Lenten Taizé Prayers

Greetings Taizé friends! As you journey in Lent, enjoy an excerpt from Br. Matthew’s annual letter 2026, the subject of which is “What are you seeking?” See below for upcoming prayers around the state.

“Seeking a direction”

“Silence makes true discernment possible. When we are seeking which direction to take, silence allows us to listen to what is deepest in us. We also need an inner freedom so that we can make a responsible choice. Such freedom involves accepting our limits, but without being afraid: fear is never a good counsellor, and God never forces our hearts.

Everyone is seeking both a sense of belonging and some form of security. And as we seek an authentic way of living, sometimes it is other people who can help us find who we really are. Through others we may be surprised to discover something that we could not have found alone.

In John’s Gospel, two young people are staying in the Jordan valley with their teacher, John the Baptist, whom they trust. Not wanting to keep them for himself, he points them towards another, to Jesus. And they leave to go after him.

When Jesus sees them, he asks, “What are you seeking?” When they reply, “Master, where do you live?” he tells them, “Come and you will see”.*

Those two questions sum up the process of seeking and discovering a direction for a life with Christ. Starting with our own desires, with expressions of our longing for greater life – “What are you seeking?” – we go on to confront them with the person of Jesus – “Master, where do you live?”

The Jesus who invites us to “Come and see” is gentle and humble of heart, and he loves us with a love that is unconditional, secure and unfailing. Will I dare to respond to his invitation despite my hesitations and even my doubts?

Christ Jesus, show me the way and make me ready to follow it.*

Who are the people who point me towards Christ? Spend a moment giving thanks for them.

REGULAR PRAYERS AROUND GEORGIA

THIS THURSDAY, March 12, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., St. Thomas More Catholic Church, 636 W. Ponce de Leon Ave. Decatur, GA 30030. Prayers in Advent and Lent. Tea and cookies following! Park in front of the church for easy access.

March 16th, Third Mondays, 8:00  p.m.Cathedral of Saint Philip, 2744 Peachtree Road, Atlanta, GA. https://www.stphilipscathedral.org. Labyrinth walk in Atrium 7:00-8:00.

March 22, Fourth Sundays, March 22, 10:00 a.m.Atlanta Mennonite Church, 1088 Bouldercrest Dr SE, Atlanta, GA. https://atlmenno.org. Sunday worship on Fourth Sundays is always a Taizé service.

March 24, Fourth Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m., Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church, 471 Mt. Vernon Highway NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328. Labyrinth available during prayer.

April 1, First Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m., St. John Lutheran Church, Griffin. 1689 Martin Luther King Jr Pkwy, Griffin, GA 30224. (Contact Larry Boudon, larryboudon@gmail.com).

Weekly on Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m. On ZoomColumbia Presbyterian Church. Zoom link: https://cpcdecatur.com/online-worship-links. With recorded music.

Weekly on Wednesdays, 5:30 – 6:00 p.m., Vineville United Methodist Church, 2045 Vineville Avenue, Maconhttps://vinevillemethodist.com/taize/ Communion service.

See also the Taizé Atlanta Facebook page for prayer listings and other stories. Apologies for gaps in communication!

Advent Taizé Prayers

Greetings Taizé friends! As we enter the new year, enjoy an excerpt from Br. Matthew’s annual letter 2025, the subject of which is “Hope Beyond All Hope”. See below for upcoming prayers in Advent around the state.

“Striving for Hope”

“How do we react when our plans are frustrated and our hopes are dashed? Jesus gives us a key to how we can remain people of hope. Faced with a large crowd of hungry people, he “had compassion” on them, literally “his heart went out”1  to them. And he found a way to satisfy their needs.”

“That refusal to resign ourselves to situations of distress allows hope to take shape within us. It is the opposite of waiting passively, it involves a struggle 2, there is no other way. Even our very longing for hope can lead us across the threshold from what is humanly possible to what is possible for God.”

“The hope given with Christ grants us a foretaste of what is to come about in fullness in God’s future. It is like a ship’s anchor3. It holds us firm when the storm is raging. It allows us to live out little signs of our faithfulness to the calling we have received and to the people entrusted to us. It is also like a helmet 4, protecting us from the adversity that can rain down upon us.”

“The Rule of Taizé speaks of never resigning ourselves ‘to the scandal of the separation of Christians who so readily profess love for their neighbor and yet remain divided’. For Brother Roger the unity of Christians5 was never simply a goal in itself, but a way to lead towards peace within the human family6.”

“The humble boxwood bushes around Taizé, though ravaged twice by parasites these past years, are suddenly springing to life again. From what was apparently dead, fresh sprigs grow as grey turns to green. Nature fights to survive, mirroring and encouraging our own fight to hope. Hope for creation7, and hope provided by God’s good creation, go together with hope for humanity8.”

Upcoming prayers around the state:

November 23, 10:00 a.m., Fourth Sundays, Atlanta Mennonite Church, 1088 Bouldercrest Dr SE, Atlanta, GA. https://atlmenno.org. Sunday worship is a fully Taizé service. None on 12/28.

November 17, December 15, Third Mondays, 8:00  p.m.Cathedral of Saint Philip, 2744 Peachtree Road, Atlanta, GA. https://www.stphilipscathedral.org. Labyrinth walk in Atrium 7:00-8:00. December prayer followed by a lovely Christmas reception!

November 18, December 16, (normally) Fourth Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m., Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church, 471 Mt. Vernon Highway NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328. Labyrinth available during prayer.

December 3, First Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m., St. John Lutheran Church, Griffin. 1689 Martin Luther King Jr Pkwy, Griffin, GA 30224. (Contact Larry Boudon, larryboudon@gmail.com). None in January.

December 4, St. Thomas More Catholic Church, 636 W. Ponce de Leon Ave. Decatur, GA 30030. Prayers in Advent and Lent. Tea and cookies following! Parking on the street.

Weekly on Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m. On ZoomColumbia Presbyterian Church. Zoom link: https://cpcdecatur.com/online-worship-links. Recorded music.

Weekly on Wednesdays, 5:30 – 6:00 p.m., Vineville United Methodist Church, 2045 Vineville Avenue, Maconhttps://vinevillemethodist.com/taize/ Communion service.

See also the Taizé Atlanta Facebook page for prayer listings and other stories. Apologies for gaps in communication!

Endnotes:

  1. The Greek verb σπλαγχνίζομαι (splanchnizomai) is very strong emotionally. It indicates a warm, compassionate response to need. It is difficult to translate: compassion, pity, sympathy, all convey something of it. But “his heart went out to them” perhaps expresses more fully the gut reaction that the verb implies. In Matthew (see 14:14, 15:32, 18:27, 20:34), the verb does not just refer to an emotion or feeling, but designates also a practical response which meets the need. In this case, Jesus heals the sick and will then feed the crowd. Emotion results in caring and effective action. The verb contains the Gospel in a nutshell. ↩︎
  2. 1 Tim 4:10 “For to this end we toil and struggle, because we have our hope set on the living God, who is the Saviour of all people, especially of those who believe.” ↩︎
  3. Hebrews 6:19 ↩︎
  4. 1 Thessalonians 5:8 ↩︎
  5. The Synod on Synodality has enabled the Catholic Church to recognise and value the diversity which already exists within herself. The role of the delegates from other Churches in this Synod was important. Does this not give a new hope for the ecumenical vocation on the path towards the unity of all who love Christ? ↩︎
  6. Taizé was founded during a time of war. The “parable of communion” that we strive to live as brothers of different Churches, countries, cultures and ages needs constant care in order to be a sign of hope in the face of divisions in the human family. ↩︎
  7. Romans 8:21-23 ↩︎
  8. Faced with the challenge of climate change and the loss of biodiversity, how can we deepen the care for our common home where everything is linked? ↩︎

November and December Taizé Prayers in Atlanta

Every Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. Taizé Zoom prayer, Columbia Presbyterian Church, 711 South Columbia Drive, Decatur, 30030.  https://cpcdecatur.com/online-worship-links/

Monday, November 20, and December 18, 8:00  p.m.Cathedral of Saint Philip, 2744 Peachtree Road, Atlanta, GA. There is a monthly labyrinth walk from 7:00-8:00 before the prayer. An introduction to how to walk the labyrinth is at 6:30. Third Mondays.

Tuesday, November 28, and December 19, 7:00 p.m., Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church, 471 Mt. Vernon Highway NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328. Labyrinth available during prayer. Fourth Tuesdays.

Thursday, December 14, 7:30 PM, St. Thomas More Catholic Church, 636 W. Ponce de Leon, Decatur, 30030. Parking along the street in front of the church. Tea and cookies following. Quarterly prayer.

Thanksgiving Blessings in the next week and blessings on your Advent preparations! Thank you for subscribing to this newsletter and please forward it to anyone who might want to know about the prayers.

If you are interested in the various books and music books by and about the Taizé Community, you can scan the variety available in the US at this link. This will provide links to the publishers and sources here in the US and Canada.

For Taizé related gifts, visit their Web Shop here. You can buy icons, posters, prayer benches, soap, cookies and gift boxes made by the Community, among other things. The Taizé brothers created a board game based on the lives of the desert fathers and mothers called Trellis. Try it out and report back!

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