A Toast for a First Communion

A Toast for a First Communion
The Occasion
This is a short toast delivered by a parent, godparent, or grandparent at the family gathering after a child's First Communion — usually around a Sunday table laden with cake, coffee, and a little too much food. The tone is tender and proud, with room for a small laugh. It honors a big spiritual milestone in a way a seven- or eight-year-old can feel without being overwhelmed. ~3 minutes (~450 words spoken).
The Speech
If you can, lift your glass and find the child's eyes first. Let the room settle before you start.
Before the cake disappears and the kids escape to the backyard, I want to take just a minute. Today is [child's name]'s day, and I don't want it to slip by in all the wonderful noise.
Then speak to the child directly. They will remember being seen.
[Child's name], this morning you walked up that aisle in your beautiful [white dress / new suit], and honestly, I had to blink a few times. You looked so grown-up and so much like the little one we still see at the dinner table asking for more [favorite food].
Name something true about who they are. Specifics turn a toast into a memory.
What I love about you is the way you [a specific trait — ask big questions / hug everyone goodnight / share your last cookie]. That is exactly the kind of heart today is about. Faith isn't only about the church and the candles. It's about being kind when no one is watching, and you already know how to do that.
Acknowledge the people who carried this child here.
And I want to thank the people who got us to this morning — your parents, [Godparent's name], your teachers, your grandparents who have been praying for you since before you could walk. You are surrounded by people who love you, [child's name], and that is its own kind of gift from God.
Close with a blessing they can carry.
So here is my wish for you. May you always know you are loved — by this family, and by God. May you stay curious, stay gentle, and never stop asking the big questions. And may you remember this day, this table, and all these faces smiling at you.
Then raise your glass to everyone.
Will you all raise a glass with me? To [child's name] — on your First Communion. We are so proud of the person you already are. Cheers.

👉 Quick Call with Kory White, Fractional CRO · See Kory on LinkedIn · CRO Syndicate
Make It Yours
- Swap in the child's name everywhere, and use the exact outfit they wore — "white dress," "navy suit," "the little bow tie."
- Replace the trait line with something only your family knows: a phrase they say, a habit, a kindness you witnessed this week.
- Prompts to spark specifics: What did they ask you about God or church recently? Who in the family has prayed for them the longest? What is the smallest, truest reason you are proud of them?
Delivery Notes
- Keep it slow. This is not a wedding speech; it's a quiet, full-hearted moment. Pause after you say the child's name the first time.
- Make real eye contact with the child during the lines spoken to them, then sweep the room for the thank-you and the blessing.
- If your voice catches, that's fine — let it. No one at a First Communion minds a teary godparent.
- Hold a small notecard if you like, but glance, don't read. The blessing at the end lands best from the heart, not the page.
Variations
For a 30-second version when the gathering is restless or the child is shy:
[Child's name], today you made your First Communion, and we could not be prouder. You have a good and gentle heart, and you are surrounded by people who love you. May you always know that — from this family and from God. Everyone, raise a glass: to [child's name]. Cheers.
For a longer, more formal version — say at a parish luncheon — add a short reading or favorite verse, a line about the meaning of the Eucharist, and a thank-you to the priest and catechists by name. For a lighter tone, open with a gentle joke about how many photos were taken in the church parking lot.
For a more solemn tone, drop the humor and lean fully into the blessing and the gratitude.
FAQ
How long should this speech be? For a child this age and a family gathering, aim for about two to three minutes. Long enough to feel meaningful, short enough that the kids don't start fidgeting and the cake stays the real star.
Should I speak to the child or to the room? Both, in that order. Begin by addressing the child directly so they feel honored, then turn to thank the family and offer a blessing everyone can share in.
Is it okay to add a prayer or Bible verse? Absolutely, and it's lovely if it fits your family. A simple line like a blessing, or a short favorite verse, deepens the moment — just keep it brief so a young child stays with you.
What if I get emotional? Let it show. A First Communion is a tender milestone, and a little emotion makes the toast warmer, not weaker. Pause, breathe, and finish — the room is entirely on your side.
Do I need to mention God if our family isn't very religious? You can keep it light on the theology and heavy on the heart. Honor the child, the kindness they show, and the people who love them — that spirit fits any table.
Bottom Line
A First Communion toast works best when it's small, specific, and sincere — honoring the child, thanking the people who raised them in faith, and offering a blessing they can carry. Speak slowly, look them in the eyes, and let the love do the heavy lifting. Two heartfelt minutes will be remembered far longer than any polished paragraph.
