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Bread Breakers: New Jersey Church Launches Collaborative Food Ministry During Pandemic

By Tracy Simmons
New Dover UMC food ministry
New Dover United Methodist Church in Edison, New Jersey partners with two other local congregations for their food ministry, which has delivered about 100,000 meals since the pandemic began. (Photo: New Dover UMC)

When New Dover United Methodist Church in Edison, New Jersey, closed its doors in 2020 to prevent the spread of COVID-19, parishioners went home and made sandwiches. 

To date, members of the New Jersey church have made almost 100,000 of them.

“When the pandemic hit, people were calling and asking, ‘What can we do?, What can we do?’” said the Rev. Chuck Coblentz. “We needed to figure out a way people could be involved, given the circumstances, without being here.”

And that’s how a sandwich ministry was born.

People could make sandwiches at home and then drop them off at the church to be delivered to nearby organizations that were feeding the hungry. To keep the sandwiches from getting soggy, a small group of volunteers added condiments right before delivery and packaged them with healthy sides, Coblentz explained.

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Brian Richards, a member of New Dover UMC who has been a driving force behind the sandwich ministry, said it was just him and two women from the congregation assembling the sandwiches at first.

New Dover food ministry
Volunteers assemble sandwiches every Friday morning at New Dover United Methodist Church in Edison, New Jersey. (Photo courtesy of New Dover United Methodist Church.)

Now about a dozen people from three different congregations come together on Friday mornings to get the meals prepped.

“God doesn’t tell the helpless and the hungry and the poor and the downtrodden to come find a church, but he does tell us to go outside and find people,” he said, adding that he’s passionate about making sure people are fed.

Feeding the hungry isn’t unique to New Jersey parishes. Recently, a city in Oregon — Brookings — passed an ordinance barring churches in residential areas from serving more than two free meals a week to people experiencing homelessness. St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church responded by suing the city.

“How do you tell a church they can’t feed people?” the Rev. Bernie Lindley asked in an interview with KGW News last year. “Isn’t that what churches are supposed to do? Our diocese and the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon, our churches feed people, that’s instrumental in the way that we serve God and serve God’s people”

There’s no law preventing the New Dover church from feeding its community, though COVID-19 has tried, unsuccessfully, to keep the ministry down.

Each week, the 225-member church provided more and more sandwiches, and soon, the ministry came to be known as “Bread Breakers,” since they continued to break sandwich making records. 

food ministry
Brian Richards and the Rev. Chuck Coblentz pose with new refrigerators purchased with a grant from the Methodist Conference. (Photo courtesy of New Dover United Methodist Church.)

Now they feed anywhere between 300 to 1,200 people per week and have a sandwich system in place.  Most of the sandwiches go to surrounding towns, including Elizabeth and Plainfield, where the need is greater.

Throughout the week, parishioners — and now others from the community, including Jews and Muslims — put sandwiches in a refrigerator outside the church. Volunteers pick up sides, like chips or fruit cups, donated from area WaWa Convenience Stores and store them at the church until Friday morning, when members from the congregation assemble the sandwiches and get them ready for distribution. Richards and others from the church then take the meals to partners in surrounding counties. 

“Nothing is laying around — every sandwich is eaten,” Coblentz said on a Friday afternoon in January, just after the church sent 700 sandwiches out the door.

He said the pandemic has been an opportunity to put faith into action, which is what he said church is really all about.

“Faith without works is dead,” he said. “Everything springs from the service, and we continue to let people know that faith isn’t just the reciting of the creed or altar calls — it’s getting your butt out there and doing something.”

New Dover UMC — which has been called the most diverse congregation in New Jersey, with 40% of the congregation hailing from India — also raised $38,000 in 2021 to pay for the creation of an intensive care unit at a Christian Medical College in Vellore, India. The church continues to support the hospital through its ICU India ministry.

Coblentz said it’s ministries like these that will make the church stronger on the other side of the pandemic.

“I don’t know what the church is going to look like when it’s over — nobody does. But I think it’s going to be more powerful than it was. It’s helped people realize how much seven days a week church really is,” he said.

New Dover UMC is one of many congregations reporting intensified social outreach during the pandemic, according to data from Exploring the Pandemic Impact on Congregations.

A church in Graham, North Carolina helped fund a food truck that was donated to a school to provide a mobile feeding center for a low-income community. Another congregation launched a Memory Cafe, which provides a monthly social opportunity for people with dementia and their care partners.

“This survey of the Exploring the Pandemic Impact on Congregations study demonstrates that churches are finding innovative new ministry opportunities and outreach methods despite the countless challenges presented by the pandemic,” said project director Sarah Brown. “The creativity they’ve demonstrated through acts of service, as well as their level of adaptability, is deeply inspiring at a time when we could all use some good news.”

Coblentz hopes other churches can learn from New Dover UMC’s story and realize that they too “can do some really cool stuff” in the midst of COVID-19.

This story was originally published by Religion Unplugged.

Tracy Simmons is an award winning journalist specializing in religion reporting and digital entrepreneurship. Simmons has worked as a multimedia journalist for newspapers across New Mexico, Texas and Connecticut.

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4 Responses

  1. This is wonderful. And I recently heard on the news of a Christian pastor, a Jewish rabbi and a Muslim group getting their congregations together in New York to help the many who were devastated by that large apartment fire. They took them to Target and bought them everything they needed to get a little start to getting back on their feet.It was so heartwarming to hear. I’ve been so disillusioned with church that just meets in these big buildings once or twice a week with huge utility bills but no one’s in the building most of the week. It just seems shameful to me. Like open the doors! Let people come in! Feed them, clothe them, care for them. Isn’t that what church is about. It’s not just a pep rally every Sunday morning but so many churches do church that way. It just doesn’t seem the way Christ would do church. I think every church should have a stocked food pantry at minimum.

    1. I do have to thank liberal church members for embarrassing the conservative ones! Thankfully, there are some conservative church members who help out charitible groups like these . Otherwise, the fundamentalist churches would be entirely condemned!

      1Praise Yah!
      Praise Yahweh, my soul.
      2While I live, I will praise Yahweh.
      I will sing praises to my God as long as I exist.
      3Don’t put your trust in princes,
      in a son of man in whom there is no help.
      4His spirit departs, and he returns to the earth.
      In that very day, his thoughts perish.
      5Happy is he who has the God of Jacob for his help,
      whose hope is in Yahweh, his God,
      6who made heaven and earth,
      the sea, and all that is in them;
      who keeps truth forever;
      7who executes justice for the oppressed;
      who gives food to the hungry.
      Yahweh frees the prisoners.

      8Yahweh opens the eyes of the blind.
      Yahweh raises up those who are bowed down.
      Yahweh loves the righteous.
      9Yahweh preserves the foreigners.
      He upholds the fatherless and widow,
      but he turns the way of the wicked upside down.
      Yahweh will reign forever;
      your God, O Zion, to all generations.
      Praise Yah! —WEB

      1. I thought my Bible program had put the psalm number on the quote that I took from it . In fact I quoted all of Psalms 146.

        If you have a conservative Bible commentary, you should look it up. I think all of them that I’ve read, ignores the idea that we are God’s servants and hands . We should be carrying out what this Psalm says!

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Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Baptistland: A Memoir of Abuse, Betrayal, and Transformation” by Christa Brown.