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Taizé to be held at St. Paul’s Episcopal
A candlelight service of prayer, meditation and song

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Oaks, PA will be hosting a Taizé service at 7:00 pm on Wednesday, September 18th. We welcome all to attend this peaceful, candlelit service in our 152-year-old church on Black Rock Road. Not familiar with Taizé? Here is a bit of the history of Taizé.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Oaks, PA will be hosting a Taizé service at 7:00 pm on Wednesday, September 18th.
We welcome all to attend this peaceful, candlelit service in our 152-year-old church on Black Rock Road. Not familiar with Taizé? Here is a bit of the history of Taizé.
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Taizé is a little village in the south of Burgundy, France where, in 1940, Brother Roger Schütz founded an ecumenical Christian community devoted to prayer and living a parable of reconciliation within the Church and the human family. The Taizé Community is made up of brothers from all the continents and major denominations who gather three times a day, seven days a week, throughout the year, to pray. The Community’s group prayer services have drawn thousands of pilgrims from around the world each year, many of whom are young people.
The unique style of the Taizé Community’s worship—the essence of which is directness and simplicity—has been developed upon Brother Roger’s assertion that there was too much speaking in worship. In place of complicated liturgy and sermons, therefore, Taizé worship emphasizes the immediacy of sensory experience to draw one into God’s presence, using visual symbolism (candles, icons), singing, short readings from the Bible, and periods of silence.
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The characteristic repetition that marks Taizé chant is not a new phenomenon nor unique to Taizé. The use of repetitive prayers is a long-attested reality in the history of Christian spirituality and liturgy (for example, in various litanies, the Rosary, and the “Jesus Prayer” of the Eastern Orthodox church). What is unique to the prayer of Taizé is the adaptation of the repetitive form to simple musical lines and core biblical texts that can be sung by a whole assembly of various nationalities, languages, and denominations. The assembly is to immerse itself in the simple but profound harmonies and let itself be carried by this sung prayer.
Silence is perhaps the second most important aspect of this particular prayer practice. Rather than incorporating many short silences, Taizé worship has one central period of silence that is the culmination of the preceding songs, psalmody, and readings. Maintaining silence is not a technique or method enabling some special communication with God. It is simply holding oneself in a presence and letting Christ, through the Holy Spirit, pray in us.
For directions and more information, call the church office at 610-650-9336 or see our website www.stpaulsoaks.org..