Hope, Faith, Community.
Contact Us
St. Jude’s Church
The Anglican Parish of Victoria
319 Lancaster Street,
Saint John, NB E2M 2E7
Phone: 506-672-4301
FAX: 506-674-1984
E-mail: stjude@nbnet.nb.ca
St. George’s Church
The Anglican Parish of Carleton
100 Watson Street
Saint John, NB E2M 1G2
Phone: 506-635-8620
Fax: 506-635-8626
E-mail: poc@nbnet.nb.ca
Or use our contact form.
Our Community
All the latest news and events from our community.
Regular Services
We're there to welcome you.
Sundays
9:00 am – Eucharist (said) at St George’s & St Jude’s
10:30 am – Eucharist (sung) at St George’s & St Jude’s
Wednesdays
7:00 pm - Eucharist (said) at St. Jude's
Thursdays
9:00 am - Morning Prayer (said) at St. Jude's
Fridays
8:30 am - Morning Prayer (said) at St. George's
Welcome to "His West Side Story".
An online meeting place for St. Jude's and St. George's Anglican Churches in Saint John, NB.
St. Jude's and St. George's, Anglican Churches, set the foundation for strong communities in the lower west in Saint John. We are dedicated to the advancement of our faith through worship, education, poverty relief, and lots of community activities .
In addition to our regular worship services, we organize regular meetings, dinners and family activities so that our members can join together and support our communities from day to day.
We are always happy to meet new people - everyone is welcome!
Who We Are
Landmark churches make landmark decision
By Vicars Hodge
St. George’s, Parish of Carleton and St. Jude’s, Parish of Victoria, are two of Saint John’s landmark churches. And together they recently made the landmark decision to share and strengthen their ministry.
The two churches are neighbours in Saint John’s lower west side and in
recent years have collaborated in
several ways — Lenten missions, the Alpha course, summer clergy coverage, and an extensive food bank support ministry. When the Rev. Canon David Kierstead, rector of St. Jude’s, announced in early
2009 that he would retire before the end of the year, the usual transition protocol was triggered. The wardens and parish advisory committee arranged a meeting with me, their territorial archdeacon.
We discussed the preparation of a parish profile, talked of interim ministry, and began to consider what gifts were needed in the next rector of St. Jude’s. However, as the conversation proceeded,
the leadership team at St. Jude's grew into the idea that the future of St. Jude's might well involve the people of St. George's as well. So conversations with two sets of churchwardens and two
vestries led to a remarkable sharing in ministry on the West Side.
The two churches agreed that although both corporations would continue, they would share two clergy equally — one would be the rector of both churches and the other would be the associate priest of
both. While the two clergy would live in the two rectories, neither priest would be the exclusive minister of either church. Theirs would be a team ministry.
So last November, the Rev. Canon Howard Anningson, rector of the Parish of Carleton (St. George’s) was also named the rector of the Parish of Victoria (St. Jude’s). On him fall most of the
administrative responsibilities and his considerable gifts in pastoral care are a blessing to both congregations.
The Rev. Rob Salloum was appointed associate priest on Jan. 1. He shares in liturgical leadership and pastoral care in both parishes – and under the rector's direction, takes the lead in small group,
program ministry, and congregational development.
Their positions were made official at a service in February and the photo at the top of this page shows them (Canon Anningson in the centre, me on his left, Mr. Salloum on his right, and the church
wardens surrounding us) following that service.
This is a remarkable new beginning for the two churches, especially in light of their histories. St. George's Church predates our first Bishop John Medley by half a century and is the product of the
evangelical revival of the 18th century. The present structure, built in 1821, has a distinctive clock tower that presides over the deep west side and overlooks the busy harbour.
St. Jude’s was planted during the time of Bishop Medley and has its roots in the Anglo-Catholic renewal that swept through the Anglican Church in the 19th century. It dwells up the hill from St.
George’s, next to Queens Square and overlooking the Digby ferry terminal.
Although both congregations are much smaller numerically than they once were, they have plenty of desire to be useful and have embraced the ideas of shared ministry with enthusiasm. Despite historic
rivalries that grew from their different theological beginnings, they have for decades known that they have far more in common than the things that once divided them.
The Ven. Vicars Hodge is Archdeacon of St. Andrews
What We Do

The Church of Tomorrow
Written by
Archbishop Oscar Romero
It helps, now and then, to step back and take the long view.
The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts, it is beyond our vision.
We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of
The magnificent enterprise that is God’s work.
Nothing we do is complete, which is another way of saying
That the kingdom always lies beyond us.
No statement says all that could be said.
No prayer fully expresses our faith.
No confession brings perfection.
No pastoral visit brings wholeness.
No program accomplishes the church’s mission.
No set of goals and objectives includes everything.
This is what we are about:
We plant seeds that one day will grow.
We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.
We lay foundations that will need further development.
We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities.
We cannot do everything
And there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.
This enables us to do something,
And to do it very well.
It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way,
An opportunity for God’s grace to enter and do the rest.
We may never see the end results,
But that is the difference between the master builder and the worker.
We are workers, not master builders,
Ministers, not messiahs.
We are prophets of a future not our own.
Amen.
.
Learn more about our work.
