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An abyss of charity.


Last August the world lost one of its foremost ecumenists and spiritual leaders. Br. Roger Schutz, founder and prior of the ecumenical religious community of Taize in Eastern France, was stabbed to death by a Romanian woman suffering from schizophrenia.

It happened during an evening prayer service in the presence of thirty-five hundred people, most of them young pilgrims who had come from around the world to spend a week in prayer and reflection. Br. Roger had celebrated his ninetieth birthday in May.

Born in Switzerland, the youngest of nine children, Schutz grew up in a devout de·vout  
adj. de·vout·er, de·vout·est
1. Devoted to religion or to the fulfillment of religious obligations. See Synonyms at religious.

2. Displaying reverence or piety.

3.
 Calvinist family. At the age of twenty-five, he and three other young Swiss Protestants traveled to Cluny in France to live as monks in their own religious tradition. They chose Cluny because it had been the site of one of the largest Benedictine monasteries A Benedictine monastery is a monastery that follows the Rule of St Benedict on monastic living, written by the founder of western monasticism Saint Benedict of Nursia/Italy (fl. 6th century). The Benedictine Order has been active since that time. . In its heyday Cluny was home to more than one thousand monks. Over time, the community diminished in size until it died out more than four hundred years Four Hundred Years was a melodic screamo band from Richmond, VA. Although they were only together for just over two years, the band produced two full-length releases and a compilation of singles on Lovitt Records.  ago. Today one can visit only its ruins.

While at Cluny, Schutz learned that a woman in Taize, a village five miles away, wanted to sell her farm. He and his fellow monks decided to buy it, and moved there to live a common life of work and prayer. The farm was located near the demarcation line that divided occupied and unoccupied France during World War II. In the early years of the war the brothers helped Jews fleeing Nazi persecution escape to Switzerland. The Nazis eventually found out, and the monks were expelled from France.

After the war the brothers, now seven in number, returned to Taize and to their charitable work. (In those years they assisted children orphaned by the war.) Over time the community attracted more and more men. In 1963, a group of Germans offered to build a large church in Taize, in atonement atonement, the reconciliation, or "at-one-ment," of sinful humanity with God. In Judaism both the Bible and rabbinical thought reflect the belief that God's chosen people must be pure to remain in communion with God.  for the atrocities committed in that region by the Nazis. Though the brothers saw no practical reason for a larger building, they accepted the offer. In honor of their commitment to Christian unity, they called the new sanctuary the Church of the Reconciliation. Ironically, the new church would eventually become too small to receive Taize's growing number of pilgrims.

In 1966 so many people poured into Taize for the Easter service that the community decided to break down the rear walls of the church. About ten years ago, as people from former Communist countries like Poland began flocking to Taize, the church was enlarged to three times its original size. Under Schutz's leadership the community attracted millions of young pilgrims from all over the world.

The first Roman Catholic joined Taize in 1966. Br. Guilain, a Belgian physician, was sponsored by Cardinal Gabriel Marty, the archbishop of Paris The archbishop of Paris is one of twenty-three archbishops in France. The original diocese is traditionally thought to have been created in the 3rd century by St. Denis and corresponded with the Civitas Parisiorum, and it was elevated to an archdiocese on October 20, 1622. . Since then, more and more Roman Catholics have joined. Today, fifty-five of the approximately one hundred monks are Catholic.

The new prior is Br. Alois Leser, a fifty-one-year-old German Catholic. The community will continue to pray for Christian unity and live according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the "Rule of Taize," which Schutz composed during a long retreat in the early 1950s. The rule emphasizes the importance of living simply: "Throughout your day let work and rest be quickened by the word of God. Maintain interior silence in all things in order to dwell in to abide in (a place); hence, to depend on.

See also: Dwell
 Christ. Be filled by the spirit of the Beatitudes Beatitudes (bē-ăt`ĭtdz') [Lat.,=blessing], in the Gospel of St. Matthew, eight blessings uttered by Jesus at the opening of the Sermon on the Mount. , joy, simplicity, mercy."

Having visited Taize many times since 1971, I had the privilege of knowing Br. Roger and the community rather well. The prayers he composed for each service were profound meditations on the Holy Spirit. In one of them he wrote, "Christ transfigures the 'no' that is in me day after day into [a] 'yes.'" The truth of these words was apparent in the days following Br. Roger's death: the other monks declined to condemn his killer, instead offering forgiveness. Their hearts were transformed by Christ. It is no wonder that the community of Taize has been called un abime de charite--an abyss of charity.

Even though Br. Roger Schutz is gone, his spirit lives in the community he founded. Death does not have the last word. Schutz will experience the joy of the risen Lord in the mystery of death and new life so appropriately sung in the hymns of Taize: "Darkness is not darkness in your presence, O Lord / The night like the day is full of light."

The Most Reverend Most Reverend
Noun

(in Britain) a courtesy title applied to archbishops
 Peter A. Rosazza is an auxiliary bishop

Main article: Bishop (Catholic Church)
An auxiliary bishop, in the Roman Catholic Church, is an additional bishop assigned to a diocese because the diocesan bishop is unable to perform his functions, the diocese is so extensive that it
 in the archdiocese arch·di·o·cese  
n.
The district under an archbishop's jurisdiction.



archdi·oc
 of Hartford, Connecticut “Hartford” redirects here. For other uses, see Hartford (disambiguation).

Hartford is the capital of the State of Connecticut. It is located in Hartford County on the Connecticut River, north of the center of the state.
.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Roger Schutz
Author:Rosazza, Peter A.
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Obituary
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Jan 13, 2006
Words:753
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