The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An early feast for the least of these

- Gracie Bonds Staples

For nearly 350 men, women and children who call the Salvation Army home, Thanksgivi­ng dinner arrived last week, compliment­s of the Antioch Baptist Church North Ministeria­l Alliance and the Male Chorus.

It isn’t a particular­ly unique gesture. Every day across this city too busy to hate, thousands of churches prepare meals for the city’s needy.

Thanksgivi­ng, like Christmas Day, is special, though.

By the time you’re reading this, the men, women and children, restored by the evening cheer and the notion that someone cared enough to make them dinner, will have returned to their cramped quarters upstairs. And the Rev. Lester Duncan, the man who makes all this possible, is back home with his wife and children, most likely seated at a table spread with turkey and every side dish imaginable. God is good.

The early Thanksgivi­ng meal might appear to be about little more than providing sustenance for the day. But for Duncan and the men of Antioch North, serving the least, the less and the lost is much more than that. Simply put, it is in keeping with the church’s mission and Christ’s commission to go into all the world and share the Gospel. Not just on Thanksgivi­ng but every day.

Duncan told me it began with a conversati­on between

him and the Rev. Scott Copeland, who, along with other preachers before them, had for years been serving up the good news of Christ’s death, burial and resurrecti­on to Salvation Army residents.

Duncan and Copeland, though, wanted to do more.

As Thanksgivi­ng 2003 approached, they couldn’t help thinking what it might be like for the people attending the agency’s religious services. Men who were away from home and loved ones. Women who had no place to go. And children who were there through no fault of their own.

Let’s do something more for them, he suggested to Copeland.

He baked a turkey, a pan of dressing, and cooked a few side dishes, enough to feed about two dozen.

That night was like gathering with family. For the preacher and those they’d come to serve.

Each year thereafter, the meals and the crowds got bigger. In 2006, Antioch’s singles’ ministry took over the effort, but they soon discovered they needed more hands in the kitchen.

The church’s Male Chorus gladly offered theirs.

And so on the Wednesday before this year’s scheduled meal on Nov. 15, choir members gathered in the church kitchen or at home to prep. They made pans of cornbread dressing. They baked turkeys and hams. They cooked pots of collard greens and candied yams.

Hours before the meal, one of them arrived to transport food to the Salvation Army’s Lucky Street location just blocks away.

There, after a 30-minute service, complete with selections from the Salvation Army Choir and a sermon, “The Gospel of Christ does not Discrimina­te,” taken from Romans 10:12-17, they gathered at tables decorated with pumpkins and fall foliage, to break bread and talk awhile.

“This is what families do,” Duncan said, moved by the sight of happy children enjoying plates of turkey and dressing.

“I’m just a sucker for kids,” the father of two said. “Whenever you see them, you automatica­lly want to do more.”

Before coming to Antioch, he said, he couldn’t imagine sitting down and eating with the homeless or those fresh out of prison. But Antioch Pastor Cameron Alexander and his son and co-pastor Kenneth Alexander, he said, changed the way he views the poor and downtrodde­n.

Both, Duncan said, were as comfortabl­e mingling with the poor as they were with the likes of South African President Nelson Mandela, a trait Jesus modeled and was criticized for.

“They treated everyone with love and respect,” Duncan said of Antioch’s pastors.

Last Thursday, the Rev. Duncan broke bread with the least of these, but they may as well have been the Obamas. There was nothing to indicate otherwise.

That alone is enough reason to offer thanks on this Thanksgivi­ng Day. Find Gracie on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ graciestap­lesajc/) and Twitter (@GStaples_AJC) or email her at gstaples@ajc. com.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Rev. Lester Duncan (left), an associate minister at Antioch Baptist Church North, talks with Male Chorus members David Vaughn and Tom Jennings. The Male Chorus helps with the early Thanksgivi­ng dinner that the church prepares for Salvation Army residents.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Rev. Lester Duncan (left), an associate minister at Antioch Baptist Church North, talks with Male Chorus members David Vaughn and Tom Jennings. The Male Chorus helps with the early Thanksgivi­ng dinner that the church prepares for Salvation Army residents.

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