Luthern Campus Ministry at UNM and TVI held a Taize service every week during the 2000-01 school year at 1805 Las Lomas Rd NE. Call 242-0607 for more information. Everyone is welcome! |
Taize is ecumentical protestant monastery
in France. Every week during the summer, Taize hosts 2500 to 6000 visitors,
primarily young people. Most of these visitors attend the three hourlong
services, periods of work, and Bible studies held daily. After the
evening service that ends at 9:30, many stay and sing for hours, well past
midnight.
Brother Jean-Marie, a native New Yorker in his 40's, was interviewed recently.
He spoke about the singing and silence
that constitute the prayer at Taize:
We call the prayer at Taize "common prayer," not the "office," which
suggests a work of obligation: "We do our office." "We do what we
ought to do." That doesn't correspond to the way we experience prayer
in our lives. To say prayer is "common" is to say that it brings
us together. Of course, each member of the community tries to find
time for personal prayer. But prayer in the church brings us all
together.
A lot of people say "Well, God is close to you anywhere." Of course, a
Christian prayes on his own. But prayer brings us together. And a certain
attention given to God will have an effect on the way we are with others. If
God really is communion-Father, Son, Holy Spirit-then the same communion will
have some bearing on the life we live with others.
Prayer in a Christian sense is an attentiveness to God that also makes us
attentive to others. It is not just a question of a personal discipline.
Sometimes you hear people say "I've got to find more quiet time in my life.
Every morning I'm going to take half an hour for silence." I'm not against
that and would not discourage it. But it's important to come together to pray
and for prayer to have an effect on our lives.
We can't help but try to look at prayer from the perspective of our
visitors. It's a bit of a plunge for most people to come here and spend
seven days praying three times a day. It might seem pretentious to say we
live plunged in prayer. But after a while praying three times a day becomes
something natural.
Not that it's always so incredible meanful. As with anything you do, every
day, you have your own high or low moments. But we would like to help people
find that there is something natural in prayer, something a little bit like
breathing, like eating. Not that prayer is a need the way eating is a need,
but we all need to find some way that God becomes - and faith becomes - a
natural element of life.
People come to Taize from different backgrounds and speak different
languages. With all that diversity, prayer has to be simple in the sense of
being whole, not made up of lots of details. But also simple in the sense
that everybody finds something to take away and chew on. We talk about that
a lot. There is a constant quest for prayer, the constant need to ask
ourselves, "What really helps us?" whether in the choice of music or in the
choice of readings.
For example, on Saturdays for a while we were using candles to celebrate the
resurrection. Then one Saturday things got a little bit out of control.
There was a group that started waving the candles - the music we were
singing was very joyous - and then the whole church started moving the
candles around. It was very emotional, but was also dangerous. We took this
into account on the next Saturday. When it was time to light the candles, we
used music that was a little bit calmer and saved the songs that were more
open and joyful for later once people got used to the candles.
Besides needing to address the issue of safety, we didn't want to push the
service to a religious high. That's one of the things we want to avoid.
Given that there are four or five thousand young people here for an intense
week, we want to be sure their experience is close to the ground and is
something that will not just be put in the category of an unrealistic dream.
We don't want them to say, "At Taize we could pray, but when we go back home
we can't."
So we constantly need to be thinking about what can be changed and what
little details have to be taken into account. These are questions for us in
the community too. Day after day, week after week, year after year we need new
elements, new songs, things that renew our prayer.
There's really very little of a "Taize model" for prayer. There are elements
that we feel are very important. Prayer is meditative. It's scriptural. It's
christocentric. It's prayer in the Spirit. It's trinitarian. It's
God-centered. But the form of prayer needs to be changed in response to the
needs of the people.
At the same time, it can be a big help for people to see that there is a
structure to prayer: the Psalms at the beginning, scriptures, prayer
intentions, the Lord's Prayer, a blessing. It is a traditional structure
based on the ancient Christian prayer of the hours.
And we found over the years that singing and silence are two fundamentals of
prayer. It's not that spoken prayer is unimportant but the spoken word can
be a little bit cerebral. There's a fullness to sung prayer, an element of
wholeness.
It's impossible to imagine a time of prayer at Taize without that long
moment of silence in the middle. It's a time of listening, a time to leave
things before God, a time be before God, to have one's soul open for God.
Sometimes we hear people say that in the silence they feel a freedom with
God that's an important element. A lot of people don't experience the
freedom God gives. And a lot of adolescents don't experience going to church
as an act of freedom.
I don't want to sound as though we've gotten everyone's opinion, but the
overwhelming majority seem to say that they get something from our practice
of prayer. When you ask people at the end of the week what they most
appreciated, what's been most important for them they usually say it's
prayer...
We encounter all kinds of concerns. For believing �hristians, God can become
one shelf on a vast wall covered with shelves. One compartment within a life
made up of many things, the ability to stop is important, to let things rest
before God.
Copyright 2001 Christian Century Foundation.
Reproduced by permission from the March 21-28, 2001
issue of the Christian Century. Subscriptions:
$42/yr. (36 issues), from P.O. Box 378, Mt. Morris,
IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097
Visit the Taize web site.