Page 21 - The Priest, Summer 2015
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Within weeks, Geoffrey was sent to study for Anglican Orders at Trinity College, Melbourne, lodging with Mel- bourne’s most famous Anglo-Catholic Di- vine, Canon Farnham E. Maynard, Vicar of St Peter’s, Eastern Hill. Geoffrey James Taylor, child of Evangelical Adelaide, found himself thrust into the very epicent- er of Australian Anglo-Catholicism.
Geoffrey completed his studies with a License in Theology and was ordained a deacon by Melbourne Archbishop Joseph Booth in St Paul’s Cathedral on 18th Feb- ruary, 1951. He was appointed as curate to All Saints, East St Kilda, a leading High Anglican Church, serving under Archdea- con Douglas Blake, “a delightful and able man.” Here Geoffrey connected to Angli- can nuns of the Community of the Sisters of the Church, one of the fruits of the English Tracterian Movement with which Geoffrey was now becoming familiar.
On 9th March 1952, Geoffrey was or- dained a priest in Anglican Orders, and he offered his rst Mass at All Saints, East St Kilda the following day. In late 1952 Geoffrey was appointed Vicar of St George the Martyr, West Footscray, thrust into the vibrant and turbulent life of work- ing class Melbourne at the height of the struggle between Communist-dominated unions and the Movement, led by Bob Santamaria. Geoffrey loved his time in West Footscray and was deeply loved in turn by his parishioners. It was in this time that Geoffrey Taylor and Geoffrey Jarrett, then a schoolboy, rst met through the Al- tar Servers’ Guild. In this period Geoffrey became an Oblate of St Benedict connect- ed to the Anglican Benedictine Abbey at Nashdom in Buckinghamshire. He never lost his commitment to Benedictine spir- ituality and prayer life. It was also at this time that he discovered the life of St John Vianney.
By early 1958 Geoffrey felt the need to explore a Benedictine vocation, sailing for Europe on the S.S. Stratheden. He disem- barked at Marseilles, spending time with the peripatetic Little Sisters of Charles De Foucauld, visiting the Shrine of the Cure D’Ars and sharing accommodation with the worker priests of the Lay Brothers of Charles De Foucauld in Paris. He arrived at Nashdom Abbey in the depths of an English winter. Geoffrey found Nashdom
“a remarkable place in which to meet re- markable people,” helping to edit proofs of the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, but he concluded that monastic life was not his calling. He then took up the post of Resident Chaplain with the Community of the Sisters of the Church at their headquarters in Ham Common, re- connecting while there with Geoffrey Jar- rett, then studying in England, and also forging a connection with the Most Rev- erend Michael Ramsey, then Archbishop of York, but from 1961 Archbishop of Can- terbury. In this period Geoffrey immersed himself in Anglo-Catholicism, then in its con dent heyday, marked by a Eucharistic Congress in Royal Albert Hall in July 1958. Geoffrey was appointed a locum chaplain in the Royal Chaplaincy, serving at Hamp- ton Court Palace. One of his parishioners was the Countess Gowrie, widow of an Australian Governor-General.
Geoffrey returned to Australian in May 1959, having drunk deeply at the well of a vital and con dent Anglo-Catholic Church, not in the least aware that its days were now numbered as a truly vital pres- ence. On 1st July 1959 Geoffrey became curate to Canon Maynard at Eastern Hill, and was appointed Vicar of that parish in June of 1964. In his inaugural letter to pa- rishioners, Geoffrey announced his devo- tion to the Catholic Church and his deep desire to bring the Mass into the daily lives of his people. In his ministry Geoffrey dis- played deep humility, profound pastoral commitment, down-to-earth friendliness, a commitment to Christian unity and a deep-seated devotion to Our Lord Jesus Christ and to Our Lady. His devotion to his ock was matched by his parishioners’ devotion to him.
Geoffrey would subsequently serve as Anglican Vicar at St John’s, Albany, and at Christ Church, Essendon. He was elected Provincial Vicar of the Anglo-Catholic So- ciety of the Holy Cross (SSC); in 1986 and in 1988 he was appointed an Honorary Canon of Christ Church Cathedral, Bal- larat. On 7th March 1993, following con- sultations in England with Bishop Graham Leonard, Episcopal Visitor of the SSC, Geoffrey sadly but rmly resigned his An- glican Orders, in the face of the evident determination of the Anglican Church to ordain women to the priesthood. He be-
gan attending Mass at St Monica’s Church near his home at Moonee Ponds, being re- ceived into the Catholic Church by Bishop Gerorge Pell on 10th April 1993 at St Pat- rick’s Church, Mentone.
With great dignity Geoffrey entered the Catholic Church as a layman, coming to attend daily Mass at St Joseph’s, West Brunswick, where Fr Denis Hart was then parish priest. With the active encourage- ment of the Anglican Archbishop of Mel- bourne, Catholic Archbishop Frank Little determined that Mr Geoffrey James Taylor should be ordained a Catholic priest. On the Feast of the Assumption, 15th August 1995, Geoffrey Taylor was ordained by Archbishop Little as a priest of the Catho- lic Church, with Bishop Pell and Fr Hart concelebrating. Fr Taylor became an hon- orary member of the clergy team at West Brunswick parish, performing chaplaincy duties at Mount Royal Hospital, Parkville, and teaching duties at Corpus Christi Col- lege when it moved to Carlton.
In 2000 Archbishop Pell conferred the title of Pastor Emeritus on Fr Taylor and he retired from his day to day involve- ment in the parish and the seminary. He remained very active in priestly ministry, generous with his time, his prayers, his Christian counsel, always delivered with a cheery avuncularity. “Remarkable”, he delighted to say; and so he was, just “re- markable.”
In failing health, but good spirits, in 2002 Geoffrey retired to Justin Villa, North Balwyn, where he was very happy in the care of the Sister Disciples of the Divine Master. He continued to receive a steady stream of former parishioners, both Anglican and Catholic.
Geoffrey spent the twilight years of his life in St Catherine’s House, next to Justin Villa. He is remembered with the deepest love and respect by the many people whose souls he touched and guided, among them numerous bishops and priests. He died on 26th July 2015 and Archbishop Hart pre- sided at his Requiem Mass at St Joseph’s, West Brunswick, on the 30th July 2015. In the words of Bishop Jarrett: “We thank God for Geoffrey’s faithful ministry. It used to be only for bishops that the choir sang ‘Ecce, Sacerdos Magnus,’ but for Geof- frey Taylor let it be our chorus: ‘Behold, a Great Priest!’” Ä
Journal of the Australian Confraternity of Catholic Clergy
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