Since 2009 a
parish lunch has been organised by the Parochial Church Council (PCC) of St
Michael & All Angels Church, Barningham, which is located between Richmond
and Barnard Castle.
The lunches are
held three times a year, with the main aim being to raise funds for the local
Church. A more recent development has been that 10% of the profits are now
donated to Christian charities, for example Church Urban Fund, Christian Aid
& the Children’s Society. A typical Parish lunch will raise over £600 after
expenses have been deducted.
The lunches are
held in the village hall after Sunday morning worship, with all the vegetable
dishes being prepared by Church volunteers; sweets are prepared and provided by
individual Church members; the main course, a hot meat or fish dish being
supplied by a local caterer. This has included: roast beef, pork or lamb and
salmon in season.
The Parish lunches
have become extremely popular, with a recent lunch attracting nearly sixty
people, including people from the local community as well as friends from the
wider area. There is a real sense of
fellowship during the meal as people talk with friends and neighbours; diners
often staying to talk long after the meal has finished.
One aspect that
has made the initiative possible in Barningham is that there is no local pub or
restaurant in the community, so there was no abstraction of revenue from a
local business. It would of course be
possible to hold a parish lunch in a community with a local pub or restaurant
by either holding the event on their premises or commissioning them to provide
some of the catering.
Other churches in
the area are now considering replicating the initiative because of its success
The Parish Lunch
initiative could be seen to reconnect with the historic pattern of the quarterly
feast days in the calendar, which were celebrated at Christmas Easter, Lady Day
and Michaelmas. It could also be seen to build on the popularity of harvest
suppers, which are still held in many rural communities, following harvest
festival services.