It all began with some comments about turkey. Our church's annual turkey dinner had grown stale. As one young couple stated, "There's a limit to how many turkey dinners one can eat in a week!" It was time to begin a new Thanksgiving tradition.
On Sunday evening before Thanksgiving, our church family gathered in the fellowship hall for a very special Lord's Supper celebration and a simple meal. Everyone was seated at round tables with candle centerpieces. One deacon or church staff member sat at each table, and a scrumptious meal of homemade stew and cornbread was served. At their table, each person informally shared about blessings from God during the previous year.
After dinner, lights were dimmed and the pastor led a meaningful candlelight Lord's Supper, and we celebrated God's greatest blessing. He directed the deacons or staff members to administer the elements to those at their table. This simple, solemn ceremony became an anticipated, well-attended tradition. And it was turkey-free.
Looking for more fresh ideas for Thanksgiving?
1. A "Pie Squad Party" is a Thanksgiving celebration/ministry event. Partygoers load into cars to joyfully deliver gorgeous homemade pies to every church member who is homebound or living in a nursing home. Each member of the group signs a greeting card to leave with the pie, and after spending a few minutes to encourage and pray for the homebound friends, team members gather back at the church to enjoy the town's biggest homemade cobbler.
2. "A Wall of Thanks" is a visual expression of thanks. At the beginning of November, use white paper to cover a focal wall in the church foyer. Invite church members of all ages to use markers or paints to artfully express thanks to God all month long.
3. "Seeking Thanksgiving" is a mystery van trip where vehicles packed with church members follow a map to several prearranged locations to discover and celebrate God's blessings. Recruit church members with large vehicles to drive, and ask them to enhance its exterior with Thanksgiving decor and a "Seeking Thanksgiving" sign.
Carefully select Christians in your church who have been uniquely blessed or protected by God this year, and ask them to host a mystery stop, where carloads of church members will make a brief visit to celebrate God's blessings. Your pastor may have ideas of very thankful members. Some examples:
a couple with a new baby
a homebound senior adult rocking on her porch
a brand new Christian at his home
a college student in her dorm
a hospitalized member who can receive guests
a recent immigrant
Each thankful person awaits the visitors, holding a large picket-type sign that reads "I'm thankful!" Groups take a photo with them, encourage and pray with them, then return to the church for refreshments and fellowship.
After all, there's more than just turkey to a great Thanksgiving season.