SMCH Schedules First Fall Harvest Benefit
Sevierville, TN–For many years the months of October and November have been designated as Fall Harvest Festival months—a time for local Church of God congregations to give an offering for the Church of God Smoky Mountain Children’s Home. This has been done through monetary contributions and/or gifts in kind. The Fall Harvest Festival offering helps to provide food, clothing, shelter, and education for less fortunate, troubled, and abused youth in our care.
“Fall Harvest Festival is a time for remembering the Children’s Home through special projects and offerings…a time for thanksgiving and celebration for God’s faithfulness…a time for sharing and caring,” said SMCH Director Dr. Walt Mauldin.
With this in mind Smoky Mountain Children’s Home is sponsoring its first annual Fall Harvest Benefit Dinner and Auction. The event is scheduled for November 12, 2015 at 6:00 pm in the B.J. Moffett Cafeteria on the grounds of the Home for Children in Sevierville. Admission is $25.00 per person which includes dinner, entertainment, a silent auction and a public auction. Special guest for the evening will be Clark Beckham, an American Idol finalist and Lee University graduate.
The two auctions will highlight the following items: A Royal Caribbean cruise for two, a local chef to cook dinner for eight in your home, Royal Caribbean Cruise, weekend get-a-ways, attraction tickets, vacation packages (including Costa Rica, London and Paris, and Disney), tickets to Biltmore mansion, a Murmaid bed and mattress, and two country music superstar guitars with authentic signatures. Autographed photos of Muhammed Ali, Star Wars movie stars, golfer Phil Mickelson, and Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Jr. will also be auctioned along with many other items.
A few tickets are still available, and can be purchased by calling Smoky Mountain Children’s Home at 865-453-4644. Tickets are also available at Ogle Discount Furniture on Dolly Parton Parkway in Sevierville. Tables of ten for $250 are also available.
“This will be an evening to remember while benefiting Smoky Mountain Children’s Home and helping to invest in young, troubled lives for a brighter future,” Mauldin concluded. “ Will you help us gather and care for the harvest of children and youth?”