St. Luke’s United Methodist Church Holds Ceremonial Groundbreaking for a New Woodshop Facility Adjacent to its Westheimer Campusby Intown StaffAugust 5, 20230Shares00L-R, Rev. Amy Sumrall, Jenna Lindley, Steve Lindley, Bruce Jamison, Tom Brown, Lee Denson, Hugh Parker, Jeff Creek, Dr. Tom Pace, Jennifer Boubel, Ryan Nunn, Daniel Kendri. Photo Credit: Angel MelendezView GallerySt. Luke’s United Methodist Church broke ground on August 2 for the construction of a new, modernized Woodshop to be located at 2614 Edloe Street, directly across the street from the main church campus. A ceremonial “turning of the dirt” took place with the volunteers who make up this storied ministry, along with other church members and St. Luke’s staff.The new 3,370 square-foot Woodshop, with both indoor and outdoor workspaces and office/meeting space, will replace the current, much smaller workshop located just down Edloe Street – a former storage shed – that the Woodshop Ministry had long ago outgrown. The St. Luke’s Woodshop Ministry was begun by senior church members who wished to lend both their wood crafting expertise and their tools to an enterprise where their skills could be used to benefit not just the church but the larger community.Rendering courtesy of Jackson Ryan ArchitectsSoon, the Woodshop Ministry was refinishing church furniture, building sets for church theater productions, making and distributing thousands of wooden toys annually for programs across the U.S. serving low-income children, and partnering with Kids Hope USA to build bookcases for children in mentoring programs in Houston schools.The new Woodshop is one project funded through St. Luke’s recent Transformed capital campaign. Other projects funded by the campaign include a Community Youth Center currently under construction next door to its St. Luke’s Gethsemane church, at 6856 Bellaire Boulevard, in the Gulfton community; partnership with Small Steps Nurturing Center to open a no-tuition, quality early childhood education program on the St. Luke’s Gethsemane campus; and restoration two years ago of the church’s then-60-year-old steeple at its Westheimer campus.Dr. Tom Pace, Senior Pastor of St. Luke’s UMC, welcomed more than 70 guests and noted how important the Woodshop Ministry is at St. Luke’s and how it has impacted the local community, people in other U.S. cities and the volunteers who have sustained it over the years. It is comprised mostly of retirees, some with extensive woodworking skills, and some who are beginners.Founding, still-active members of the Woodshop Ministry were on hand, including Founder Hugh Parker, Jeff Creel, Lee Denson and Tom Brown. Others in attendance were Bruce Jamison, co-chair of the Transformed Capital Campaign; Jennifer Boubel, Chief of Staff for St. Luke’s; Anne Culver, Director of Advancement; Rev. Katie Montgomery Mears, Associate Pastor; Rev. Amy Sumrall, Outreach Pastor; Suzi Pitts, Director of Communications; Tom Forney, CEO of Forney Construction, the contractor; Ryan Nunn, Forney Chief Operating Officer and Daniel Kendrick, Forney Project Manager. See Also Money Lessons: Teaching Kids About Money HistorySt. Luke’s is a United Methodist church established in 1945, meeting at Lamar High School before its first church buildings were built at 3471 Westheimer.For more information visit www.stlukesmethodist.org.What's Your Reaction?Excited0Happy0In Love0Not Sure0Silly000