Sacred Places Summer 2014 | Page 12

UPDATE on Partners: Texas Office Places and $225,000 in support from foundations - and funds are still coming in! The goal of the campaign was to raise enough money to install a new kitchen and a sprinkler system for the main floor. Due to the success of the fundraising, Grace UMC was also able to remodel the existing choir room to provide additional office spaces and renovate its Fellowship Hall. Grace United Methodist Church, near Dallas, helps its neighbors and its community through myriad social service programs. Photo courtesy of Grace UMC. Grace United Methodist Church, located near downtown Dallas, is a conventional church on Sundays. But during the rest of the week, Grace UMC is anything but - it’s a preschool, a medical clinic, a legal clinic, a sanctuary for teen mothers, a community center, and a monastic community that serves the poor. Not a large church by any standards, this 300-member congregation is committed to serving its neighbors every day by housing a wide variety of vital community programs within the church’s walls. Grace UMC participated in New Dollars/New Partners training in 2007, during which the congregation learned how to recognize and calculate the public value of its historic sacred place. The congregation was helped to develop and effectively tell its story to a wider audience, which helped to attract new partners and resources to help maintain the aging facility. The church’s many outreach programs have not only encouraged donations from within the congregation, but have also gained support from the wider community. Over the past few years, the church has embarked on several capital campaigns and added significant new programming to its array of social services programs. From 2010 to 2013, its Transforming Grace capital campaign raised $300,000 from the congregation, which was supplemented with an additional $25,000 grant from Partners for Sacred 11 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Summer 2014 June marked the one-year anniversary of the new kitchen’s opening. The Missions Committee prepares breakfast there once a month for those attending services, many of whom often stand outside the building for hours waiting to enter. Additionally, cooking classes through a local nursing school’s nutrition program are now being offered. Grace UMC hosts five different nonprofit organizations on its small campus: the Agape Medical Clinic, which is open four days a week and helps more than 3,500 medicallyunderserved patients per year; the Open Door Preschool, which serves multicultural and non-English speaking students; Ally’s House, providing support services, education, and mentoring for teen mothers; Bonhoeffer House, a monastic community of seminary students in service to the homeless; a legal clinic –the only pro bono legal aid program in East Dallas; and a program that assists the approximately 40 refugee families who attend the church. In addition to these programs, Grace UMC has been able to add, with no additional staff, a new worship group Texas Advisory Board Members James R. Nader, FAIA, Chair Kenneth Barr Cynthia Boyd Diane Bumpas Richard H. Bundy, AIA Kris Calvert Louise B. Carvey Robert I. Fernandez Donald Gatzke, AIA Marty Leonard Robert F. Pence, PE The Reverend Brenda W. Weir Ex Officio Fernando Costa Randle Harwood William J. Thornton, Jr.