SILER CITY CHRISTMAS PARADEDecember 4, 2025  (7:00PM)
DESFILE NAVIDEÑO DE SILER CITY: 4 de diciembre de 2025 (19:00 h)

This event the children participated in last year, along with our Youth.
We had several parents involved in helping with this effort, which we will need again this year.
Please let me know in the below survey.

Los niños participaron en este evento el año pasado, junto con nuestros jóvenes.
Contamos con la participación de varios padres en esta iniciativa, que necesitaremos de nuevo este año.
Por favor, háganmelo saber en la encuesta a continuación.

1. The Small Town Shelter: Making Room at the Inn /
El refugio del pueblo pequeño: haciendo espacio en la posada

This theme directly connects the story of Mary and Joseph finding no room at the inn with the modern need for shelter, emphasizing the church’s mission to provide.

  • Small Town Angle: This is a depiction of your church or community opening its doors to provide comfort.
  • Children’s Roles: Children can be “Volunteer Helpers,” offering blankets, warm drinks, or small, safe comfort items. They demonstrate the community’s action.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • One end of the float features a simple, stylized “shelter door” or window with a welcoming light (yellow LEDs) and a simple sign: “Vacancy: All Are Welcome.”
    • The 10×30 foot space allows for children to be arranged along the sides holding prop blankets, mugs, or small, wrapped food parcels.
    • Decorate the float with a blend of rustic charm (to convey the small-town setting) and warm fabrics (to convey warmth).
    • Place a prominent, simple banner with a key message like: “No Room in the Inn? We Say All Are Welcome.”
  • Message: Action, hospitality, and opening your heart and home.

2. A Coat of Warmth: Sharing Our Blessings /
Un abrigo de calidez: compartiendo nuestras bendiciones

This theme focuses on the tangible act of providing warmth and essential items during the cold winter, a practical expression of Christmas charity.

  • Small Town Angle: The town’s community drive is underway, collecting coats and necessities for those without shelter.
  • Children’s Roles: The children are the “Collecting Crew,” actively sorting and preparing items for donation.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • The float centers around one or two large, decorated “Donation Bins” or “Giving Barrels.”
    • Along the 30-foot length, set up long, sturdy tables where children are sorting brightly colored scarves, mittens, and small, neatly folded blankets.
    • Instead of gifts, the float is covered in colorful, donated winter clothing items (secured so they won’t blow away).
    • The children can wear vests or simple sashes identifying them as “Community Outreach Volunteers.”
  • Message: Practical charity, warmth, and clothing the naked.

3. The Light of Hope: Finding the Way Home /
La luz de la esperanza: Encontrar el camino a casa

This theme is more symbolic and focuses on the church as a beacon of guidance and hope for those who are lost or displaced.

  • Small Town Angle: The light from the small-town church steeple guides those in need of hope or shelter.
  • Children’s Roles: They are “Candle Bearers” or “Angels of Light,” representing the people who offer guidance.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • A high, central element representing a Guiding Light (like a lantern on a post, or a stylized steeple facade), heavily decorated with bright, stable LED lights.
    • The children are arranged in gentle tiers, all holding safe, battery-operated candles or lanterns.
    • The entire float should feel like a nighttime scene, using deep blues and purples in the background, contrasted sharply with the bright, white/yellow light held by the children.
    • A simple, powerful banner: “The Light Shines in the Darkness.”
  • Message: Hope, spiritual guidance, and enduring faith in dark times.

4. The Blessing of the Season (The Giving Tree)
La bendición de la temporada (El árbol generoso)

This theme highlights the small town’s spirit of generosity and community giving, tying into the church’s mission.

  • Small Town Angle: Every year, the town dedicates a “Giving Tree” to collect gifts and warm clothes for those in need.
  • Children’s Roles: They are the town’s “Elves”—but instead of Santa’s workshop, they’re preparing gifts for their neighbors.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • A large, sturdy Christmas tree decorated with simple ornaments and lots of paper tags/stars showing written blessings or needs.
    • The 10×30 foot float could feature a long line of children sorting or “wrapping” donated items (use empty boxes wrapped in bright paper).
    • Children standing along the edges can hold signs with scripture verses about charity and giving (e.g., “It is more blessed to give than to receive”).
  • Message: “Small Town Hearts, Big Spirit of Giving.”

5. The Candlelight Christmas Eve Service
El servicio de Nochebuena a la luz de las velas

This captures the cozy, reverent feeling of the most important service of the year in a small-town church.

  • Small Town Angle: The final moments before the church bells ring and the service begins, with the congregation filling the pews.
  • Children’s Roles: They are the Church’s Junior Congregation/Acolytes.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • A backdrop simulating stained-glass windows (can be made from colored cellophane or plastic sheeting).
    • A few small, decorated pews or benches where children can be seated.
    • Children standing along the sides holding faux, battery-operated candles (crucial for safety) or small hymnals.
    • One child can be positioned near a prop pulpit or lectern to simulate reading the Christmas story.
  • Message: “Gathered in Faith, Celebrating the Light.”

6. Santa’s Mailroom in the Small Town Post Office
La sala de correo de Papá Noel en la oficina de correos de un pueblo pequeño

This is an excellent theme for a large group of kids, allowing for varied, engaged activity.

  • Children’s Role: They are Santa’s Elves (or “Junior Postmasters”) busy sorting letters from the town.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • Build a facade of a Post Office sorting wall with different cubbies labeled “Naughty,” “Nice,” “North Pole,” etc.
    • The center can be a long table where the children are actively “working.”
    • Give each child a simple prop: a large letter envelope, a feather pen, or a toy magnifying glass.
    • Ensure the work areas are clear and the kids have room to sit or stand comfortably without bumping each other.
  • Action: The children should be busily sorting, stamping (with prop stamps), or writing with big smiles. This is a very active and engaging scene.

7. The Small Town Cookie Exchange/Gingerbread Village
El Intercambio de Galletas de la Pequeña Ciudad/Pueblo de Pan de Jengibre

This focuses on the baking tradition, which is a key part of small-town charm.

  • Children’s Role: They are bakers, decorators, and tasters for the town’s holiday treats.
  • Visuals & Safety:
    • Create a large, fantastical “Gingerbread Village” on the float (made of plywood and paint).
    • Set up a long, sturdy table across the float.
    • Children can wear simple white aprons and chef hats.
    • Use large, non-toxic props like giant wooden spoons, plastic cookie cutters, and oversized “gingerbread men” cutouts. Avoid actual food props that could cause a mess or attract pests.
    • The table provides a safe boundary for the children.
  • Action: Children should be “decorating” the gingerbread houses, “mixing” bowls, and holding up their favorite “cookies” to show the crowd.

DOWNTOWN SILER CITY CHRISTMAS MARKETDecember 7, 2025  (Afternoon) /
MERCADO NAVIDEÑO DEL CENTRO DE SILER CITY: 7 de diciembre de 2025 (Tarde)

This event the children sang at last year.
We do not have a time yet, as I wanted to make sure we had enough Children to Sing that day, before I committed our group.
Please let me know in the below survey.

Los niños cantaron en este evento el año pasado.
Aún no tenemos fecha, ya que quería asegurarme de que hubiera suficientes niños para cantar ese día antes de asignar a nuestro grupo.
Por favor, háganmelo saber en la encuesta a continuación.