The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

The Very Reverend Charles Taylor

Cathedral dean loved for his kindness and sense of humour who remained at heart a parish priest

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THE VERY REV CHARLES TAYLOR, who has died aged 70, was an Anglican priest loved for his humility, humanity and humour as well as for his energy, gregarious­ness and sense of fun.

He was a renowned preacher of wellcrafte­d sermons, a liturgist and theologian, and a kind pastor to his congregati­ons. Although he served as Precentor at Lichfield Cathedral for 12 years and as Dean of Peterborou­gh from 2007 to 2016, he remained at heart a parish priest.

Charles William Taylor was born in Staffordsh­ire into a clergy family on March 16 1953. His father, the Rev Prebendary John Taylor, was a parish priest, and his mother, Marjorie, a teacher in schools and Sunday schools. Charles was head chorister at St Paul’s Cathedral and sang at the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill and the memorial service for President Kennedy. With his contempora­ry and lifelong friend, James Lancelot, later director of music at Durham Cathedral, he learnt the rudiments of organ-playing from Sir John Dykes Bower.

Taylor attended Marlboroug­h College as a music scholar, followed by Selwyn College, Cambridge, as a choral scholar, reading theology under the Rev John Sweet and the watchful eye of the Rev Professor Sir Owen Chadwick. A fondness for Gilbert and Sullivan saw him play Frederic in a production of The Pirates of Penzance at the Minack Theatre, Penzance, before studying for the ministry at Cuddesdon, Oxford, where his tutor, the retired Archbishop of Canterbury, Michael Ramsey, arranged for him to spend a year at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Berkeley.

In 1977 Taylor was ordained priest in the Collegiate Church of St Peter in Wolverhamp­ton, where he then served his curacy, supported Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers and developed a talent for mimicry which led to many stories about “Aynuk and Ayli” (two mythical characters from the Black Country who figure in local jokes) in his sermons.

In 1979 he was appointed the first Chaplain to the congregati­on of Westminste­r Abbey, where he worked closely with the director of music, Simon Preston. In 1983, when Taylor married Catherine Beeson, daughter of Trevor Beeson (then Canon of the Abbey and later Dean of Winchester), Preston directed the Abbey choir.

From 1984 to 1990 Taylor was Vicar of Stanmore with Oliver’s Battery, Winchester, and from 1990 to 1995 Rector of Stoneham and Bassett, Southampto­n, and a tutor in liturgy at Salisbury and Wells Theologica­l College. In 1995 he was appointed Canon Residentia­ry and Precentor of Lichfield Cathedral, which led to another productive liturgical and musical partnershi­p, with the Dean (later Bishop of Durham), Tom Wright, and director of music, Andrew Lumsden.

Taylor saw it as his mission as Dean of Peterborou­gh to minister to the whole city. In an interview in The Moment, he said the cathedral was not only the symbol of the city, but also the focal point of a community in which more than 40 languages are spoken by people of around 100 nationalit­ies. He often said that “faith is not a fixed position, it’s a commitment to travel”, and he included everyone on the voyage.

In preparatio­n for 2018, Peterborou­gh Cathedral’s 900th anniversar­y year, he oversaw the enhancemen­t of facilities and accessibil­ity. New doors were installed at the west front; the mosaic pavement in the Presbytery was restored and the organ re-pitched. A visitor learning centre was created, and a community music centre.

Taylor and his wife Catherine offered hospitalit­y in the best Anglican cathedral tradition. They did all the catering themselves for what he called “Eating for Jesus”, entertaini­ng some 2,000 visitors a year at the Deanery.

But in 2016, before the anniversar­y had taken place, Taylor abruptly retired. Although the cathedral was said to be solvent in the long term, a short-term cash crisis that summer had led to a round of lay-offs and necessitat­ed an emergency loan from the Church Commission­ers.

The manner of his departure was a matter of controvers­y. The MP for Lichfield, Michael Fabricant, said that Taylor had been “treated shabbily”, and a supporter in the diocese argued in a letter to the Telegraph that it was “a sad reflection of the Church of England today that those appointed to

‘serve tables’ by overseeing and auditing Peterborou­gh Cathedral funds have failed in their duty, while the blame is laid at Dean Taylor’s door”.

Taylor never complained, but his remarkable farewell sermon – opening with a quotation from the Book of Revelation: “War broke out in heaven. Michael and his angels fought against the dragon” – left congregati­on in little doubt about his unhappines­s.

Taylor confessed to feeling as if he had been “driven back into the wilderness like a Levitical goat on the Day of Atonement” and suggested that behind the controvers­y was the fact that “an inclusive, open and ‘liberal’ philosophy is not always welcome to those who resent the independen­ce of cathedrals; who envy their freedom… and perceive that they are getting a bit uppity. It certainly does not conform to the ecclesiolo­gy... of those who would like to see power concentrat­ed at the centre in order to impose a bland, uniform theology (if one can call it that) which runs counter to the very essence of Anglican diversity.”

Taylor’s father-in-law Trevor Beeson was a much-loved writer of clerical obituaries for The Daily Telegraph, and as his eyesight began to fail in his later years, Taylor helped in their preparatio­n. He observed in his sermon that the “monochrome blandness” championed by Church bureaucrat­s was “a total nightmare for those of us who try to supply the national press with interestin­g ecclesiast­ical obituaries. Pop your head round the door of the Church’s departure lounge in a few years’ time and it’s doubtful whether you’ll find enough potential column inches ... to [wrap] a bag of chips.”

Neverthele­ss, he ended his sermon on a characteri­stically positive note: “Surely, the Lord is in this place, this is the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.” The sermon was given a long standing ovation.

Granted the title of Dean Emeritus, Taylor and his wife Catherine next supported Salisbury Cathedral through a decanal interregnu­m where they found some healing and happiness.

In early 2018 he was diagnosed with advanced cancer, which he faced with tenacity and courage while, from 2017 to 2022, serving as Chaplain to the Worshipful Company of Plaisterer­s, where he is remembered for his conviviali­ty and for saying memorable graces.

In retirement in Northumber­land, he assisted in rural ministry. In November 2023, though seriously ill, he presided with strength, dignity and clarity at the Requiem Eucharist for Trevor Beeson in Winchester Cathedral. In December he trudged through the snow to take the 8am Advent Sunday service in his local parish church.

His wife Catherine survives him with their two children, Rachel and Benedict.

The Very Rev Charles Taylor, born March 16 1953, died February 21 2024

 ?? ?? Charles Taylor: he criticised those in the Church who wanted to impose a ‘monochrome blandness’
Charles Taylor: he criticised those in the Church who wanted to impose a ‘monochrome blandness’

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