 
the field  who helped us understand what gives dignity. We learned when you 
give things for  free, it can undermine dignity and increase entitlement. So, 
we charge for some  of our services. We charge $5 per child for clothing. 
People pay for parts when  they are getting their cars repaired and we 
provide the labor. A visit to the  dental or vision clinic is $20 per visit. 
All 
this money is put into a  benevolence fund to help others. 
We always refer to people who visit the Care Center for services as 
"guests."  And we offer to pray with our guests if they'd like. 
CP: What aspects of the Care Center are new? I read, for example,  that the 
food pantry and C.A.R.S. Ministry were already a part of the Care  Center's 
offerings. 
DeLay: The food pantry and the C.A.R.S. Ministry have  been for years. (The 
C.A.R.S. Ministry is 25 years old this year.) What's  changed is now it's 
all under one roof — onsite at the church. Additional  services were also 
offered before, but now they can be expanded. We have a new  clothing store 
where parents can get clothes for their children. We've added a  new dental and 
vision care clinic. We have a legal clinic where people can get  legal 
assistance. We offer ESL and GED training, and the new facility allows us  to 
expand all these services. 
We also added a Kid Zone where parents can check their kids into a safe,  
kid-friendly environment where they're cared for by trained staff and 
volunteers  while their parents are here. 
CP: What kind of people show up to take advantage of the Care  Center's 
services? 
DeLay: Our guests to the Care Center are people who are  in need. Many are 
unemployed or on fixed incomes, but there are also many who  are 
underemployed — what is sometimes referred to as "working poor." They do not  
have to 
be a member of our church (although some services are confined to people  who 
are members or long-time attenders). 
CP: How is Willow Creek able to create such a massive outreach to the  
community? And how does the church plan to maintain it? 
DeLay: Needs have risen by 300 percent since 2008 when  the economy was 
hurt. 
We have a partnership with the Greater Chicago Food Depository that allows 
us  to purchase food. We also have volunteers who serve on "gleaning" teams. 
We are  able to glean from local grocers and food suppliers to get food. 
The point is:  God has provided. And He provides in ways that let people know 
He knows them and  their needs. On one of the gleaning visits, a grocery 
gave us a birthday cake  with the other groceries we picked up from them. That 
night, a woman came into  the Care Center for groceries for her family. The 
volunteer who helped her  noticed on her paperwork that it was her birthday. 
When the volunteer helped her  load her groceries into the trunk of her 
car, she gave her the birthday cake.  God knew it was her birthday and He 
provided the cake. Things like this happen  all the time. These are things 
people 
might call co-incidence, but we know it's  God. So, as to how we're able to 
create such a massive outreach, the answer is  "Only God." 
The process of partnering with the GCFD and local grocers will continue. A  
portion of the tithes and offerings of the church will go to help maintain 
the  Care Center. 
CP: Is this something Willow Creek might try and replicate, or help  other 
churches create on a large scale in their own cities? 
DeLay: We don't have plans to replicate this, but we've  already been 
approached by other churches asking if we can advise them, and  we're happy to 
do 
that. The Care Center is part of Willow's Compassion and  Justice Ministry. 
CP: Who are the people helping to deliver these services, such as  with the 
C.A.R.S. Ministry? Is everyone participating on a voluntary basis, or  does 
the Care Center also provide employment? 
DeLay: The Care Center has 2,000 volunteers and we  could use another 1,000 
more. There is church staff that runs it, but we  couldn't do it without 
volunteers. 
CP: Finally, why is it important for Willow Creek to undertake such a  
community service effort? 
DeLay: We often had people show up at the church to get  help from the Food 
Pantry and since it wasn't onsite, we had to send them to the  location, 
which was 2-3 miles away. Then, if they needed help with car repairs,  we had 
to send them to another location 15 miles away. Many people who came to  us 
for help had no idea they were getting help from a church. With everything 
in  one place, we can serve people more efficiently — and they know it's God 
helping  them through a church. 
CP: Please add any additional comments. 
DeLay: Even people who aren't part of our church have  been eager to 
support this new Care Center by donating clothes, asking to  volunteer, etc.

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