Ecumenical Prayer and Reflection
Taizé in Hollywood
After a successful trial during Lent and Holy Week 2010, we continue to offer an experience in contemplative prayer grounded in the tradition of Taizé, Brief services of prayer and music are held on Thursday evenings at 7:00, and last about 30-35 minutes. > Come at 6:00 p.m. for an informal Soup Supper. (There is no charge, but freewill offerings are always welcome!)

The worship life of Taizé is perhaps best known for its music, which is contemporary, simple and straightforward, and can be learned simply by singing along. A Taizé service also includes a period of silence for contemplation. There is no sermon, or other formal elements as in a Sunday morning liturgical service.
Taizé in Hollywood is not a "Lutheran" service, but an ecumenical experience that includes people from different Christian denominational backgrounds. You do not need to be a member of any church to participate or to appreciate the beauty and mystery of Taizé.
We are looking for musicians, amateur or not, who can play flute, guitar, keyboard, or other instruments to lead Taizé songs.
If you would like to be notified of our Taizé program, please send an e-mail to taize@hollywoodlutheran.org and put "Taize" in the subject line.
About the Community of Taizé and our own Community
Taizé is a small village in France near Cluny. The ecumenical community of Taizé was founded in 1940 by a Swiss man, Brother Roger, who was of Catholic and Lutheran roots; his father was a pastor. During World War II, with the help of his sister and other friends, they practiced a ministry of hospitality for anyone fleeing the terrors of war. Taizé was very near the demarcation line which divided France under Nazi power. Before long, friends in Lyon were simply giving the address of Taizé to all who needed refuge.
Their desire was to create a community of hospitality and trust for people from all over the world, and particularly a place of refuge for those from Eastern Europe.” Taizé is truly ecumenical and European because it has refused to be limited by the labels of the past. Brother Roger thought that Taizé’s mission or vocation was to be a “parable of community,” a small but visible sign of reconciliation.
I am mindful that this is how our community is growing. Whether we realize it or not, we are a small community near the demarcation lines of various conflicts, struggles and even culture war. We are practicing a ministry of hospitality and trust. We are a Reconciling in Christ congregation. And —although we are a Lutheran church— in another sense we are neither Protestant nor Catholic but a little of both, because we offer compassion, food, spiritual nourishment, refuge, and a place where anyone seeking God may be at peace.
As a community, we are neither black nor white, gay nor straight; not rich or poor, although our community has individuals who fit those labels. Our purpose is to reflect the will of God and the mission of Jesus for whoever comes here.
Brother Roger continued to serve as the prior of the community from 1944 for more than six decades until his death a few years ago as a martyr. At the age of 90, he was murdered by a mentally ill woman who attacked him with a knife. Brother Roger wrote some 14 books, and co-authored 3 more with Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Today, May 12, is the birthday of Brother Roger, who was born in 1915.
The Taizé Community today has more than 100 brothers from Catholic and Protestant backgrounds and from more than 25 countries, who live in community. Since the 1950’s, young people have been visiting Taizé from all over the world. Some weeks, there are as many as 7,000 gathered from 70 nations. Taizé has become a model of ecumenical spirit, Christian renewal, prayerful contemplation and service. All over the world, churches of different denominations hold Taizé prayer services including silent meditation and its simple music.
Prayer by Brother Alois. On Easter morning 2009, Brother Alois offered this prayer in the Church of Reconciliation in the presence of the brothers and thousands of visitors.
Risen Jesus, like Mary of Magdala, who on Easter morning stayed close to the tomb, we say to God our expectations, our unresolved questions, and sometimes our helplessness. You, the Risen One, you come towards us humbly and call us by our own name.
To each one of us you say, "Go towards those who have been entrusted to you. Tell them that I am risen. Pass on my love by your life."
And as we communicate the mystery of your resurrection, we understand it more and more; it can transform our lives.
So I believe that if we move with commitment toward those who are given to us, and entrusted to us, it will transform our life in this community. We must not just talk about faith and love. We must model what we believe God is working in us. We must be the change we believe God asks of us—not only the change within each of us by repentance and faith, but the change within our shared life as love, welcome, hospitality and reconciliation. The stronger our parish community becomes, the more we model Christ’s love within the larger church: not drawing sharp demarcation lines, never turning people away, never tiring of showing compassion and hospitality.
Gracious and holy God, we remember and give you thanks for Brother Roger, who courageously offered hospitality to Protestants, Catholics and Jews alike, and who built a community out of broken dreams and abandoned buildings.
We are mindful of his witness as a brother in Christ that the church, everywhere and in every expression, should model the love and compassion of Jesus, without reservation and without condition. We give thanks for the community of Taizé, and many other expressions of the new order in the church, committed to living out your grace.
Give us this same heart and this same love, to be at peace with you through faith, to be courageous as we follow Jesus where he leads in our community, and to be moved and shaped by the Holy Spirit, who will tell us all we need to understand in order to be genuine and faithful in our times and always. Amen.
—Pr. Dan Hooper
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