Va. Ministry Opens First-Ever Church-Run Grocery Store to Provide Affordable Food to Needy

by Samuel Smith, Christian Post Contributor |
Products are on display at The Vineyard Church's The Storehouse in Hampton, Virginia. | PHOTO: FACEBOOK.COM / THE STOREHOUSE

A nondenominational church in Virginia claims to be the first church in history to open up its own nonprofit grocery store to provide its local impoverished community discounted groceries at up to three-quarters of the cost of regular grocery stores.

Last month, The Vineyard Church in Hampton hosted the grand relaunching of its nonprofit, The Storehouse. The Storehouse, which is located in the back of the church, exists with the purpose of providing affordable food and household necessities to many in the Hampton Roads area who don't know where their next meal is going to come from.

Although The Storehouse first opened in October 2015, it was initially only a benefit available to church members, pastor Jacob Hopson told The Christian Post on Thursday. But as the store grew and Hopson and the church leadership got a better understanding of how to run it, the store was eventually opened up to the public.

"We went from once a month to every Saturday to doing it weekly. It went from doing it two or three days a week to doing it five days a week now and opening it up to the general public," he explained. "We started off and saw that our members had about a 75 percent reduction in their grocery budget."

The grand relaunching of the store, which took place on April 15, was attended by local politicians and several community members. Over 18,000 people have benefited from shopping at the store since its inception.

At the store, customers can find a wide variety of needs they might find at a normal grocery store — anything from Poptarts and laundry detergent to produce, dairy and meat.

"We don't do anything like skirt steak, we actually do filet mignon and New York strip. We do bone-in sirloin," Hopson explained. "We do high-end stuff that keeps them eating like kings and queens on a pauper's budget."

In the Hampton area, there is a high percentage of the population that suffers from food insecurity, or the lack of consistent access to a sufficient quantity of nutritious food.

According to WAVY, as many as 16 to 26 percent of the Hampton area suffers from food insecurity.

"That is the number of people who don't know where their next meal is coming from," Hopson, a disabled Air Force veteran who has survived two heart attacks and cancer, said. "The area that we are in is an economically challenged area. Even though it is right down the street from the beach, there are a lot of drugs in the area. Not only are we doing this in helping them in their need, but we are actually here to help some people get off of drugs. We are still doing other missions of the church but we are just doing this other aspect as well."

Open five days per week to the public — Tuesday through Saturday — and to the church members on Sunday, customers of The Storehouse are aided in their experience by a personal shopper who will hold their basket and take them throughout the store. When the customer is done, the shopper will even carry the customer's bags to their car.

Read more about this First Ever Church-Run Grocery Store on The Christian Post.