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On the record ... with the Rev. Frank Timar

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The Rev. Frank Timar (Curtis Clegg - cclegg@shawmedia.com)

Father Frank Timar had just finished eighth grade when he began his path to the priesthood, moving 800 miles from his family home in Pennsylvania to a seminary in Geneva, Ill.

“My mother wasn’t too happy about that,” Timar said. “She thought she’d need to supervise me.”

On Jan. 4, Timar will celebrate his 23rd anniversary with the St. Mary’s of Sycamore parish of 1,250 families, and on Jan. 10 he will retire as the parish’s priest after administering thousands of sacraments and watching hundreds of children from the church and its affiliated school grow to adulthood.

“I watched them from baptism, to first communion, to confirmation to marriage,” he said.

Timar visited with MidWeek reporter Curtis Clegg and reflected on his 23 years in Sycamore and his 54 years in the priesthood.


MidWeek: When did you announce your retirement?
Frank Timar: It was a week ago Sunday, on the 9th.

MW: Was that a difficult decision, or was it one you had been considering for a while?
FT: To tell the truth, I was as surprised as all get-out. I am turning 80 years old on Dec. 27 and most priests in this diocese retire at the age of 70. Church law, though, says you have to retire at 75. The only ones who aren’t affected by that are the Pope and the cardinals. The bishop himself suggested to my superior, the provincial in Aurora, and my boss said that the bishop told him, “Maybe it’s time he took a rest.” It’s actually 10 years longer than most stay on. I found out on Sept. 25. …You have to say yes to that – it’s what you have to do. It’s what they call the vow of obedience.

MW: What are your plans now?
FT: I will be moving to Aurora, where we have our headquarters for the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, at least to start. I am just retiring from being a pastor. I hope people don’t misunderstand that retirement means we can do whatever we want – relax, go on vacation, travel, or whatever. We, the missionaries of Sacred Heart, our religious community adopted the policy that when retire – we could actually retire at 65 – what it means for us is that from that that point on you do what you can, where you can, and when you can. It depends on your ability to continue and you have many more choices and options. We don’t just sit around waiting to die.

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