Saturday, August 14, 2027
Proper 14
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Eleventh Sunday after Trinity
O God, the strength of all who put their trust in you: Mercifully accept our prayers, and because, through the weakness of our mortal nature, we can do no good thing without you, grant us the help of your grace to keep your commandments, that we may please you in will and deed; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
The Eleventh Sunday after Trinity
Monk of Taizé and Ecumenist
Ecumenical Commemoration
Brother Roger Schutz (1915-2005) was a Swiss Reformed pastor who founded the Taizé Community in a poor village of Burgundy in 1940, first as a wartime refuge and then as a monastic community for a divided church. Its simple sung prayer and its welcome drew young pilgrims by the hundred thousand from every tradition. He gave his life to the hope that Christians might be one, and died, at ninety, stabbed by a disturbed woman during the community's evening prayer.
Roger Louis Schutz-Marsauche was born on May 12, 1915, in Arnex-sur-Nyon, Switzerland, to a French Reformed pastoral family. Educated in theology, he was deeply moved by the spiritual devastation of the Second World War and convicted of the tragedy of Christian division. In 1940, at age 25, he settled in the small village of Taizé in Burgundy, France (then under Nazi occupation), where he purchased a small house and began a monastic community dedicated to prayer, hospitality, and Christian unity. The community initially sheltered Jewish refugees during the occupation. After the war, Brother Roger established the Rule of Taizé, a simple monastic Rule open to men of different Christian traditions (Reformed, Catholic, Orthodox). The community grew rapidly, developing a distinctive form of contemplative worship featuring simple melismatic chants, extended periods of silence, and communal prayer. Beginning in the 1960s, Taizé became an international pilgrimage center for youth, attracting hundreds of thousands of young people seeking spiritual formation and ecumenical experience. Brother Roger emphasized prayer as the path to unity, famously stating 'Come and see.' He published numerous devotional works and journals reflecting on prayer, community, and reconciliation. In 2005, while presiding over evening prayers, an attacker, later identified as a disturbed individual, approached him from behind and fatally stabbed him. He died on August 16, 2005. The manner of his death—while kneeling in prayer with his community—became a final eloquent testimony to his lifelong commitment to faith and intercession. The Taizé Community continues his legacy, welcoming tens of thousands of pilgrims annually.
Brother Roger is venerated in ecumenical circles as a prophet of Christian unity, contemplative spirituality, and youth ministry. The Taizé Community stands as his primary legacy—a thriving international monastic community that has shaped generations of Christian youth through its distinctive synthesis of liturgical worship, silence, and ecumenical hospitality. Taizé chants have become globally recognized vehicles of Christian prayer, uniting people across language and denominational boundaries. His death during prayer is interpreted by many as a final witness to his lifelong conviction that prayer is the foundation of Christian reconciliation. Brother Roger exemplifies the ecumenical movement's deepest aspirations: visible unity grounded in common worship and shared faith in Christ.