Monday, October 28, 2013

The Saints of St. Mary's III - The Rev'd. Charles Tyner

          Today’s subject of the Saints of St. Mary’s is different from all of the others. Some of you are familiar with the two previous installments of this sermon series about our parish’s spiritual ancestors. All those whose stories I’ve told before were members of this congregation. Today’s saint comes to St. Mary’s by cross pollination. You’ve noticed by now that in addition to offering prayers in the name of our patroness, we mention the name of St. George often. Our choir and our chapel are named for him. St. George came to St. Mary’s through a merger of two congregations in the 1980s. St. George’s Church had a long history on Kansas City’s east side. The end of its time came about 30 years ago when its members and its memories became a part of St. Mary’s. Today’s subject is the Rev’d. Charles Tyner who served as rector of St. George’s from 1923 until 1952. Like Fr. Betts, he came to St. Mary’s from the Diocese of Nebraska. Like Fr. Jardine and Thomas Pain, he came by way of eastern Canada. Unlike any other priest who served in West Missouri, his first career was as a professional athlete.
          The Toronto Professionals were Canada’s first pro hockey team. In 1908 they won the championship of the Ontario Professional Hockey League. On March 14 of that year they met the Montreal Wanderers, champions of the Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association, in a match for the Stanley Cup. Toronto’s goal tender was Chuck Tyner. He was well known on Toronto’s east side as a gifted athlete: a champion amateur boxer and a talented baseball and lacrosse player as well as the rather elderly goal-tender of the Toronto Professionals. His teammates were still in their teens or barely out of them. Tyner was well into his twenties, his long playing years probably due partly to his natural athleticism and partly because goalies experience less wear and tear than their teammates.
If your first thought was that March 14 seems awfully early for a Stanley Cup match, there are a couple of reason for that. In the early 20th century, the Stanley Cup was awarded on a challenge basis. Any team who thought they could beat the current champions could petition the commissioners and request a match.  In the 1908 matchup, Toronto was the challenger. The Wanderers had held the cup the previous two years. The match was played on Toronto’s home ice, housed in a wood frame building in the city’s downtown. The building seated five thousand spectators and was used for a variety of sports. It had a concrete floor with a recessed area surrounded by the seats.  In the winter, they flooded the floor and let mother nature create the rink. The season had to end before the spring thaw. The Wanderers won the cup that year 6-4 on two late goals. Chuck Tyner retired from professional sports the following year and enrolled in seminary.
As with nearly all of the subjects of this sermon series, there’s quite a lot written about him, but very little of it is introspective. We know nothing about Fr. Tyner’s call to ministry . We know that he married a Canadian woman by the name of Mary, but we don’t know what moved him to come to the United States.  He next turns up in 1916, mentioned in an article in the Toronto World newspaper. It reads “old timers remember Chuck Tyner, all round amateur athlete and sportsman of the east end, proficient in lacrosse, baseball, hockey and boxing. Rev. Mr. Tyner is home from Lincoln, Nebraska where he has had a charge for several years, anxious to go to the front with the Sportsmen's Battalion. He is, of course, eligible as chaplain and his qualifications in the above games should give him preference over most preachers. Mr. Tyner has aged imperceptibly. He will present his credentials today to Lieut. Col. Greer.”
The Sportsmen’s Battalion was a military unit in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during World War I. For whatever reason, Fr. Tyner’s application to it was not successful. A year later the Ottawa Journal notes that “the Rev. Charles “Chuck” Tyner who played for Marlboro of Toronto several years ago and later with Branford and Montreal is going overseas with an American contingent.” He did serve in World War I, but in the US Army, rather than the Canadian.  He left behind his congregation at St. Luke’s in Lincoln when he departed for Europe.
          When he returned to Nebraska in 1919, he was called to the position of Dean at St. Mark’s pro-Cathedral in Hastings. St. Mark’s was the first church to be built west of Grand Island. All evidence indicates that Dean Tyner was popular, a sociable man with a great sense of humor and a skill for building community. In the congregation’s history on its web site, the comment on him is “who will ever forget this human dynamo.” Under his leadership, St. Mark’s engaged Ralph Adams Cram, one of the greatest architects of his generation, to design its new building. In an elaborate ceremony in September 1921, leaders of the congregation broke ground for the new building and the bishop laid the cornerstone in December, 1922. A few months later, Charles Tyner accepted a call from St. George’s Church in Kansas City. Again, we don’t know why he relinquished the position of dean to become a parish priest.
          At St. George’s his lively temperament and skill at building community were apparent. His name and picture appeared frequently in the newspapers. He spoke regularly to community groups and took a leadership role among the city’s clergy. Diocesan publications note the affection and respect that his colleagues had for him. His athletic interests didn’t fade as he entered into middle age. Fr. Tyner served as the president of the Kansas City Figure Skating Club and as a judge at its local competitions. He was seen frequently on the ice as a referee in local amateur hockey games.
          During the course of Fr. Tyner’s rectorship, St. George’s reached a great milestone:  the congregation paid off the mortgage on their church building. An elaborate celebration was planned with the Eucharist followed by a reception at which the mortgage would be ceremonially burned. A week before the date of the party, Fr. Tyner was injured in a rather serious car accident, necessitating a stay in the hospital. He was determined that the party would not be rescheduled and that he would be there. He spent the week persuading the attending physician to release him from the hospital long enough to attend. The doctor agreed, but only if he traveled by ambulance on a stretcher and did not rise from it for any reason. Fr. Tyner agreed. Another priest was engaged to preach and celebrate and the Kansas City Star carried a picture of Fr. Tyner, lying on a stretcher in his clerical collar with a huge grin on his face as ambulance attendants carried him into St. George’s.
          Another anecdote comes from two of my colleagues – The Rev’d. Harry Firth, known to some of you and the Rev’d. Bill Beachy. Both of them knew Fr. Tyner personally. They were newly ordained around the time he retired. He had not forgotten his days as a champion amateur boxer on a day when he was pulled over for speeding. When the officer came to the side of his car and informed him why he was being cited, Fr. Tyner opened the door and stepped out of the car. He raised his hands, closed his fists and playfully suggested that the two of them engage in an informal boxing match to determine whether or not he would receive a ticket. Neither of my colleagues knew what the officer’s reaction was to this challenge from a man in a clerical collar.
          He retired in 1952. He and Mrs. Tyner remained in Kansas City until his death in the mid-1960s. Twelve years after his retirement, the Star carried an account of an event organized by the altar guild of St. George’s, honoring Fr. and Mrs. Tyner. In the Missouri Valley Special Collection of local historical documents at our downtown library, you can see a scroll presented to the two of them at this event, expressing the affection and respect of the St. George’s Altar Guild. All of its members’ signatures appear on the scroll.
          Fr. Tyner’s obituary in the diocesan newsletter gives a sense of the great affection and respect felt for this energetic and faithful man with a great sense of humor. St. George’s Church continued on only about two decades after his passing.
          There is a season for everything. Nothing but God is eternal, but the divine is present in all creation, in the love we hold for one another that lives on. St. Mary’s received the gift of the history and legacy of St. George’s church when the two merged nearly three decades ago. God calls all of us. With some that call is clearly articulated and documented; with others the particulars of it remain mysterious but the reality of the call is unmistakable. With some people vocation is a clear and obvious path from childhood, through adolescence and into young adulthood. With others, the vocational path remains hidden early on, becoming clear only later in life, but there is no mistaking its truth. The story of St. George’s Church reminds us that we do not know the future holds. We can only remain faithful as it unfolds before us. Charles Tyner did that, with energy, good humor and devotion and today for his ministry we give thanks.

A portrait of Fr. Tyner as Rector of St. George's

Team photo of the 1908 Toronto Professionals. I think Charles Tyner is at the left end of the second row.




                

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