Calvary-St. George's Parish is an Episcopal parish in Manhattan, New York City. According to the church website, its mission is to "divide the word of truth between Law and Gospel, so that the people in the city of New York and beyond might know and confess where they end and God begins." The current Priest-in-Charge is Jake Smith, who came to the parish and was ordained as a presbyter in the fall of 2006. The other priests are Jim Munroe, and Nancy Hanna. Kamel Boutros, a former singer with Metropolitan Opera, is music director. In 2020, it reported 966 members, average attendance of 264, and $823,362 in plate and pledge income.
Calvary-St George's was the birthplace of Alcoholics Anonymous. It also served as the launch point for Let My People Go, a non-profit organization that teaches churches how to fight human trafficking, and sponsors Out Not Down, an LGBT youth homelessness prevention program. A soup kitchen ministry serves meals to approximately 125 people on Thursdays at noon. The parish also hosts a children's Christmas pageant open to "[w]hoever shows up at church," according to Wall Street Journal.After a May 1, 2016 fire burned neighboring church Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sava, members of that parish temporarily used the St George's sanctuary to gather. St George's also hosts St. Ann’s Church for the Deaf, the first church for the Deaf in the United States, and Sea Dog Theater, a non-profit off-Broadway theater troupe.During the early days of New York's 2020 coronavirus lockdown, New York Post reported on the church's bells, which played "Amazing Grace" and other hymns four times a day. Calvary-St George's connection to Harry Thacker Burleigh, one of the first African-American composers to incorporate spirituality into music, was subject of a February 2021 PIX11 Black history moment.