Memphis Man Raises $103K for Teen Who Offered to Help Carry Groceries The whole community came together to support a struggling teen and his mother.

 -- A Memphis teenager asked a stranger at the grocery store to buy him and his mother some food in exchange for carrying the man's groceries to his car, and what happened next will tug at your heartstrings.

An unlikely bond formed between the pair, and within two weeks, the stranger helped raise more than $103,000 to support the teen and his mother, who is disabled. Today, that stranger, Matt White, told ABC News that he helped the teen, Chauncy Black, and his mother move into a new house with the money they raised.

"When Chauncy approached me, it just tugged at my heart," White said. "Here comes Chauncy, just trying to get food for him and his Mom off of the grace of other people. When I looked at him and saw what he was doing and what he was asking for, I said he was my hero."

So White set up a GoFundMe page for the teen and his mother. It's touched the hearts of many, garnering over 8,900 shares and raising more than $103,000 in less than two weeks.

"Chauncy lives in Memphis with his disabled mother," White explains on the crowdfunding site. "He is a straight A student who is doing his best to make it in a world with no money and very few resources. He wants to work and help his mother financially."

White's original Facebook post sharing the story also has more than 10,000 likes.

"Chauncy came up to me at the Kroger here in Memphis, and he had taken a bus in from South Memphis just hoping that someone would buy him some food," White told ABC News.

White said Chauncy asked him for donuts, but White knew that the teen needed more food than that, "So we just went aisle by aisle and he told me his story, about him and his Mom, and we just went through the store and got him his necessities, about a week's worth of groceries.

"He missed the bus, so I drove him back to his house and I saw what he and his mom lived in, and just how much the groceries meant to them. Then I went home and posted on Facebook."

White said he just shared the story with his friends, and had no idea his and Chauncy's story would go viral.

White told ABC News how inspired and encouraged he is by the outpouring of love from his community, and that he wants to encourage others to "look for Chauncys out there, look for them and their stories."

"I live to fulfill God's heart and God has a heart for the fatherless and for the needy," White said. "The focus of this is not me and what I did, because I really didn't do anything. I just captured a story and put it online but our community, Memphis, picked up this family and put them on a platform."

Chauncy Black told ABC News today that his favorite subject in school is math and that when he grows up he wants to be a business owner.

He is currently in 10th grade and plans to launch a lawnmowing business over the summer while he is out of school to support him and his mother.