Ebook
When the definitive history of Christianity in the twentieth century is written, one of the key figures will certainly be that of Roger Schutz-Marsauche (1915-2005), known as Brother Roger, the founder and first prior of the Taize Community in France. Taize is familiar to many across the world for its music and contemplative style of worship, and as a place where tens of thousands of young Christians flock each year to spend a time of prayer and reflection. What is less well-known is the underlying reality that makes all this possible: a monastic community of brothers from over twenty-five different countries and different Christian traditions striving to live as a "parable of community," a sign of unity in the midst of divided Christians and a world torn apart. This first volume of Brother Roger's journals covers the years from his arrival in Taize during World War II to the turbulent 1960s, when young adults began making their way to the hill of Taize in their searching. These collected insights, reflections, and accounts of personal encounters and current events offer what is perhaps the best portrait of the founder of Taize. They bring to light key aspects of the community which continues to attempt to put into practice the vision that inspired him.
“I knew Brother Roger personally for a long time, and I had a
relationship of warm friendship with him. He had often visited me,
and, as I said in Rome, the day of his death I had received a
letter from him that went directly to my heart. . . . I
think that we should listen to him, listen from within to the
ecumenism that he lived out spiritually, and allow ourselves to he
led by his witness towards an ecumenism that is truly inward and
spiritual.”
—Pope Benedict XVI
“Very few people in a generation manage to change the whole climate
of a religious culture; but Brother Roger did just this.
. . . He changed the image of Christianity itself for
countless young people. . . . His authority was
authentically monastic—the authority of a father and elder brother
in God who drew his vision from patient waiting on the Lord in
prayer, and from the work and study and discernment of a committed
community.”
—Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury
“The vision of peace and reconciliation in ‘God’s today’ which
guided Brother Roger’s commitment and that of the community he
founded has been a source of inspiration and spiritual renewal for
generations of young people, in Europe and throughout the world.
Under his spiritual leadership, the Taizé Community has offered a
model of how the praise of God is integrally linked to solidarity
with the least fortunate. For many of us, Brother Roger incarnated
the hope that the Christian faith can bring to the world.”
—Geneviève Jacques, former Secretary General, World Council of
Churches, Switzerland
“Brother Roger was known throughout the whole world. Man of
inspired words, man of prayer, zealous worker in the fields of
Christ—his untiring search to establish relationships of peace and
love among Christians and his commitment to transmitting the
Christian ideal to the youth of Europe earned him universal
respect.”
—Alexy II (1929–2008), first Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia in
the post-Soviet period
“When I came in mission to Estonia after the terrible years of
communism, I understood what Brother Roger meant by the ‘power of
the provisional,’ which leaves all the room to God and God alone. I
shall ever be grateful to him for that. . . . He was
called Roger and his name, everywhere it was pronounced, sang the
consoling tenderness and freshness of God for all who were in pain
and suffering.”
—Metropolitan Stephanos of Tallin, Primate of the Orthodox Church
of Estonia
“Brother Roger came twice to Dresden for a prayer with young people
and he stayed at my home. The Kreuzkirche was filled to
overflowing, and other churches too. It was a profound moment of
hope for many young people, right in the midst of the era of the
German Democratic Republic. His spiritual openness to the will of
God and God’s commandments also remains unforgettable.
. . . What a life in the footsteps of Christ!”
—Johannes Hempel (1929–2020), Lutheran Bishop of Dresden during the
time of Communism
“Brother Roger was a good friend and brother to our Mother, Mother
Teresa; to our late Holy Father, Pope John Paul II; to the young;
and to all regardless of religion, race, nationality, or social
status. He has left behind thousands of friends on earth and will
surely be welcomed by a host of friends in heaven.”
—Sister M. Nirmala (1924–2015), successor to Mother Teresa as
Superior General, Missionaries of Charity, Kolkata, India
“For me, Brother Roger was one of the spiritual pillars of Europe
in its movement towards unity.”
—Vaclav Havel (1936–2011), former President of the Czech
Republic
“Following the finest traditions of the faith that sustained him,
Brother Roger consecrated his life to the service of peace,
dialogue, and reconciliation. He became the untiring advocate of
the values of respect, of tolerance, and of solidarity, in
particular toward the young. His message of hope and of trust will
remain a source of inspiration for all.”
—Kofi Annan (1938–2018), former Secretary General of the United
Nations