Sections reference · v1

Every section, in one place.

Each canonical pattern from the catalog rendered in Ecosia-light’s mission-forward language — plus the three signature patterns this DS adds. Demo content shows a fictional church plant, The Open Table, restoring its East-Valley neighborhood.

Patterns rendered16 canonical · 3 signature · 10 generic blocks
Demo tenantThe Open Table
Updated2026-05-07

Catalog

Pattern 01 · Hero
hero-photo-led

Photo-led editorial hero

Top-of-homepage moment. Establishes mood with a real photo and a short, declarative headline. Best when the org has strong fieldwork imagery.

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East Valley · Est. 2019

A church on the corner, restoring its block.

The Open Table is a community of neighbors learning to feed, plant, and forgive together — one Sunday and a thousand small Saturdays at a time.

Pattern 02 · Hero
hero-centered

Typography-only centered hero

No photo. Used on internal landings or high-statement headers where the headline alone carries the page. Generous space; chunky display type.

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Welcome · First Sunday guide

It’s easier than you think.

Whatever you’re carrying into your first Sunday, you’re welcome. Here’s where to park, what to expect, and who to look for when you walk in.

Plan your visit
Pattern 03 · Chrome
announcement-bar

Slim announcement strip

A single sentence above the main nav for time-sensitive moments — a service change, a planting day, a capital push. One per page maximum.

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Saturday May 11 · All-hands planting day on the Queen Creek wash — breakfast at 7, shovels at 8. RSVP →
Pattern 05 · Body
intro-statement

Editorial intro paragraph

Single thought block that follows a hero. States the org’s posture in one to three sentences — declarative, plain, mission-forward.

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Our story, in one paragraph

Six years on one corner, doing one thing — showing up.

We started in 2019 with a borrowed garage, four families, and the conviction that the gospel sounds louder when it’s being lived. Today the work is gathered worship, daily mercy, and trees in the ground — the work that stays after the photographers leave.

Pattern 06 · Body
service-times

Worship schedule

When and where worship happens — days, times, short context per service. Lives near above-the-fold on the homepage and "I'm New" landing.

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Sundays at The Open Table

One room, one hour,
one practiced welcome.

Sunday10:00 AM
Gathered worship in the warehouse. Coffee’s good. Kids welcome and loved — ages 0–11 with hand-off after the call to worship.
Sunday11:30 AM
Community meal in the back lot. Always free. Always enough. Cooked by neighbors who slept here last week and neighbors who own the block.
Wednesday6:30 PM
Recovery cohorts — addiction, grief, and post-incarceration support. Three rooms, three trained leads, no front-door cost.
Where to find us 2480 E. Ellsworth Loop Rd. · Queen Creek, AZ 85142
Pattern 07 · Body
ministries-grid

Programs as cards

Programs / ministries / departments rendered as a card grid. Each card a clear name, a one-line description, an optional icon. Four to nine items typical.

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Pattern 08 · Body
events-list

Upcoming dates

A clean list of upcoming events — date, title, one-line context. Calendar without the calendar metaphor; sequenced by time.

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What’s next

On the calendar.

All events
  • May11

    Mile-marker 3 planting day

    600 native saplings into the Queen Creek wash with the parks team. Breakfast at 7 AM, shovels in the ground at 8.

    RSVP
  • May18

    Pentecost Sunday

    One service at 10:00 AM, communion in the round, the kids back in the room. Stay for the meal afterward.

    Details
  • May25

    Recovery alumni dinner

    Monthly gathering of folks who finished a cohort. Invite-only. If you’ve been through, you know.

    RSVP
  • Jun01

    Summer ESL block opens

    Twelve weeks, Tuesday + Thursday evenings. Free, with childcare. Registration closes Friday.

    Register
Pattern 09 · Body
staff-profile

Single leader bio

One person, one photo, one bio. Used on the about page or "I'm New" landing to give the visitor a face before their first Sunday.

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Meet the pastor

Pastor Marcus Chen

Founding Pastor · The Open Table

Marcus grew up two blocks from where the church now meets. He spent eight years as a high-school counselor before planting The Open Table in 2019, and he still keeps Tuesday afternoons open for the kids he used to counsel — now mostly grown, mostly thriving, occasionally not.

He preaches every Sunday, runs the Wednesday recovery circle, and is on the planting line every Saturday morning. He and his wife Linh have three kids; the oldest leads the children’s ministry on Sundays.

Read his full story
Pattern 10 · Body
staff-grid

Team grid

Four-to-twelve leaders as a card grid. Each card: photo, name, role, optional one-line bio. Used on about pages and leadership landings.

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The team

Eight people, each doing one thing well.

Marcus Chen

Founding Pastor

Sunday teaching, Wednesday recovery, Saturday planting line.

Linh Tran-Chen

Director of Hospitality

Runs the kitchen and the refugee-family welcome program.

Daniel Ortega

Restoration Lead

Trees, beds, soil. Twelve years with the Pascua Yaqui restoration team.

Ada Robinson

Recovery Pastor

Eight years sober, six years leading the Wednesday cohorts.

Ren Kobayashi

Worship Lead

Pulls the songbook from the room, not from a list.

Sarah Olufemi

Children’s Director

Ten years public-school teaching. Runs the 0–11 program every Sunday.

Jonas Whitehorse

Community Justice Lead

Coordinates the re-entry mentor program with Maricopa County.

Priya Anand

ESL & Tutoring Lead

Built the K–12 tutoring program from a single Saturday.

Pattern 11 · Body
story-prose

Long-form narrative

The about-page founding story — two to six paragraphs of prose with one optional pull-quote. Reading rhythm; not a brochure.

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How we got here

From a borrowed garage to a corner everyone walks past.

In the spring of 2019, Marcus and Linh moved back into the neighborhood Marcus had grown up in. The block had changed and stayed the same in the ways those things tend to go — the school still there, the corner store under new ownership, the wash overgrown, the houses split half-rented half-owned. Four families met in their garage on Easter Sunday.

The first year was the kind of work that no one writes a memoir about. Folding chairs. A speaker borrowed from the high school. A Sunday meal that began the second week and never ended. By the time the pandemic arrived a year later, twelve families showed up. By the time the lockdown lifted, sixty.

“The gospel sounds louder when it’s being lived.”

The work expanded sideways. The meal grew into a Sunday community lunch. The lunch grew into a weekday food pantry when a member donated her produce truck. The pantry brought a recovery program. The recovery program brought a need for childcare. The childcare brought tutoring. Each ministry started because someone in the room asked for it, not because the staff planned it.

Year three brought the trees. The Queen Creek wash had been a bare strip of gravel for as long as anyone in the room could remember. Daniel — a member who had spent twelve years on the Pascua Yaqui restoration team — pitched a planting day after a Wednesday recovery circle. Three Saturdays in, fifty volunteers. By the end of year four, a thousand native saplings in the ground.

Today, six years on, the work looks like a Sunday gathering, a daily kitchen, a weekly recovery group, a weekday tutoring room, and a Saturday planting line. None of it has a marketing budget. All of it has a Tuesday meeting where the staff prays through the previous week and writes down what didn’t work.

Pattern 12 · Body
beliefs-list

Convictions enumerated

Doctrinal distinctives, values, or organizational convictions, numbered and explained. Four to seven items typical. Plain language.

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What we believe

Five convictions that order our week.

Not a doctrinal statement — we have one of those, and you can read it at the bottom of this page. These are the convictions that shape how the Sunday becomes a Saturday.

  1. The gospel is good news, not good advice.

    We are people in need of rescue, not refinement. Every Sunday is an announcement before it is an invitation.

  2. Mercy is the test of orthodoxy.

    If our beliefs don’t produce a kitchen, a recovery room, and a planting line, our beliefs are decoration. Doctrine is meant to be inhabited.

  3. The neighborhood is the assignment.

    We are not building a regional megachurch. We are restoring four corners. If our work doesn’t serve the people who walk past, we have lost the plot.

  4. The land is part of the parish.

    The wash, the soil, the natives, the canopy — these are members of the congregation. To love a place is to plant in it.

  5. Slow is faster than fast.

    Six years of Tuesday meetings. Twelve years of Sunday lunches. The unsexy week is where the gospel becomes credible.

Pattern 13 · Conversion
cta-band

Mid-page conversion moment

A full-width band — usually dark green, occasionally photo-backed — that breaks the page rhythm and asks the reader to take one specific action. One per page maximum.

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Saturday morning, 7:30 sharp

There’s a shovel
with your name on it.

No experience needed. Coffee and breakfast burritos at 7. We start planting at 8 and we’re home by noon. Bring kids; bring boots; bring a friend.

Pattern 14 · Conversion
ways-to-give

Donation methods + allocation

All the ways a donor can give, paired with a transparent breakdown of where the money goes. Honest math; no padding.

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Generosity

Four ways to give.

Pick the path that works. We re-publish allocations every quarter, and we get the math wrong sometimes — when we do, we re-publish.

Where every dollar goes

Audited annually by Sterling & Howe.

42%

Programs

Meal, recovery, ESL, tutoring, planting, refugee hospitality.

28%

Staff

Six full-time, two part-time. Salaries published annually.

18%

Facility

Rent, utilities, kitchen supplies, planting tools.

12%

Reserves

Six-month emergency fund & capital for the next program.

  • The Open Table is a 501(c)(3) public charity (EIN 84-3119482). Gifts are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law.
  • Receipts emailed monthly; annual statements mailed by January 31.
  • We do not sell, trade, or share donor information — ever.
Pattern 15 · Closing
closing-block

Final editorial moment

The reassurance line right before the footer — "we’re here, we’ll pick up, you’re welcome." A direct human gesture before the page ends.

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Still have questions?

Pick up the phone.
Someone’s on the other end.

If you’ve read this far and you’re still uncertain about a Sunday, a Saturday, or a Tuesday recovery group — call us. A real human answers between 9 AM and 7 PM.

Pattern 17 · Signature
Ecosia-light only impact-stats

Big chunky stat number

Ecosia’s signature "trees planted" treatment, retooled for any mission impact metric. A huge brand-green number, a small uppercase tracked label, a one-to-two-sentence support line. Single oversized stat or a 2–4 grid.

Hero variant · 1 stat
Year three, in one number

What six years on one corner adds up to.

62,400 Pantry meals served · 2019–2026

Half grown on church-property raised beds, the rest sourced from the Mesa Co-op and seven East-Valley farms that donate weekly.

Grid variant · 4 stats

The work, in four numbers.

1,200 Weekly meals served

Sunday community lunch + Wednesday-evening pantry distribution at three pickup points.

85 Families housed since 2019

Through our refugee hospitality network & emergency-housing partners.

1,240 Native trees planted

Across four East-Valley re-greening sites along the Queen Creek wash.

62 Recovery cohorts run

Weekly groups across addiction, grief, and post-incarceration support.

Pattern 18 · Signature
Ecosia-light only action-steps

Numbered green-pill steps

Ecosia’s mission-forward "here’s how to take action" pattern. Each step gets a green pill marker (01, 02, 03…), a chunky display title, a one-paragraph description, and an optional CTA. Three to five steps typical.

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Get involved

Four ways in — pick the one that fits.

If you’ve read this far, you’re probably ready to do something. These four steps are how a first Sunday becomes a sustained life of service. Take them in order, or skip ahead — we’ll meet you where you are.

01

Visit on Sunday.

10:00 AM. Walk in any door. Coffee’s in the lobby, kids hand off after the call to worship. No registration form, no follow-up email unless you ask for one.

Plan your first Sunday
02

Stay for the meal.

11:30 AM in the back lot. Always free, always enough. Sit at any table, eat with anyone. The fastest way from "first-time visitor" to "person who knows three people’s names."

See this Sunday’s menu
03

Find a way to serve.

Trees, food, recovery, hospitality, kids. Pick the work that fits the week you actually have. Most volunteers start with two hours on a Saturday and stay for years.

Browse the work
04

Become a member.

Six-week class, twice a year. We cover the convictions, the history, the doctrine, and the rhythms. After that, you’re part of the people who carry this place when the wind blows.

Sign up for the next class
Pattern 19 · Signature
Ecosia-light only caption-pill-photo

Photo + green pill caption

Ecosia’s blog signature — a single editorial photo with a green pill caption overlay. Use anywhere a single photo + one-line context is the right unit (homepage chapter breaks, mid-page about-section beats, story illustrations).

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A volunteer plants a native sapling along the Queen Creek wash Year-three planting day

Mile-marker 3, Queen Creek wash · April 2026 · photo by R. Kobayashi

Live render · second example
Volunteers prepare the Sunday community meal Sunday Meal · Week 312

Back-lot kitchen, The Open Table · produce grown on church-property raised beds

Pattern 20 · Generic block
image-right-text-left

Two-column · text left, image right

The most common editorial-section layout — declarative copy on the left, supporting photo on the right. Pair with image-left-text-right to give a long page rhythm.

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Sunday Community Meal

How we serve dinner together.

Every Sunday after the 11 AM service, the sanctuary becomes a dining room. Tables go down the center aisle. Volunteers from this morning’s congregation plate the meal. Neighbors from the apartments across Ellsworth eat alongside members.

It’s the same table for everyone — that’s the point. No line, no badges, no “guest” or “volunteer” signs. Just a meal we cook for whoever walks in.

Volunteers prepping the Sunday community meal at The Open Table Sunday meal · Wk 312
Pattern 21 · Generic block
image-left-text-right

Two-column · image left, text right

Flipped variant of the row above. Same field contract; alternate layout reads as a fresh beat when stacked between sections.

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Why we plant trees

A church on the corner, planting its block.

The wash behind our parking lot was bare caliche when we arrived in 2019. Six years later, 3,400 native saplings — mesquite, palo verde, ironwood — line a half-mile run along Ellsworth. We planted them on Saturdays. Whoever showed up did the work.

This is what restoration looks like at the small, neighborhood scale: one corner, six years, every Saturday somebody could come.

A volunteer plants a native sapling along the wash Year three planting
Pattern 22 · Generic block
faq-section

Frequently asked questions

An expanded numbered list — questions paired with their answers, no expand/collapse. Best for getting-started landings where you want every question visible at a glance. For long FAQ banks, use accordion-v1.

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Before you visit

First-Sunday questions.

The honest answers — no insider language, no qualifications. If your question isn’t here, call us at the number on the closing page. Real human, 9 AM to 7 PM.

01

Do I need to bring anything?

Just yourself. We supply Bibles, kids’ activity bags, a pot of coffee, and the Sunday meal. If you want to contribute a side dish to the community lunch, the kitchen will gladly take it — no signup required.

02

Is childcare available during the service?

Yes. Nursery for ages 0–3 and a kids’ program for ages 4–10 run during the 11 AM service. Both rooms are staffed by two background-checked volunteers, the door is propped, and a parent pager system goes off if your kid needs you.

03

What does it actually look like to attend?

A 60-minute service with three songs, a 25-minute sermon out of Scripture, and Communion. Then a 90-minute community meal — you can stay or you can leave. Roughly half the room stays. Roughly half goes home.

04

How can I volunteer?

Saturday planting at 7 AM, Sunday kitchen at 9 AM, or Tuesday recovery hospitality at 5:30 PM. Show up once. If you’d like to come back, the team lead will plug you in — we don’t do online signups.

05

Are you affiliated with a denomination?

Yes. We’re a Christian Reformed Church plant in partnership with Acts 29. Doctrinally Reformed, missiologically urban, practically a neighborhood church.

06

I’m not a Christian. Am I welcome?

Yes. About a third of the room on any given Sunday isn’t (yet). The Sunday meal especially is for the neighborhood, not the membership roll. You don’t need to believe anything to eat with us.

Pattern 23 · Generic block
three-card

Three equal value-prop cards

The canonical “three commitments / three pillars / three programs” row. Three equal cards, chunky display headings, brand-mist hover. Always exactly three items — not four, not two.

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Three commitments

Gather. Serve. Restore.

The three things we’ve promised the neighborhood we’ll keep doing — for as long as someone shows up to do them with us.

01

Gather.

A 60-minute Sunday service at 11 AM. Three songs, one sermon, Communion at every gathering, and a meal that runs another 90 minutes.

Plan your Sunday
02

Serve.

The Sunday meal, the Wednesday pantry, and the Tuesday recovery cohort — the three ways our doors stay open all week to whoever needs them.

See the work
03

Restore.

3,400 native trees planted on Saturdays since 2019. A wash that was bare caliche is now a half-mile mesquite-and-palo-verde corridor.

Join a Saturday
Pattern 24 · Generic block
accordion-v1

Collapsible · list-style

Full-width rows divided by hairline rules. Click the row to expand the panel; only one panel open at a time. Use for long-form FAQ banks, policy lists, or program catalogs where each item is text-heavy.

Live render · click rows to expand
Action-oriented FAQs

Get involved — here’s how.

Five paths into the work. Each one starts with showing up once. After that, the team lead carries it from there.

Show up Sunday at 9 AM in the back-lot kitchen. The lead will hand you a knife or a skillet. We feed roughly 200 people a week between members and the neighborhood — about 30 hands turn that into a calm two-hour shift.

Pattern 25 · Generic block
accordion-v2

Collapsible · card-style

Each item lives in its own rounded card with a brand-mist hover tint. Use when each row carries enough weight to read as a discrete object — positions, distinctives, segmented FAQ groups.

Live render · click cards to expand
What we’re convinced of

Four convictions that shape the work.

The neighborhood already has a story before we showed up; our job is to recognize and join, not impose.

Our walls don’t define our work. The half-mile around the corner of Queen Creek & Ellsworth is the parish — meaning the families on those blocks are the ones we’re accountable to, whether or not they ever cross our threshold.

Pattern 26 · Generic block
tab-section-v1

Horizontal pill tabs

Pill-shaped tabs along the top, content panels below. The active tab is filled brand-green. Best for “by audience” sections — same page speaks to multiple groups without forking the URL.

Live render · click tabs to switch
Pick where you fit

Four ways into this church.

Different starting points; same table at the end of the hallway.

If this is your first Sunday

You don’t need to do anything before you walk in.

Pull into the gravel lot off Ellsworth at 10:50. A greeter named Marisol or Dean will be at the door. Sit anywhere; rows aren’t reserved. Stay for the meal if you can — that’s where the church actually meets the church.

Sunday morning at The Open Table
Pattern 27 · Generic block
tab-section-v2

Vertical pill tabs

Pill-shaped tabs stacked on the left; a single rounded content panel on the right. Use when each tab’s content is long enough to warrant its own page-like panel — programs, doctrinal positions, partner profiles.

Live render · click tabs to switch
The four programs

What runs through the building, all week.

Sunday is one of seven days. Here’s what the other six look like.

Sundays · 12:30–2 PM

Community Meal

A free, plated, sit-down meal in the sanctuary every Sunday after the 11 AM service. Roughly 200 plates a week — about 60% members and regulars, 40% from the neighborhood.

Roughly half the produce is grown on church-property raised beds. The rest comes from the Mesa Co-op and seven East-Valley farms that donate weekly seconds. Volunteer crew rotates through 30 names; the meal lead is on her fourth year.

LeadMarisol Pineda
Volunteers needed6 / Sunday
Plates per week~200
Pattern 28 · Generic block
slider-v1

Image gallery carousel

Photo carousel with chunky pill arrow buttons, brand-green dot indicators (the active dot stretches), and a green caption pill on each slide. Swipe-enabled on touch.

Live render · arrows or dots to navigate
The work, in five photos

A year on the corner.

Sunday meal in the sanctuary Sunday Meal · West End
Saturday tree planting along the wash Saturday Planting · Wk 47
The Ellsworth wash, year three Ellsworth Wash · Year 3
Pantry distribution at the back gate Pantry · Wednesdays 5 PM
ESL class on Wednesday evening ESL Cohort · Spring ‘26
Pattern 29 · Generic block
slider-v2

Testimonial carousel

Quote-led carousel on a brand-mist field, big chunky pull-quote, attribution with avatar and role, dot navigation only (no arrows — reads cleaner editorially). One member story per slide.

Live render · dots to navigate
In their own words

Members on the table.

My wife and I came for the meal — we’d heard they fed anyone — and we kept coming because nobody asked us to be anything we weren’t. Three years later we’re on the kitchen rotation.

Hector & Lily Vargas

Members since 2023 · West End

I drove past the church every morning before I ever walked in. The Saturday morning planting crew is what got me — people sweating in the wash at 7 AM. I figured anyone willing to do that is worth knowing.

Reyna Carter

Tutoring lead · Member since 2021

Recovery is where this church saved my life, and I don’t mean that as a flourish. The Tuesday cohort gave me a room I didn’t have to perform in. Two years later I facilitate the men’s side.

Dean Ortega

Pastor of Recovery · Member since 2020

My grandchildren learn to read here. They learned my name here. The tutors call me Doña Marisol; the kids call me Abuelita. That’s the church — that the building knows me by both.

Marisol Pineda

Sunday Meal lead · Member since 2019