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Who Pays For The Free Foods Served After Religious Services?

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  • Who Pays For The Free Foods Served After Religious Services?

    WHO PAYS FOR THE FREE FOODS SERVED AFTER RELIGIOUS SERVICES?

    Examiner.com
    July 7, 9:25 AM

    Some people actually are using the recession to make the round of
    snacking food or three-course buffet meals served after religious
    services at various houses of worship, regardless of the faith. Here's
    what some houses of worship or non-worship serve. Although some people
    attend various services of worship or meeting and leave a five or
    ten dollar donation on the plate when it's passed around to pay for
    the usually free food offered, there are crashers with the nerve to
    show up after services only to stand in the food line, pretending to
    be one of the worshippers who just came out of the building.

    That's naughty. But if you're hungry and penniless, perhaps, you'll
    keep from starving. Unfortunately, some of the people crashing
    after-services snacking can afford it, but are well, crashers. Not
    that it's right, of course, but servers note they see it done.

    Here's what is served. At one of the Unitarian-Universalist churches,
    you can attend services and afterward buy a delicious lunch for a $5
    donation that usually consists of raw multi-vegetable salads, beans,
    pasta, cooked vegetables, beverage, and dessert. The beverage may
    be juice, coffee, or tea. At some of the area synagogues, there's
    a bean and vegetable stew, sometimes with some added meat called
    cholent followed by a fruit and vegetable salad and challah (egg
    bread) served at Chabad House (orthodox/Hassidic), and a full meal
    including beans, bagels, cheese, salads, fruits, with dessert served
    after Saturday morning services at Mosaic Law. Other synagogues serve
    vegetable dips, toasts of small amount of wine, beans, cakes, and
    snacks. Some synagogues may invite a guest for lunch, socializing
    and discussions related to religion at the rabbi's wife's house
    (usually women's groups). Other houses of worship may serve lunch
    in the courtyards or social halls. Occassional dinners on holidays,
    concerts, or and seniors' brunches cost a small donation sometimes.

    Other senior lunches or brunches are free. Related to the houses of
    worship meetings might be genealogy groups that meet on weekends or
    the group goes to a restaurant. That's where the free lunch ends. Other
    houses of worship do serve free food either just after services. Some
    churches also offer a free dinner night for low-income people. The
    type of free food varies from snacks to actual lunch meals. Holiday
    dinners usually costs a fee. Additionally, there may be fundraising
    dinners. As far as free food, Catholic churches such as St. Ignatius
    parish serve donuts and coffee after some morning services. The
    freethinkers and atheists groups might serve cookies and juice or
    coffee during break or after the meeting. Or they congegate in an
    eatery a few blocks away after the meeting one Sunday afternoon
    per month. Protestant churches in the area usually serve coffee and
    cake, cookies, or donuts. The Greek Orthodox church has a once a year
    "Greek for a Day" food festival at the Convention center open to all,
    with a wide variety of Greek foods that cost anywhere from $8 to
    $10 for a meal. Vegetarian and non-vegetarian faire is sold along
    with pastries and music. There are ethnic food served in a wide
    variety of churches during food festivals, for example the Armenian
    Apostolic church and the Antiochian Orthodox church have their own
    food festivals during the year. What does the free kind of house of
    worship food taste like? Usually, it's pretty good, and donations
    are encouraged. Some churches ask for a donation for the food. Some
    offer it free, and others require a payment in advance to eat. Who
    eats? Mostly members of the church and guests. Food is one way of
    bringing people into the services where they might become members or
    at least leave a donation during or after services or mass. Buddhist,
    Hindu, and related services that have attendees from all types of
    ethnic groups from anywhere, serve vegetarian food, usually Indian such
    as curried vegetables or Ayurvedic-style foods--garbanzos, lentils,
    rice, curries and home-made breads. A few years ago, Sacramento
    State University (CSUS) gave away the most delicious free food,
    Indian style and wrapped in little napkins with ribbons, at the
    Ganesh festival featuring authentic Indian music and performances
    of dance on stage. Is a church, synagogue, temple, or pagoda a good
    place to eat lunch? It does provide a low-cost or even free meal or
    snack, but really is meant for those that attended services in good
    faith. Are guests welcome? Yes. Is there a contest for who serves
    the best-tasting food? If you ask professional church-hoppers who
    don't favor one religion over the other but just come for the food
    (not a good practice) they'll tell you anonymously that the widest
    variety of tasty food they can stuff their mouths with for free is
    served at Mosaic Law synagogue after services on Saturday. But don't
    get any ideas to be a freeloader. A family each week sponsors the
    food and pays for it. That's right. Somebody foots the bill. But if
    you are sincerely interested in joining one of the religious houses
    of worship, regardless of denomination or faith, do you choose your
    place of worship or freethinking based on the food served after the
    services, mass, or meetings? Or do you brown bag your own food to
    eat or share? Some clubs, social groups or professional association
    meetings also offer food, usually as a potluck or catered. If a
    meeting's meal is catered, you pay your share for it. It's worth a
    study to find out who serves the best food in town at which price
    or for free in exchange for attending what kind of services or
    meetings. What do people think of free food crashers that go from
    church to church or meeting to meeting just for the meal? You know
    what they think. Usually those people who do the tastings circuit
    show up each week at a different place. Who are they? Anyone, but a
    small number are people who find it difficult to pay their own food
    bills. Some are isolated, lonely, and haven't been to any form of
    entertainment outside their homes in decades. And some will find out
    when weddings, bar mitzvahs, communions, or other events and parties
    are being held and show up as a crasher pretending to be a guest. Do
    they get away with it?

    That depends whether or not they are recognized or whether they ever
    visit the same place twice. Where do they go least of all? Usually,
    they avoid places where donuts and coffee are given out (or sold)
    after services and show up where full lunches are provided free to
    people streaming out of a service by a different sponsoring family
    each week who pays hundreds of dollars to underwrite a noon meal.

    Then there are the families that donate food for meetings or arrange
    pot lucks for various clubs that meet in people's homes. But those
    usually cost money for each guest. The interesting fact to realize
    is how many different houses of worship or non worship meeting for a
    few hours once a week offer food for guests and members, and how many
    people actually show up for the sometimes free food after services.

    A unique project for sociologists to study is what attracts guests
    that do not belong to that particular religious or ethnic group to
    show up for the free food after the services are over? Is it just
    to eat? Could it be hunger, unemployment, or curiosity? Maybe it's
    isolation and lack of transportation to other places. Do people use
    church food as entertainment? Some do attend the meeting or services
    to try out a different church or religious house of worship each week
    going from Catholic to Protestant churches, to Jewish synagogues,
    to Buddhist and Hindu societies. Is there a pattern? What about the
    demographics? Is it usually the isolated elderly person who is lonely,
    low-income, and hungry, but well-dressed? The widow or emotionally
    ignored retiree? It's not the teenager or single young professional
    doing the food hopping at various houses of worship going from one
    group to another unrelated group. It's usually the older person who
    uses public transportation and travels very infrequently, lives
    in areas that have no sidewalks, and finds travel is not usually
    accessible to places far from his or her neighborhood. It's related
    to not having had a vacation in decades due to disability or lack
    of money. And it's done by people who usually have little access to
    relatives nearby and most likely, no friends. Usually it's the person
    who hasn't been to any form of entertainment outside his or her home
    in years, doesn't go out after sunset, and has very little fun or
    access to entertainment. It's not only the older person who shows
    up at various churches for meals. And it's not only the homeless or
    unemployed. Food hopping is a choice of the lonely and the shy.

    If you ask a food hopper why....the answer might be "because my spouse
    only gives me very little for grocery allowance." But not many food
    hoppers actually will be eager to be interviewed. That's why this is
    a project for sociologists to research. From the food perspective,
    who serves the best free food to guests and members after a religious
    service or freethinkers meeting? It's the house of worship, whatever
    religion or none that you choose, where a different family each week
    underwrites the cost of the catered meal. And it's expensive. If you
    have to ask a question, it might be why some houses of worship serve
    free food to guests and members? Feeding patrons for free can be
    an act of random kindness that people want to pass forward by doing
    another random act of kindness.

    And why do the families that pay for the expensive, catered
    food do it? What is their goal--personal satisfaction of helping
    the particular house of worship? Raising funds? Attracting young
    families to become members? What does food represent to them--love,
    nourishment? Again, it's a social issues project to study. How is
    free food and worship related? Could it be Biblically-inspired as in
    "feeding the masses?" The motive, again, is kindness.
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