What is Taizé Prayer?
Taizé Prayer is a contemplative style of Christian worship characterized by the repetition of short meditative chants, extended periods of silence, and scriptural readings. Originating from the ecumenical Taizé Community in Burgundy, France, this practice combines elements of traditional monastic liturgy with accessible, multilingual music designed to facilitate personal contemplation and communal unity across denominational boundaries.
Origins & Lineage
The Taizé Community was founded in 1940 by Brother Roger Schütz, a 25-year-old Reformed Protestant from Switzerland, who settled in the village of Taizé in southeastern France during World War II. Located near the demarcation line dividing occupied France, Brother Roger initially welcomed refugees, especially Jews, into his home. On Easter Day 1949, seven brothers committed themselves together for life in celibacy and to a life together in great simplicity.
The community’s guidelines were formalized in The Rule of Taizé, written by Brother Roger and first published in French in 1954. Today the community comprises about one hundred brothers from Catholic and Protestant traditions, originating from about thirty countries. The community’s musical repertoire was primarily conceived and composed by Jacques Berthier, with later contributions from Joseph Gelineau.
Brother Roger led the community until his murder in 2005 during evening prayers. Taizé has become one of the world’s most important sites of Christian pilgrimage, attracting over 100,000 young people each year.
How It’s Practiced
A typical Taizé prayer service incorporates periods of silence with meditative readings from Scripture, prayers of praise and intercession, and the frequent repetition of simple, contemporary chants based on the Psalms or other parts of Scripture. The music emphasizes simple phrases, usually lines from Psalms or other pieces of Scripture, repeated and sometimes also sung in canon.
A standard service structure includes: 2-3 opening chants to settle the group; a Psalm (sung or read); a short Scripture reading from Gospel or Epistle read slowly; 5-10 minutes of absolute silence; intercessions with sung responses like “Kyrie Eleison”; the Lord’s Prayer spoken or sung together; and closing songs that often continue as people drift away or stay to pray around the cross.
Services are often lit by hundreds of candles symbolizing the light of Christ, with icons (especially the Cross of Taizé) placed centrally as a focal point for the gaze. Songs are sung in many languages to reflect the international and ecumenical nature of the community. The atmosphere is intentionally non-performative—no hymnals are required, no sermons are given.
Taizé Prayer Today
Taizé Prayer is widely practiced today in student centers and retreat houses, and is growing in popularity in parish churches and local congregations throughout the world. Ecumenical services based on this model and music are held in many churches globally. The Taizé Community continues to host week-long international meetings for young adults ages 15-35 at the village in France, with additional meetings held annually in major European cities during the New Year period.
Individuals encounter Taizé through local prayer services held in Catholic, Protestant, Anglican, and Orthodox churches; through recordings available on streaming platforms and the official Taizé website; in university chaplaincies and campus ministry programs; and at dedicated Taizé-style retreats. Small groups of brothers from the community also travel internationally to lead prayer gatherings.
Common Misconceptions
Taizé Prayer is not exclusively Catholic, despite its close association with Catholic liturgy and papal recognition. It remains fundamentally ecumenical, welcoming all Christian denominations. It is not performance music—while the chants are musically sophisticated, their purpose is contemplative rather than aesthetic. The practice is not silent meditation in the Eastern sense; silence is one element interwoven with communal song and spoken prayer.
Taizé is not a denomination or movement seeking members—the community explicitly encourages participants to return to their home churches and local communities rather than forming a separate Taizé “movement.” Finally, while associated with youth pilgrimage, Taizé prayer is practiced by people of all ages; the emphasis on simplicity and accessibility makes it suitable across generations.
How to Begin
To experience Taizé Prayer, search for “Taizé service” or “Taizé prayer” along with your city name to find local offerings, typically held monthly in churches of various denominations. For individual practice, access recordings through the official Taizé website (taize.fr), YouTube, or streaming services like Spotify. Begin with well-known chants such as “Jesus, Remember Me,” “Laudate Omnes Gentes,” or “Stay With Me.”
For those wishing to organize community prayer, consult the practical guidance in Taizé songbooks or the community’s website. Essential elements include a quiet space, candles, a cross or icon, selected chants in a simple order, and willingness to maintain extended silence. The book A Community Called Taizé by Jason Brian Santos provides historical and practical context. For deeper engagement, consider pilgrimage to Taizé itself, where the community welcomes visitors year-round for week-long stays combining prayer, work, and reflection.