LYNN-A downtown Lynn soup kitchen was among four Greater Boston organizations awarded medals by the Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge for its continued community service and patriotism.My Brother’s Table, in the multi-service center at the corner of Washington and Liberty streets, which also houses the city’s homeless shelter, was cited by the Bay State Chapter of Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge.”My Brother’s Table of Lynn has spent the last 25 years serving big meals and small miracles to local residents down on their luck,” said Freedoms Foundation spokesman Ed Coletta. “The 2,500 men and women who volunteer at My Brother’s Table not only prepare and serve meals daily, 365 days a year, but they also supply vital services to their clients, who are often homeless or finding themselves going through a difficult period.”Other organizations and individuals slated to receive the foundation’s George Washington Honor Medal include Casa Monte Casino in Boston’s North End, where thousands of families find a home-away-from-home while in need of temporary shelter while a relative is being treated at one of the city’s famous hospitals. In many cases, these families are far from home and many do not speak English. Casa Monte Casino provides a comfortable environment without draining the family’s finances.Operation Troop Support in Danvers will receive a medal. The organization was founded at the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom when Dick and Christine Moody heard from their daughter, then serving as a paramedic at a U.S. medical facility in Germany, that wounded soldiers lacked books or games to keep them busy as they recuperated.Since then, Operation Troop Support has sent more than 25,000 care packages to soldiers stationed across the Middle East and to the military hospitals tending to the wounded. Last year, the group sent more than 15,000 individually wrapped holiday gifts to military personnel stationed overseas. The family support group also brought in professional counselors, veterans organizations, legal advisers, financial consultants, and returning soldiers to talk to families and give them information to quell anxieties and help them cope with military deployment stress.The Winthrop Emblem Club No. 15 in Winthrop, dedicated to performing charitable acts, was also singled out for a medal, as was essayist Thomas Outlaw of Allston who submitted the winning entry in the foundation’s adult military essay category.These organizations and individuals will receive the Freedoms Foundation’s George Washington Honor Medal at a Nov. 3 ceremony at Spinelli’s Function Hall in East Boston. For tickets, contact Joseph Ferrino at 617-569-2110.The national Freedoms Foundation awards Americans who go above and beyond in their efforts to educate their communities about the values of good citizenship.