We know showing up at a new church can be intimidating, especially if you’re not used to a more traditional church setting, or just new to the idea of church.

Here you’ll find everything we can think of to help you know what to expect on a Sunday at Kingsfield. And, if we’ve missed anything, please reach out!

We are here for you!

Planning Your Visit

  • We gather for worship every Sunday at 10:00 am

    Currently Kingsfield is in a transition to worship more locally, where the majority of the families of Kingsfield live. The Wailuku area is an easy drive being centrally located on the island. The area is beautiful and family friendly with expansive parks, views and residential spaces pressed up against the West Maui Mountains.

    Please contact Fr. Jason, jason@kingsfieldmaui.com or 808-343-8764 for our current meeting location. We look forward to seeing you there!

    Once you arrive, take a deep breath and celebrate. Coming to church can have all kinds of obstacles. The Lord will meet you right where you are.

  • There will be someone to greet you and show you around, point out bathrooms and answer any immediate questions. We have coffee and tea available before service so you are invited to come 15 minutes early and get to know some of us or just sit quietly in preparation for worship. 

    As you enter our worship space, you’ll be handed a buletin so that you’ll be able to follow along with our liturgy. This printing contains additional information in the margins to help you understand why we do what we do. But please, don’t hesitate to find us afterwards and ask your questions. We love answering them!

  • We love children and whole families worshipping the Lord together! We do not offer children’s ministry during worship service instead we have a high tolerance for them to be with us. You’ll see the children who have been with us for a while in service that have grown to really love being included, participating in the liturgy (the work of the people) and not separated from the family of God. We provide clipboards, a children’s worship activity, and crayons for small children in worship. You are welcome to bring some quiet activities for your child if they are not used to this type of setting. If you have a real little one, there is space for you to set up in the back so you can have some room to tend them.

  • Our worship is “liturgical.” The Greek word “leitourgia” means a public work, the work of the people and consist of two movements:

    Word and Sacrament.

    Liturgical worship begins with God’s call upon us, his meeting with us, speaking among us, and ministering to us. God call us out of the world up into the heavenly places by his word and we ascend his holy mountain where we feast with Jesus at his Holy Table. This is the summit and climax of our worship where we as a family are invited to eat with Jesus as our host and our food. It is in the breaking of bread that we come to know him.

    The flow of our liturgy aims at drawing us further into the life and love of the Holy Trinity and then moving us outward in love to our neighbors and city.

    Our worship is also “sacramental” - these are means of grace in which God works in and through the physical to bless and strengthen the believer. Baptism is the sacrament of the new birth into the church and the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper is the family meal of the church that nourishes us with the life of Jesus Christ. The water, bread, wine, and oil are given as gifts from the Lord to the church to help us encounter him and his presence together as a church body. All baptized Christians of all ages are welcome to receive the bread and wine of Holy Communion.

    You don’t have to be a member at Kingsfield or a part of the Anglican Church. If your faith is in Jesus and you have been baptized in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit - you are welcome at the Table!

  • One of the ways we worship God is by singing. Lifting up our voices to God in both reverence and joy. You’ll find us on Sunday’s and throughout the week gathering and singing the Psalms (the Bible’s own hymn book) and hymns. We also, in parts, sing our liturgy. The sound of our praise being lifted up to the Lord with unified voices glorifies God, strengthens the saints toward faithfulness, and is a weapon yielded against our adversary the Devil. If you are not good at singing, that’s alright, as you begin to sing you learn to sing, especially with a band of merry saints who give a joyful noise.