In David Brooks’s book The Second Mountain, he describes the dinner table of Kathy Fletcher and David Simpson, where “on any given Thursday night there will be about twenty-six kids sitting around the dinner table” (David Brooks, The Second Mountain: The Quest for a Moral Life [New York: Random House, 2019], 61). These are kids without the means or family structures to eat around a table themselves. After the meal, they might play music. Some might sing. All will share stories, and newcomers are welcomed. This paints a picture of the kind of community a church can be, where young people of all backgrounds are welcomed and nurtured.