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What
is Taizé Prayer?
Taizé is a meditative prayer service that incorporates
simple, repetitive song and chant, scripture readings, and periods
of group silence in a setting of peace and soft light that fosters
communion with God. Through Taizé, participants can worship
in a community setting, yet remain open to the voice of God and
discover the prayer within themselves.
Christians of
all traditions share in this ecumenical form of prayer.
Taizé Prayer
is meditative common prayer. Gathered in the presence of Christ,
we sing uncomplicated repetitive songs, uncluttered by too many
words, allowing the mystery of God to become tangible through
the beauty of simplicity.
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Worship
in the Spirit of Taizé
People are handed a bulletin and a candle as they come in the
door, where they gather quietly in the gently lit worship
space. At the front, a few lighted candles sit amongst Christian
symbols or icons. People sit during the first few songs, which
usually are sung in English, but may also be in Latin, French,
or Spanish. These are songs of adoration praise or petition to
the Lord. Two or three different songs are sung to begin. Then
all stand, and a few (usually the children) come to the front
to light their candles. They then walk to the first rows, sharing
their light with the person on the end, who turns to his neighbor,
and shares the light.
When all the candles are lit, the cantor utters a few words
of prayer, and everyone raises their candles and sings "Alleluia" with
the cantor.
A Scripture reading follows. And, as the people sing gently
again, each person comes to the front to stand their candle in
a pot filled with sand, and then return to their place. When
all have surrendered their candle, quietness descends, and the
people sit in silent prayer for ten minutes.
The cantor ends the silence by beginning a song, which everyone
sings. A time for prayer for those near, and those far away,
and for all the things that are on our hearts follows, with all
the people joining in with "Kyrie eleison." This time
of prayer is ended with the people joining hands and praying
the Lord's prayer together.
A final hymn ends the service, and everyone is invited to
share the Lord's peace with their neighbor.
Taizé Beginnings
Taizé Prayer is an ecumenical form of prayer modeled
after an international, ecumenical community founded in the 1940's
by Br. Roger in Taizé, France.
At the heart of daily life in Taizé are three times
of prayer together. Since the late 1950s, many thousands of young
adults from many countries have found their way to Taizé to
take part in weekly meetings of prayer and reflection.
Everything began in great solitude. In 1940, at the age of
25, Brother Roger left his native Switzerland in order to live
in France, the country of his mother. For several years he had
borne within him a calling to begin a community where reconciliation
between Christians would be lived out in daily life. A community
where "kindness of heart would be a matter of practical
experience, and where love would be at the heart of all things."
He wanted this community to be present in the midst of the
suffering of the time, and thus it was that he made his home
in the small village of Taizé, in Burgundy, just a few
miles from the demarcation line which cut France in two during
the first years of the war. There he was able to hide refugees
(Jews in particular) who had fled the occupied zone in the knowledge
that they could find refuge in his house.
After the war he was joined by others, and on Easter Day,
1949, the first brothers of the community made their commitment
to a life in celibacy, to community of possessions, and to simplicity
of life.
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During a long silent retreat in the winter of 1952-3,
Brother Roger wrote "The Rule of Taizé" which
expressed the "things necessary for living in community."
Today the Taizé Community is made up of over
a hundred brothers, Catholics and from various Protestant backgrounds,
coming from more than twenty-five nations. The community's existence
is in itself a sign of reconciliation between divided Christians
and divided nations. The brothers are committed for their whole
life to material and spiritual sharing, to celibacy, and to a
great simplicity of life.
The above information was adapted from the Taizé Community's
website at http://www.taize.fr/en. |
| Right at the depth of the human condition, lies the longing
for a presence, the silent desire for a communion. Let us never
forget that this simple desire for God is already the beginning
of faith. |
. . . .Brother Roger
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