Act to Feed Your Neighbors


Feeding People | Five Loaves, Two Fish, Twelve Volunteers

I'm still camping. Water aerobics in the lake, games with family, and sharing dinner! I cooked on Tuesday night, my brother is cooking tonight.

Enjoy this post from February 10.

-Liz

Feeding People. Literally.

If there is anything that churches know how to do well, it is to feed people. We do this well metaphorically, and we do this well literally. Today I want to talk about ways we can use our skill at feeding people to support the resistance.

There are so many opportunities to feed people! Start with a local gathering where your neighbors are talking about how best to support immigrants, or trans people, or democracy - show up at the meeting with food! I suggest that your church be represented by two or three people. Bring easy to eat finger food to meetings: cookies, grapes, a pitcher of water or lemonade. Don't bring too much, bring the simplest of paper goods, and adjust what you bring next time based on whether it gets eaten. Home made is a delight of course. Meetings are better with food; food helps to create connections.

First Congregational Church in Rindge, NH funds dinner for the local Bridging Differences and NAACP group. A volunteer orders from a black owned business in town; students at the local university are more likely to join the conversation when dinner is provided.

If you are showing up at town meeting or a controversial discussion, your congregation should send a delegation rather than and individual. And bring brownies and/or tangerines. Connect with folk over the snacks before the meeting starts, making it easier to feel like you are talking to friends, not adversaries. My congregation brought granola bars and lemonade to people standing out at election time--we brought them to both sides, introduced ourselves and then went on our way. It was tense, but some of the people we think of as "against" us showed up at our active bystander training later in the year. We provided food for that, too!

A bag of jelly beans, or candy canes, or valentine hearts, and certainly almost always chocolate might be good for when your church delegation visits with an elected official.

If you already have a meal or pantry, add some posters, table cards, or other markers to make it clear it is open to people regardless of their immigration status, and that LGBTQIA+ people are welcome. I heard of a church that had one table reserved at their dinner for discussion about how to stay safe. Consider adding events specifically for a group that is being attacked.

In the early church, the evidence that the Kingdom of God is at hand was the existence of dinner every night, open to all regardless of their status as poor, female, or slave. The image of going from being a beggar to someone who was welcomed into the church family dinner still fills me with awe. It is the simplest of tasks to feed people, and it is the greatest as well..

What is your church doing with food these days? How is your resistance work going? Reply to this email to let me know what's happening.

My book Five Loaves, Two Fish, Twelve Volunteers: Growing a Relational Food Ministry talks about how to create community with your food program, or with other direct service ministries. Bookshop.org now has a way to get an ebook (although you need their reader.)

Did you know that a major project of the Black Panthers was to feed kindergarteners?

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