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Volunteers turn Hanover Park house into church's Spanish ministry

Tabernacle Baptist Church in Hanover Park held a neighborhood barbecue Oct. 3 to celebrate the rescue of a derelict house and its future use in an outreach program and ministry to Spanish speaking residents of the area.

Gangs had broken into the house at 1605 Evergreen Ave., adjacent to the church at 7020 Barrington Road, punched holes in the walls and written graffiti on them, said Rev. Matthew Black, the senior pastor at the church.

The church took possession of the building in May and Leopardo Construction in Chicago provided about 40 volunteer workers from three states through its "Helping Hands" volunteer program to do interior demolition on June 1 and then rebuild the interior in the following weeks, he said.

Because of the damage and for its new use, the building needed wiring, new bathrooms, heating and air conditioning changes, and some walls moved, Black said. Parishioners and neighborhood residents helped with tasks such as painting, plumbing, laying tile and landscaping.

One neighbor who used to be a landscaper volunteered to help lay sod. "We couldn't have done it without him," Black said. Altogether, about 40 people helped with the renovation.

The building now has meeting rooms, classrooms and bathrooms. "It will be used as a Spanish ministry" and for church fellowship events, he said.

While the congregation is mostly English-speaking, Black, who spent four years as a Baptist missionary in Spain, says the congregation has been making more of an effort to connect with people in the neighborhood, who he estimated are 80 percent Hispanic.

The church now draws 10-15 people who speak Spanish and hopes to increase that, he said.

"We feel like we're in a strategic location for reaching out and helping these people," he said.

People attend a neighborhood barbecue celebrating the rebuilding of a derelict house for use in a Spanish ministry for Tabernacle Baptist Church in Hanover Park. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
This cake was served at the dedication. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
Tabernacle Baptist Church in Hanover Park took over this house, which had been vandalized by gangs, and fixed it up with help of volunteers for use in a ministry to Spanish speaking people in the area. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
Frank Euliano, left, Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig, Dan Koerner and June Euliano talk at a neighborhood barbecue celebrating the rebuilding of a derelict house for use in a Spanish ministry for Tabernacle Baptist Church. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
Frank Euliano, left, Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig, Rev. Matthew Black, Dan Koerner and June Euliano pose at a neighborhood barbecue celebrating the rebuilding of a derelict house for use in a Spanish ministry for Tabernacle Baptist Church. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
Rev. Matthew Black of Tabernacle Baptist Church in Hanover Park speaks at the dedication of a rebuilt derelict house for use in a Spanish ministry. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
Veronica Anaya stands with Luis Torres, who is director of Spanish ministries for Tabernacle Baptist Church in Hanover Park. Courtesy Tabernacle Baptist Church
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