Saint_George's_Church,_Singapore

Saint George's Church, Singapore

Saint George's Church, Singapore

Church in Singapore , Singapore


Saint George's Church (Chinese: 圣乔治教堂; pinyin: Shèng Qiáozhì Jiàotáng) is an Anglican church located on Minden Road in Singapore's Tanglin Planning Area, off Holland Road.[4]

Quick Facts Saint George’s Church Singapore, Location ...

Constructed between 1910 and 1913, the church was built for the British troops stationed in Tanglin Barracks which was once the General Headquarters of the British Far East Land Forces.

The church's community comprises members from Singapore and many other countries. They are bound by a common desire to follow Jesus Christ, and to seek God’s purpose for their lives.

Leadership

St. George's Church is a parish of the Anglican Diocese of Singapore. The present vicar is Revd. Canon Dr Lewis Lew.[5] He is supported by Revd. Paul Tan (Auxiliary Priest).

The previous vicars of the church include Revd. Mark Roland Dickens, Revd. Canon Philip Sinden, Revd. Mervyn Moore (acting vicar), Revd. Loren Fox, Revd. Paul Corrie, Revd. John Benson, Bishop Dudley Foord (interim, vicar), Revd. Bruce Winter, and Revd. Bob Robinson.

History

Origins of the Church building – Serving the British military in Singapore

St. George's Church was constructed from materials imported from England and cost £2,000 to build.

The land was formerly used as a nutmeg plantation and it included Mount Harriet, a 103-foot high hill on which the church now stands. The land belonged to William E. Willan and was sold in 1865. However, even before the church was built, an ordained minister for the garrison was appointed in 1871.

The church's foundation stone.

The current building dates back to 1910 but there was an earlier St. George's built in 1884 near the site of the present church. Both churches were built for the British troops quartered at Tanglin Barracks which was once the General Headquarters of the British Far East Land Forces. After the British forces withdrew from Singapore in 1968, the place was used by Singapore's Ministry of Defence as its headquarters before it moved to its new premises in Bukit Gombak

From Military to Civilian Church

St. George's became a civilian church after the British troops left Singapore in 1971.[6] It was gazetted a national monument by the National Heritage Board of Singapore on 10 November 1978,[7] and now serves a multinational Christian congregation in Singapore.

The church's timber roof trusses.

Major Ivan Lyon Memorial

On the outside of the church is a memorial tablet to Major Ivan Lyon D.S.O. M.B.E., who was killed on his second commando raid on military shipping in the Singapore Harbour in October 1944. At the time of the raid, Singapore was more than 1,000 miles inside Imperial Japanese-held territory.[8]

The open arched windows of the church's east side aisle.

Services

There are three regular services conducted on Sunday. All involve lay participation.

  • a more traditional Holy Communion service following the Anglican liturgy, with hymns from Common Praise, happens every morning.
  • an informal service with a mix of modern songs and hymns, suitable for families; Holy Communion on the third Sunday of every month or at specific during Holy Week.
  • an informal service; Holy Communion on the first Sunday of every month, happens on afternoons after the Japanese service.

The Filipino Fellowship meets at the Lower Hall every Sunday at 12pm while the Japanese Fellowship meets every Sunday at 2.30pm

Courses

A number of courses are run at St George's Church, including Alpha, Christianity Explored and Moore College theology courses.

Notable members

See also


References

  1. "List of Singapore's National Monuments" (PDF). Urban Redevelopment Authority. 2011.
  2. "TREASURES OF SINGAPORE, The Sunday Times, 29 July 2018". p. B9.
  3. "Saint George's Church: A sanctuary in war and peace, The Straits Times (online), Thursday, 2 February 2017".
  4. "Saint George's Church (Singapore), Google map". Google Inc. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  5. Connell, Brian (1961). Return of the Tiger. New York: Doubleday & Company. p. 282.

Further reading

News articles


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