Kingwood United Methodist Church

Kingwood United Methodist Church The oldest Methodist Church in Hunterdon County. A site visited by Francis Asbury in 1787. All are welcome... always!

Ministry is the driving force behind the planned merger of two Hunterdon County churches.Kingwood United Methodist Churc...
06/01/2026

Ministry is the driving force behind the planned merger of two Hunterdon County churches.
Kingwood United Methodist Church and Frenchtown United Methodist Church will soon become the Open Door United Methodist Church, operating from the site of the Frenchtown church at 16 Third Street. Services will be on Sundays at 9 a.m., starting July 5 and will include a monthly Dinner Church service on third Sundays at 5:00 p.m.
Kingwood UMC is the oldest Methodist church in Hunterdon, and its site on Route 519 in southern Kingwood Township has hosted a church since the 1780s. At one time, the Kingwood church held several roast beef dinners a year that funded organizations such as rescue and fire squads, the Flemington Food Pantry, an animal rescue organization and more. In addition, Kingwood UMC has funded over $50,000 in scholarships to Delaware Valley Regional High School students since 2019. Efforts like that are the impetus for the change.
“I think of it as God at work creating something new,” said Rev. Peter Mantell, pastor of the Frenchtown, Kingwood and Sergeantsville United Methodist Churches for the past 12 years.
The new church’s name was inspired by the food pantry the Frenchtown church has been sponsoring. “The pantry has become the focus of this church’s ministry and how the church has become identified,” Mantell said, “so why not lean into that?”
The pantry started with a “blessing box” in the parking lot of the church the week of the COVID shutdown in March 2020. By that November, space was carved out of a corner of the church’s garage, making room for a refrigerator, freezer and shelves kept stocked with food. It’s accessible around-the-clock. A cooking club of church members and volunteers was organized by Mantell’s late wife, Anna, and the group continues to create and put out about 200 meals a week. Volunteers are always welcome Tuesday and Friday mornings between 9:30-noon. Cooking skills are not required.
Donations of shelf-stable food are always welcome. Perennial pantry needs include shelf-stable milk, tomato products, peanut butter, jelly, cereals, no-sugar-added juices, soups, mac & cheese, canned tuna, canned chicken, canned vegetables and canned fruits.
Closing the Kingwood church was a difficult decision that has caused some sadness, but Mantell said people are also hopeful for the future., looking to build relationships within the community, putting faith in action and making a difference in people’s lives. Still, while the Open Door United Methodist Church will be forward-looking, there are plans being formulated to remember and honor the long histories of both Kingwood and Frenchtown United Methodist Churches.
“I’m very community-minded and try to bring that out in my preaching and teaching,” Mantell said, “being inclusive, welcoming of all people, and helping the marginalized.”
The Kingwood church will hold its last traditional Sunday service on June 28, at 9:00 a.m. Rev. Ronell Howard, a district superintendent of the United Methodists of Greater New Jersey, will attend. A potluck meal will be held afterward, honoring the more than 240 years a church has been at that location. The Open Door United Methodist Church will continue the tradition of Breakfast Church services on the last Sunday of the month in the Kingwood location.
The Open Door UMC will hold its opening service on Sunday, July 5, at 9 a.m. A local piano teacher, Kristen Todd, has been hired to help revitalize the music program, which will feature traditional hymns.
“Biblically, Jesus is the door, the gate,” Mantell said. “If we open the door to all the people Jesus loves – which is everyone – we’re fulfilling our mission.”
For more information, visit the website www.kingwood-frenchtownumchurches.com, call the Frenchtown church at 908-996-3117, or email Mantell at [email protected].

This Saturday morning at 9:00 AM, at Kingwood United Methodist Church, we join together at Breakfast Church to conclude ...
05/28/2026

This Saturday morning at 9:00 AM, at Kingwood United Methodist Church, we join together at Breakfast Church to conclude our very special series on the use of Prayer Beads. Even if you haven't been with us from the beginning, come join with us, enjoy a delicious breakfast, and feel God's calling to build a new kind of kingdom where Love reigns above all else.
Saturday 9:00 AM 257 Route 519

On Sunday May 17, we continue our series on prayer.  We continue by considering the role that forgiveness plays in our s...
05/14/2026

On Sunday May 17, we continue our series on prayer. We continue by considering the role that forgiveness plays in our spiritual life and practices. Jesus included a line about forgiveness in the prayer he taught his disciples because getting right with each other is essential for our personal and communal wellbeing. Right relationship involves real honesty with God and with each other. “Pardon” is our focus. How are we being invited to let go and find new ways with one another?

Kingwood United Methodist Church 257 Route 519 Stockton 9:00 AM

This Sunday at Kingwood UMC, we continue our All My Days series as we explore how God's purpose in our lives is found in...
05/01/2026

This Sunday at Kingwood UMC, we continue our All My Days series as we explore how God's purpose in our lives is found in the words
"Thy Kingdom Come on earth as it is in heaven".
Come join us at 9:00 AM this Sunday. 257 Route 519

At Kingwood United Methodist Church's Breakfast Church this Saturday morning, we continue our series on prayer.   At Bre...
04/21/2026

At Kingwood United Methodist Church's Breakfast Church this Saturday morning, we continue our series on prayer. At Breakfast Church, we will continue our exploration of the prayer that Jesus taught his disciples by dwelling with the phrase, “Hallowed be thy name.” Devotion is time set apart (the meaning of “sacred”) to honor something or someone we love. When Jesus called God’s name “hallowed,” he was drawing us to the sacred nature of the holy. When we pray, we set apart our time and attention to things that matter deeply. Who and what do we deem “worthy” and what happens when we make praise a regular expression? Our focus or prayer this Sunday will be about “Praise”. How are we being called to set apart our time and attention to witness holiness and offer praise?
Join us at 9:00 AM on Saturday 4/25 at 257 Route 519

This Sunday at Kingwood United Methodist Church, we celebrate the second week of our "All My Days" series, joyous in God...
04/14/2026

This Sunday at Kingwood United Methodist Church, we celebrate the second week of our "All My Days" series, joyous in God's PRESENCE.
God is not distant. God is not disinterested. God is present. God is a loving parent. God is as close as your next breath.
Join us at 9:00 AM

Join us this Sunday as we begin a beautiful new series "All My Days" as we explore our prayer lives using the ancient an...
04/10/2026

Join us this Sunday as we begin a beautiful new series "All My Days" as we explore our prayer lives using the ancient and traditional use of prayer beads as a way to connect with the Holy and each other.
Sunday mornings 9:00 AM

For the next eight weeks, we are going to be focusing on learning more about how prayer can help us calm and center ours...
04/06/2026

For the next eight weeks, we are going to be focusing on learning more about how prayer can help us calm and center ourselves in a world that feels increasingly chaotic. Jesus had a rich prayer life. Whether it was public prayers and blessings or private prayers on the mountain or in the garden, praying was a deeply connecting practice for him. Sometimes prayer can be a bit abstract for us. We may not be sure about incorporating it into our lives. That’s ok. Jesus’ disciples weren’t sure either and so they asked him to help them. He gave his disciples a template for ways to relate to God in prayer. In this new worship series, we are going to sink deep into the “when, where, what, and why” of prayer as Jesus showed his disciples.
All participants will be gifted with a prayer bead strand that we will be using in our worship and at home as we learn to regulate our nervous systems by connecting to God in a tangible way. Prayer beads are part of our Christian and Protestant tradition and, more broadly, part of the human tradition.
I hope you will join us when you can over the next eight weeks of this series.

Kingwood United Methodist
Sundays at 9:00 AM (Saturdays April 26 and May 30 Breakfast Church)

For Christmas Eve this year, join us at 257 Route 519 as we welcome our brothers and sisters from Frenchtown United Meth...
12/23/2025

For Christmas Eve this year, join us at 257 Route 519 as we welcome our brothers and sisters from Frenchtown United Methodist Church at 5:00 PM,
Please join us as we continue our Advent / Christmas series "What Do You Fear".
Remember, God's good news of great joy is louder than fear. Come celebrate with us.

This Sunday is the first Sunday of the Advent Season, and we will begin a new series in which we ask the question, "What...
11/28/2025

This Sunday is the first Sunday of the Advent Season, and we will begin a new series in which we ask the question, "What do you fear"? Luke’s Gospel begins the story of Jesus with this opening line: “In the time of Herod…” This detail may seem minor to modern readers; however, it reveals layers of information about the fearful world Jesus entered, one filled with rampant oppression, economic disparity, uncertainty, and instability. A world not so unlike our own. And yet, throughout the stories of Christ’s birth, we hear the whispers of angels delivering a surprising message: “Do not fear.” When Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, and the magi are each called into God’s redemptive story, they do not deny their fears—they move through them. They ask questions, hold fast to courage, trust in good news, and say, “Here I am, Lord.” When we find ourselves in fearful times, can we acknowledge our fears while also insisting on hope?
Join us each Sunday in Advent at 9:00 AM as we find that hope together.
257 Route 519

Address

257 County Road 519
Stockton, NJ
08559

Opening Hours

8:45am - 9:45am

Telephone

(908) 996-6803

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