The Dinner Table: A Fresh Expressions Snapshot
By Jeanette Staats • March 12, 2026

On Thursday evenings in Ford City, Pennsylvania, the smell of a home-cooked meal drifts through a building at 412 9th Street as neighbors begin taking their seats around long tables. Some arrive looking for connection. Others come because they need a warm meal. A few carry quiet questions about faith.
All of them are welcomed to The Dinner Table.
Launched in October 2024, The Dinner Table is a donation-based community dinner and worship gathering that brings together people who might never walk into a traditional church service—neighbors facing financial hardship, people who feel disconnected from church, skeptics, and longtime believers alike. What happens each Thursday is simple but meaningful: people share a meal, listen to music, pray for one another, and talk honestly about how Jesus might be moving in their lives.
The vision echoes the rhythm of the early church described in Acts 2:42, where believers gathered around meals, devoted themselves to fellowship and prayer, and learned the way of Jesus together. That same pattern is quietly taking root in this small town along the Allegheny River.
“Some of the people sitting at our tables might never step foot in a traditional church… Some come for a home-cooked meal, others feel lost in their faith. This is our community. This is our church.”
Ford City itself is a borough of about 2,800 residents, once a thriving industrial town and now navigating many of the economic and social transitions common across Rust Belt communities. In a place where financial pressures and loneliness are real, gathering around food has become a powerful way to rebuild connection.
And around these tables, church is beginning to look a little different.
When Church Begins With a Table
The Dinner Table did not begin with a complicated strategy. It started with a simple observation: many people in the community were not connecting with traditional church services—but they were open to relationships, conversation, and shared meals.
So instead of asking neighbors to come to church first, the leaders began with something more natural: a table and a meal.
Each Thursday evening volunteers prepare food, set tables, and welcome guests as they arrive around 5:00 PM. Music fills the room, announcements are shared, and a short reflection invites people to consider how Jesus might be present in their lives.
But the most meaningful moments often happen in the conversations around the tables. Rather than expecting people to believe before they belong, the gathering creates space where belonging can come first.
Food, Friendship, and Faith
Over time, three simple words have come to describe the rhythm of The Dinner Table:
Food. Friendship. Faith.
One early post celebrating the weekly gathering captured the spirit of the evening:
“Another great night at The Dinner Table! Thanks to Will, Maya, and Landyn for cooking up a great meal. If you’re looking for a church built around food, friendship, and faith—this is the place for you.”
Meals are simple but meaningful. On one December evening, 80 neighbors from outside the church joined the gathering alongside 14 volunteers. Together they shared a Christmas meal of ham, scalloped potatoes, green beans, and fresh fruit.
After dinner, the room quieted as someone read the story of Jesus’ birth from Luke chapters 1 and 2. In the middle of conversation and laughter, the ancient story of Christmas was heard again around the tables.
Moments like these reveal something powerful: church doesn’t always need a stage or sanctuary. Sometimes it begins with plates, chairs, and open conversation.
Small Steps, Real Impact
As the gatherings continued, the impact began to grow. By November 2025, the community had served 308 meals across three Thursday gatherings, and the group celebrated one person giving their life to Christ.
What started as a simple meal had become something deeper: a place where neighbors experience friendship, prayer, and spiritual curiosity together.
Pulling Up Another Chair
What is happening each Thursday in Ford City may look simple—but it is deeply transformational. A shared meal has become a doorway to belonging for people who might never enter a traditional church building.
In many ways, this is simply a rediscovery of the early church. As Acts 2:42 reminds us, followers of Jesus devoted themselves to fellowship, prayer, and the breaking of bread together.
And perhaps that is the most encouraging part of this story: this kind of church is possible anywhere.
It doesn’t require a large budget or a polished program. It begins with listening to a community, loving people well, and creating space where relationships can grow.
Sometimes the most powerful place for church to begin is exactly where it did in the first century—
around a table where everyone is welcome.
Snapshot of a Fresh Expression of Church
What is the Fresh Expression called?
The Dinner Table
Where is it?
Ford City, PA
Who is it for?
People in the Ford City community who may not attend traditional church but are open to gathering around food, friendship, and honest conversations about faith.
What do they do?
Every Thursday evening, neighbors gather for a donation-based community dinner where they share a meal, listen to music, pray for one another, and reflect on how Jesus is moving in their lives.
This snapshot was developed through thoughtful research using publicly available sources, including websites, news articles, community updates and a brief conversation with the pioneer.
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