Willow Creek Pastor Dave Dummitt To Step Down, Shawn Williams Named Successor

Willow Creek
Elders at Willow Creek Church pray for new pastor Shawn Williams and outgoing pastor Dave Dummitt on March 22, 2025, in South Barrington, Illinois. (RNS photo by Bob Smietana)

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David Dummitt, who became pastor of Willow Creek Church at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, announced Sunday (March 23) that he is stepping down as leader of the influential Chicagoland megachurch.

Shawn Williams, the campus pastor of Willow Creek’s South Barrington, Illinois, location, will succeed Dummitt as senior pastor starting April 1. Dummitt will remain on staff until July 31 to help with the transition.

“Dave came to Willow during a critical moment in our church’s history, leading through a time of change with wisdom, humility, and a heart for unity,” Willow Creek’s elders said in a statement Sunday. “He has played an essential role in bringing stability and ensuring a strong foundation for the future. We thank Dave and his family for how they have served, and we will have time to celebrate the Dummitts before Dave’s official transition off staff.”

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Dummitt’s departure comes as Willow Creek has largely rebounded from the shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. The church ended 2024 in the black, with its first budget surplus since 2019, according to a church spokesperson. In-person attendance for 2024 was up 16%, to 9,875 per weekend, with an additional 3,700 people viewing services live online.

The church has also largely recovered after years of turmoil following the 2018 resignation of longtime pastor Bill Hybels, amid allegations of sexual misconduct. Hybel’s handpicked successors and the church’s entire elder board resigned that same year. The church went through several interim pastors before hiring Dummitt.

At its peak, the church drew more than 25,000 worshippers to services at several Chicagoland campuses under Hybels, known for his ambitious, corporate style of management and obsession for excellence. Hybels denied allegations against him and has largely disappeared from public life in recent years. After his departure, attendance dwindled and giving dropped, leading the church to lay off 30% of its staff in 2022. The church closed its downtown Chicago campus last year but still has seven locations in the suburbs.

Dummitt, who had pastored a Michigan megachurch before coming to Willow Creek, told RNS in 2020 that he knew restoring trust and a healthy culture at the church — which for decades was one of the nation’s largest and most influential congregations — would be a long process.

“This is a place where trust has broken down over time,” he said in an interview then. “And I think everybody here wants to be able to believe in each other again.”

During a meeting with key congregants and donors in South Barrington on Saturday, Dummitt said he and the church had accomplished most of what they had set out to do when he arrived. The church was growing and healthy and Dummitt felt it was time for someone else to lead the church into the future.

RELATED: Willow Creek Community Church Forced to Cut $6.5 Million in Staffing Due to Decreased Giving

Drawing on a familiar passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes, Dummitt said that in life, there is a season for everything — and that it was time for his season as pastor to end. Mindful of the church’s tumultuous past, Dummitt told about 800 people gathered for Saturday’s meeting that the transition to a new pastor was a healthy change, not a crisis.

“You can relax,” he told attendees, before announcing his departure.

“Let me be clear on what this is not. No one has asked me to step down,” he said, adding that he had approached the elders about resigning last September. “There’s no scandal, no moral failure, no dirt to dig up. I stand here very grateful for the last five years, and grateful to be a part of a very healthy, smooth momentum-building transition.”

Dummitt said in announcing his resignation that he had been a senior pastor for 25 years and was “a little tired” and that it was time for him to do something new. He said he hopes to do some coaching with pastors and pursue some of his other dreams — and volunteer at church as a greeter in the future.

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Bob Smietanahttps://factsandtrends.net
Bob Smietana is an award-winning religion reporter and editor who has spent two decades producing breaking news, data journalism, investigative reporting, profiles and features for magazines, newspapers, trade publications and websites. Most notably, he has served as a senior writer for Facts & Trends, senior editor of Christianity Today, religion writer at The Tennessean, correspondent for RNS and contributor to OnFaith, USA Today and The Washington Post.

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