Table of Contents
ToggleKey Takeaways
- Father’s Day started in a church. Sonora Smart Dodd proposed it after a Mother’s Day sermon at Central Methodist Episcopal in Spokane in 1909, and the first celebration was held on June 19, 1910
- Only 4% of Protestant pastors say Father’s Day ranks among their top 3 attendance Sundays, compared to 59% for Mother’s Day. A ceremony can change that
- A lapel pin given during a worship service carries symbolic weight that a tie or mug simply doesn’t; it’s a wearable affirmation of a father’s spiritual role
- Christian retail gifts account for 28% of dollar sales at faith-based stores, tying Bibles as the #1 revenue category
- Planning a pin ceremony takes about 20 minutes of service time and works for congregations of any size
- Churches that recognize fathers during worship see stronger year-round engagement from male attendees
Father’s Day was born in a church pew. Now, most churches treat it as an afterthought. A heart-shaped “Dad” pin given during a service can turn that around. It’s small, it’s visible, and it means something real to the man wearing it.
What Happened to Father’s Day in Church?
Here’s the uncomfortable number: only 4% of Protestant pastors list Father’s Day among their top three most attended Sundays. Compare that to Mother’s Day at 59%. That 14x gap tells you something about how churches have let Father’s Day slip.
Part of the problem is planning. Mother’s Day gets carnations, special music, and a dedicated prayer. Father’s Day? Maybe a quick acknowledgment between announcements. Maybe.
But it wasn’t always this way. Father’s Day itself started in a Methodist church in 1910, when Sonora Smart Dodd convinced her pastor and the Spokane Ministerial Alliance to honor fathers with a dedicated Sunday. The original vision was a day of worship and recognition, not just a card and a tie.
The gap between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day church attendance isn’t because fathers matter less. It’s because we stopped building a service around honoring them.
Why a Pin Works When a Tie Doesn’t
A lapel pin sits on a man’s chest. Visible. Every Sunday. When a church gives a father a pin during the service, three things happen that a store-bought gift can’t replicate:
| Gift Type | Worn in Public? | Spiritual Symbolism? | Ceremony Potential? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Necktie | Some workplaces | None | None |
| Coffee mug | No | None | None |
| Cologne | No | None | None |
| Lapel pin | Yes — every Sunday | High (badge of faith role) | Strong — fits in worship |
A pin works because it’s wearable, visible, and tied to a moment in the service. It becomes a “badge of honor” not unlike how military and first-responder pins already function in churches that honor service members. The same thinking that makes a 10 Commandments bracelet meaningful as a gift applies here: the object carries the meaning long after the day is over.
The pin tradition has roots in Christian ordination and commissioning ceremonies, where a physical token marks a spiritual role. A Father’s Day pin does the same thing it marks a dad’s role as a spiritual leader in his family. Churches that have used pins for Independence Day outreach ceremonies have already seen how a small token can create a lasting moment in a service.
How to Plan a Father’s Day Pin Ceremony?
You don’t need a full production. You need about 20 minutes to place somewhere meaningful in the service. Here’s what works:
Before the service:
- Order one pin per father figure — plan for 5–10% more than your average male attendance. Lapel pins from ChurchSupplier start around $2.50 and come with a butterfly clutch backing and individual cards.
- Assign 2–3 volunteers to distribute pins at the door or in the pews.
During the service:
1. Opening recognition: Pastor calls all fathers and father figures forward. Short prayer. Each man receives a pin as he returns to his seat. Takes 5 minutes.
2. Mid-service dedication: Inserted between the sermon and offering. A lay leader reads a brief script (provided below). Each father stands at his pew while a volunteer hands him a pin. Takes 8–10 minutes.
3. Closing commissioning: At the end of the service, the pastor invites all fathers forward. The congregation affirms them with applause or a spoken response. Each man is pinned by a volunteer or family member. Takes 10–12 minutes.
What to say:
“Today we honor the men among us who have answered the call of fatherhood — biological fathers, adoptive fathers, spiritual fathers, and the men who stepped into that role when no one else did. Proverbs 20:7 tells us, ‘The righteous lead blameless lives; blessed are their children after them.’ This pin is a small, visible reminder that your faith leadership at home matters. Wear it as a badge of that calling.”
Choosing the Right Pin for Your Congregation
Not every pin fits every church. Here’s how to think about it:
| Pin Style | Best For | Tone | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart-shaped “Dad” pin | Small congregations, first-time ceremonies | Warm, personal | ~$2.50 each |
| Cross pin | Formal services, liturgical churches | Reverent, traditional | ~$2–6 each |
| Angel pin | Multi-generational congregations | Protective, comforting | ~$2.50 each |
| Organization/title pin | Churches with deacon/elder structures | Formal, authority | ~$3–5 each |
Most churches ordering for a Father’s Day ceremony choose one of two paths: a single pin style for everyone, or a two-tier approach where one style goes to new fathers and a different style honors longtime fathers and grandfathers.
A few things worth knowing before you order:
- Bulk discounts start at 12+ units on most styles
- Pins come individually carded — they’re presentation-ready out of the box
- Butterfly clutch backs keep them secure on a suit jacket or dress shirt
- Cards include a guardian angel or scriptural message, which doubles as a gift enclosure
The Man Who Already Has Everything
That’s the most common reason people give for skipping a meaningful Father’s Day gift. Dad doesn’t need another thing.
But here’s what the numbers say: 76% of Americans celebrate Father’s Day, and total spending hit $24 billion in 2025 up from $22.4 billion the year before. People are spending an average of $199.38 per person on Father’s Day gifts. Most of that goes to things that get used once and forgotten.
A pin costs about 1% of that. But a man will wear that pin to church next week. And the week after that. It shows up. It’s a quiet, persistent reminder that someone in his congregation thought his role mattered enough to mark it.
That’s the difference between a gift and a symbol.
Don’t Forget the Father Figures
If your church is planning a Father’s Day recognition, expand it beyond biological dads. Here’s why: your congregation includes men who are father figures without carrying that title.
- Stepfathers who stepped up
- Mentors in men’s ministry
- Grandfathers raising grandchildren
- Deacons and elders who disciple younger men
- Single men who serve in children’s ministry or youth group
Every one of those roles deserves recognition. When you hand out pins, use language that includes them: “fathers and father figures” or “men who lead and guide.”
Some churches give a different pin style to grandfather figures a cross & crown pin instead of the heart-shaped “Dad” style, for example, which visually recognizes both roles without ranking one above the other.
What Father’s Day Looks Like When a Church Gets It Right
The churches that see the strongest response on Father’s Day don’t just tack a prayer onto the end of the service. They build a moment. Here’s what that looks like:
A call to stand — The pastor invites all fathers and father figures to stand. Not come forward. Just stand where they are. This is lower pressure for men who don’t like being on stage.
A prayer over them — Specific, not generic. Mentioning the weight of provision, the example of faith, and the long-term impact of a faithful father.
A pin placed on them — By a volunteer, a family member, or the pastor. Physical touch matters. This is the moment that separates a “recognition” from a “ceremony.”
A moment of affirmation — The congregation claps, or responds with a spoken phrase like, “Thank you for your faithfulness.” This is the part most churches skip. Don’t skip it.A word of commissioning — “Go home knowing your church sees what you do, and it matters.” Brief. Direct. Memorable.
That sequence takes 10 minutes. It costs less than $3 per man. And it does something a Father’s Day BBQ alone can’t — it tells a man that his spiritual leadership at home has been noticed and honored by his community.
If you’re not sure where to start, a quick call gets you a straight answer on pin styles, quantities, and what fits your congregation size.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. How many pins should a church order for Father’s Day?
Count your average male Sunday attendance and add 10–15%. Most churches find they need between 25 and 75 pins. It’s better to have a few extras than to run short. Leftover pins can go to men’s ministry groups or be saved for next year.
2. What’s the difference between a lapel pin and a brooch for Father’s Day?
A lapel pin is small (typically 5/8″ to 1″), attaches with a post and butterfly clutch, and sits flat on a jacket or shirt. A brooch is larger, more decorative, and uses a C-clasp. For Father’s Day ceremonies, lapel pins are the standard they’re simple, masculine, and easy to attach during a service.
3. Can we do a pin ceremony if our church doesn’t have a formal Father’s Day tradition?
Yes, that’s actually the best time to start. The first year is always the simplest: order pins, plan 10 minutes in the service, and let the pastor lead a short recognition. Churches that start small and build on it each year see the strongest long-term engagement from fathers.