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Showing posts with label taize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taize. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 April 2018

Taizé refound, 40 years on…..



Here's a guest post from Rev Hilary Oakley, Associate Priest, St Mary’s Hitchin:

I first visited Taizé in 1970. I was 16, and the Taizé community was just about to enter its heyday, when tens of thousands of young people came to witness this place of reconciliation and share in its life. I was deeply touched by the worship, in the large concrete Church of the Reconciliation, constructed in 1962. It was not so much the spirituality as the participation of people of different traditions, saying the Lord's Prayer next to me in French, Spanish, German or Dutch, and discovering that I too could use their words to praise God in the multi-lingual chants of the Taizé liturgy. My eyes were open to traditions, people and languages beyond my own, and I began to understand the importance of ecumenism, as well as my responsibilities as a European citizen.

In the second week of Easter, I visited Taizé again, after 40 years. The 1960s concrete church was still the same, but larger, with three waves of wooden extension at the west end. Beyond 60 or so adults, there were around 2,000 young people, many German, whose energy and exuberance brought Taizé alive, as it had done 40 years before. The numbers were smaller than I remembered, but the languages were more extensive, and now included Polish, Bulgarian, Swahili, Chinese, reflecting a wider Europe, greater mobility, and our engagement with a bigger world. It was challenging in a number of sometimes contradictory ways. The perspective was wider, the different traditions less important, the variety greater, the numbers smaller.

I came away wondering just how far as a Christian community we can continue to afford the luxury of division, divergence or mutual suspicion, as we struggle to afford to maintain separate buildings and church infrastructures in parallel. Taizé has nudged me to find a renewed enthusiasm for ecumenism, an energy to enable us to address and overcome those challenges that so constrained the previous generation of ecumenists, and lost us the last 40 years. As Taizé founder, Brother Roger, so simply put it: “Make the unity of the Body of Christ your passionate concern.”

Our country is also hugely divided as politicians struggle to find the Holy Grail of a Brexit that suits everybody. Yet on this biggest of all issues facing our national life, we the church have so little to say. Perhaps we just don't want to rock the boat, a stance so alien to the way of Christ. Perhaps we need to refind our commonality of faith and liturgy with our European friends and neighbours. Perhaps while the politicians argue, we should be building bridges across the Channel, a new European Christianity, an integration, a reconciliation. Perhaps we can find a vision of a future where we can speak together, and speak out, about the issues that concern us all.

I think this is a good time for us to refind Taizé and share its vision with our young people, tomorrow’s church and tomorrow’s world, those in whom we need to be investing now. If you would like to take a group pf young people to Taizé this summer, you can make contact directly with Brother Paolo at brpaolo@taize.fr., or else drop me a note at hilaryoakley@hotmail.com, and I will make the contact for you.

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Taizé - Stay With Me.

Friday, 17 March 2017

St Peter’s Chapel Bradwell: Music for the Soul

In Bradwell, Essex, stands a chapel built by Cedd in 654 on a mission to convert people to Christianity. It is the oldest Church still in use in the UK today. Bradwell is a place of pilgrimage as well as a place for quiet and reflection.

During July and August, the evening services at Bradwell-on-Sea are held in St Peter's Chapel, at the place where the land meets the sea and the sky comes close. A place where the distance between heaven and earth is tissue thin. All services start at 6.30 pm.

The theme of this year’s services is Music for the Soul where music flows from heaven to the soul.

JULY

2nd - The Secret Chord with Revd Jonathan Evens and Café Musica and Friends
9th - Evening worship with Lynne Creasy, Harp and Harvey Nightingale, Baritone
16th - Taizé Service
23rd - Evening worship with John Glynn. John is a singer and a songwriter - A former Roman Catholic Priest in the United Kingdom with a talent that spans the world.
30th - Revd Dr. Jenny Williams. Following the Quiet Day on July 29th Jenny will lead our worship reflecting on the words of the Aramaic Lord’s prayer.

AUGUST
6th - Evening Worship with Canon Ivor Moody – Songs for the Soul
13th - Reflective Worship with The Asaph Ensemble with support from the Asaph Christian Trust
20th - A service of Music & Healing with Revd Brigid & Laurie Main
27th - Music for the soul. A celebration of the summer evening services

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Cafe Musica - Time To Think.

Sunday, 29 September 2013

Deanery Taizé Service




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Taizé - Nada Te Turbe.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Taize Service @ St John's

This Sunday St John's Seven Kings is hosting a Taize Service for the Redbridge Deanery. The service begins at 6.30pm and a singing rehearsal will be held earlier at 5.45pm. All are welcome.

The service will include an introduction and short film about Taize plus music and prayers. Information will be available about the Deanery Youth Pilgrimage to Taize in 2014 from 2nd to 11th August. This  is being organised by the Redbridge Deanery Youth Link Group as one of the events celebrating the Centenary of the Diocese of Chelmsford.

Taize is an ecumenical community in France where youth and young adults are welcomed in great numbers from all over the world throughout the year to pray, to worship, to study and above all to share their experience of the Christian faith with one another in community.

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Taize - Adoramus te, o Christe.

Tuesday, 28 August 2012

My Greenbelt 2012 journal (3)



















Sunday 26th August

Instead of the Greenbelt communion I go to St Bartholomew Nympsfield for their Patronal Festival where the 60 strong congregation is made up of locals and retreatants from Erdington at the Marist Retreat Centre in the village. Diana Crook preaches an impactful sermon equating the training and dedication of the Paralympians with that of the disciples, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, St Bartholomew, and ourselves. Jesus’ question to us – ‘Do you want to go?’ is a liberating one. We follow because we choose to and want to. This is a message which I need to hear.

Lila Dance are perplexing – something vigorous and fascinating is happening but, like Mister Jones, I have to confess I don’t know what it is. Peterson Toscana, in line with Jesus’ parables, is deliberately raising more questions than answers. He mixes his own story told as a sequence of prayers with the retelling of several Bible stories. These, while amusing and different, are not as funny or radical as I’d expected from the advance notices and I’m left rather underwhelmed. The session is titled 'Jesus had two daddies' though and that got me thinking about the phrase 'The unorthodox Jesus'. So much of the debate on controversial issues in the Church seems to revolve around different understandings of orthodoxy but Jesus was unorthodox - right from the start, as Toscana noted, growing up in a family set-up that was very far from being a nuclear family. 

I revisit the Gallery and appreciate a little more fully the comic book/strip focus of this show. Leunig is whimsical and wise while Smith is clear and challenging. Green remains opaquely personal while Lia has innocent humour.

Things pick up at mainstage with a great set of sensitive folk songs from Roddy Woomble and a barnstorming set from the Proclaimers. Roddy Woomble’s ‘Work Like You Can’ strikes me as a celebration of ordinary existence, something I need affirmed currently, while the Proclaimers sang:

“Thought that God had failed me
Thought my prayers were useless
Thought that he would never give the chance for me to praise him

Thought the book was written
Thought the game had ended
Thought the song was sung and I could never sing another

Thought my faith was misplaced
Thought my back was broken
Broken by a weight that I was never fit to carry

Thought I knew this city
Thought I knew all about it
And then one night I went to Morningside and you were waiting

I met you.”

Following that inspiration, I experience a measure of peace via the Taize Service and Aradhna in Eden and write the following:

Absence is not void.
Absence fills vacuum with live memory;
a present aching.

Silence is not still.
Silence simply tunes our hearing to other sounds;
noise abounds.

Peace is not passive.
Peace requires active relations,
if hands are to be shaken.

Do not a-void absence.
Hear the sounds of silence.
Actively create peace.

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Roddy Woomble - Work Like You Can.