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Brother Roger

Roger Schutz (12 May 1915 – 16 August 2005), popularly known as Brother Roger (French: Frère Roger), was a Swiss Christian leader and monastic brother. In 1940 Schutz founded the Taizé Community, an ecumenical monastic community in Burgundy, France, serving as its first prior until his murder in 2005. Towards the end of his life, the Taizé Community was attracting international attention, welcoming thousands of young pilgrims every week, which it has continued to do after his death.


Roger Schutz
Prior of Taizé
Brother Roger Schutz in 1991
Installed1940
Term ended2005
SuccessorBrother Alois
Personal details
Born
Roger Louis Schutz-Marsauche

(1915-05-12)12 May 1915
Died16 August 2005(2005-08-16) (aged 90)
Taizé, Saône-et-Loire, France
NationalitySwiss
DenominationReformed Christianity, later reconciliation with Catholicism
EducationReformed theology
Alma materUniversity of Strasbourg
University of Lausanne

Biography edit

Background and early life edit

Born on 12 May 1915, in Provence, Vaud, Schutz was the ninth and youngest child of Karl Ulrich Schutz, a Protestant pastor from Bachs in the Zürcher Unterland in Switzerland, and his wife, Amélie Henriette Marsauche, a Huguenot from Burgundy, France.

From 1937 to 1940, Schutz-Marsauche studied Reformed theology in Strasbourg and Lausanne, where he was a leader in the Swiss Student Christian Movement, part of the World Student Christian Federation. Falling ill with tuberculosis, during his convalescence he began to feel drawn to a monastic way of life.[1]

Taizé Community edit

 
Schutz at prayer in Taizé, 2004

In 1940, at the start of World War II, Schutz-Marsauche felt called to serve those suffering from the conflict, as his maternal grandmother had done during World War I. He rode a bicycle from Geneva to Taizé, a small town near Mâcon, about 390 kilometres (240 mi) southeast of Paris. The town was then located within unoccupied France, just beyond the line of demarcation from the zone occupied by German troops. He bought an empty house, where for two years he and his sister, Genevieve, hid refugees, both Christian and Jewish, before being forced to leave Taizé, after being tipped off that the Gestapo had become aware of their activities. In 1944, he returned to Taizé to found the Community, initially a small quasi-monastic community of men living together in poverty and obedience, open to all Christians.[1]

Since the late 1950s, many thousands of young adults from many countries have found their way to Taizé to take part in weekly meetings of prayer and reflection. In addition, Taizé brothers make visits and lead meetings, large and small, in Africa, North and South America, Asia, and in Europe, as part of a “pilgrimage of trust on earth”.

The spiritual leader always kept a low profile, rarely giving interviews and refusing to permit any "cult" to grow up around himself. Prior to his death, Brother Roger was due to give up his community functions because of his advanced age and ill-health which had seen him suffer from fatigue and often use a wheelchair.[citation needed]

Brother Roger was a prized author and wrote many books on prayer and reflection, asking young people to be confident in God and committed to their local church community and to humanity. He also wrote books about Christian spirituality and prayer, some together with Mother Teresa with whom he shared a cordial friendship.[2]

Assassination edit

 
Brother Roger's grave in Taizé

Brother Roger was stabbed to death during the evening prayer service in Taizé on August 16, 2005, by a young Romanian woman named Luminița Ruxandra Solcan who was later deemed mentally ill and was stabbed as well in 2011.[3] He was stabbed several times and, though one of the brothers carried him from the church, he died shortly afterward. The assailant was immediately apprehended by members of the congregation and was placed in police custody.

The funeral took place on 23 August 2005. Horst Köhler, the President of Germany, and Nicolas Sarkozy, at that time Minister of the Interior of France, were in attendance. Brother Roger's community and friends attended the liturgy in the vast monastery church at Taizé, while thousands more followed it on a huge screen in fields outside the church. Brother Roger's simple wooden coffin, a wooden icon lying upon it, was carried into the church by members of the community. In a highly unusual move, the funeral was presided over by a Catholic cardinal, Walter Kasper, the president of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, who celebrated the Mass with four priest-brothers of Taizé concelebrating. In his homily he said, "Yes, the springtime of ecumenism has flowered on the hill of Taizé."[4] In reference to Brother Roger's concern for social justice, Cardinal Kasper said "Every form of injustice or neglect made him very sad."[4] Brother Roger's successor, Brother Alois Löser, prayed for forgiveness: "With Christ on the cross we say to you, Father, forgive her, she does not know what she did."[4]

Ecumenism edit

 
Brother Roger with Catholic and Protestant clergy, leaving an ecumenical service in St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, c. 1975.

All his life, Roger devoted himself to reconciling the different Christian denominations. He especially addressed Christian youth. Part of his appeal may have been his dislike of formal preaching, while encouraging a spiritual quest as a common endeavor. During a Taizé gathering in Paris in 1995, he spoke to more than 100,000 young people who were sitting on the floor of an exhibition hall. "We have come here to search", he said, "or to go on searching through silence and prayer, to get in touch with our inner life. Christ always said, 'Do not worry, give yourself'."[5]

Personal life edit

Religious affiliation edit

Although Brother Roger had a Presbyterian (Protestant) background, he received the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist at the Catholic Mass celebrated every morning in his monastery. In addition, he received the sacrament from both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, seemingly in contravention of canonical prohibitions reserving the sacrament exclusively to those in full communion with the Catholic Church.

According to Cardinal Walter Kasper, this was accomplished as though there was a tacit understanding between Brother Roger and the Catholic Church "crossing certain confessional" and canonical barriers through what Brother Roger called a gradual enrichment of his faith with the foundations of the Catholic Church including "the ministry of unity exercised by the bishop of Rome."[6] Brother Roger thus appeared to have undertaken a step without precedent since the Protestant Reformation: entering progressively into full communion with the faith of the Catholic Church possibly without a formal "conversion" that would imply a break with his origins.[citation needed]

In 1980, during a European Meeting in Rome, he said in Saint Peter’s Basilica in the presence of Pope John Paul II:

I have found my own identity as a Christian by reconciling within myself the faith of my origins with the mystery of the Catholic faith, without breaking fellowship with anyone.[6]

Posthumous claims edit

It was reported in the early 2000s that Brother Roger had in fact converted to Catholicism in 1972, when he received his First Communion from the local ordinary, the Bishop of Autun. The journalist reporting claimed to have confirmed this with the Vatican, explaining his unfettered reception of Communion there from the sitting Pope on two different occasions. He reportedly kept his conversion a secret for the sake of the ecumenical mission of Taizé.[7]

Brother Rogers' successor at Taizé, Brother Alois, confirmed that the sacrament occurred but denied that there was a formal conversion, stating that he merely affirmed the Creed.[8] That said, this is the historic mode of conversion, modern requirements notwithstanding.

Successor edit

In 1998, Brother Roger had designated Brother Alois, a German Catholic who had originally come to Taizé as a youth and became one of the brothers, as his successor. This was confirmed by the community and in January 2005, it was announced that Alois would soon be taking Roger's place as Prior of Taizé, but this had not yet occurred at the time of Roger's death, when Alois was attending the World Youth Day 2005 celebration in Cologne, Germany. He was installed as prior shortly thereafter.

Publications edit

  • 1944, Introduction a la Vie Communautaire
  • 1953, La Regle de Taizé
  • 1958, Vivre l’Aujourd’hui de Dieu / Living Today for God
  • 1962, L'unité, espérance de vie / Unity, Life's Hope
  • 1965, Dynamique du provisoire / The Power of the Provisional
  • 1968, Violence des pacifiques / Violent for Peace
  • 1971, Ta fête soit sans fin / Festival Without End, diary February 1969 – May 1970
  • 1973, Lutte et contemplation / Struggle and Contemplation, diary May 1970 – April 1972
  • 1976, Vivre l’inespéré / A Life We Never Dared Hope For, diary May 1972 – September 1974
  • 1979, Etonnement d’un amour / The Wonder of a Love, diary September 1974 – December 1976
  • 1980, Les Sources de Taizé / The Sources of Taizé
  • 1982, Fleurissent tes déserts / And Your Deserts Shall Flower
  • 1985, Passion d’une attente / A Heart that Trusts
  • 1988, Son amour est un feu / His Love Is a Fire
  • 1989, Marie, Mère des Réconciliations / Mary, Mother of Reconciliations (written together with Mother Teresa)
  • 1992, La prière, fraîcheur d’une source / Prayer: Seeking the Heart of God (written together with Mother Teresa)
  • 1995, En tout la paix du cœur / Peace of Heart in All Things
  • 2001, Dieu ne peut qu’aimer / God Is Love Alone
  • 2005, Pressens-tu un bonheur ? / Do You Expect happiness?

Editions, listed alphabetically, as found in the Library of Congress Catalog shortly after his death:

  • Afire with love : meditations on peace and unity. ISBN 0-8245-0474-7
  • Amour de tout amour : les sources de Taizé. (1990) ISBN 2-85040-107-2
  • Awakened from within : meditations on the Christian life. (1987) ISBN 0-385-23536-4
  • Brother Roger of Taizé: Essential Writings (Modern Spiritual Masters Series) (2006) ISBN 1-57075-639-2
  • Dynamik des Vorläufigen. (1967) Translation of Dynamique du provisoire
  • Dynamique du proviso ire. (1965)
  • En tout la paix du Coeur (1995) ISBN 2-259-18389-1
  • Essential Writings. (2006) ISBN 978-1-57075-639-9
  • Étonnement d'un amour : journal. (1979- )
  • Festival (1973) a translation of Ta fête soit sans fin. ISBN 0-8164-2583-3
  • Fleurissent les déserts du coeur : journal, 5e volume, 1977–1979. (1982) ISBN 2-85040-006-8
  • Life from within : prayers. (1990) a Translation of: Aus dem Innern leben. ISBN 0-264-67214-3 and ISBN 0-664-25162-5
  • Living today for God. (1962) Originally published under the title Vivre l'Aujourd'hui de dieu.
  • Lutte et contemplation; journal 1970–1972. (1973)
  • No greater love : sources of Taizé. (1991) ISBN 0-8146-2029-9 and ISBN 0-264-67253-4
  • Parable of community : the rule and other basic texts of Taizé. (1980) ISBN 0-8164-2301-6
  • Passion d'une attente : journal, 6e volume, 1979–1981. (1985) ISBN 2-02-008948-3
  • Peace of heart in all things : meditations for each day of the year. (1996) ISBN 0-941050-96-3
  • The power of the provisional. (1969) Originally published as Dynamique du provisoire. ISBN 0-340-02544-1
  • Le Règle de Taizé. (1966)
  • Revelation, a Protestant view; the Dogmatic Constitution on divine revelation, a commentary / by Roger Schutz and Max Thurian. (1968)
  • The Rule of Taizé in French and in English. (1968) Translation of Le Règle de Taizé ISBN 0-8164-2564-7
  • The Rule of Taizé in French and in English. (1967) French title: Le Règle de Taizé
  • Struggle and contemplation; journal, 1970–2. (1974) Translation of Lutte et contemplation. ISBN 0-8164-2106-4
  • Struggle and contemplation : journal 1970–2. (1974) Translation of Lutte et contemplation. ISBN 0-281-02809-5
  • Ta fête soit sans fin. (1971)
  • Ta fête soit sans fin : journal 1969–1970. (1971)
  • Unanimité dans le pluralisme. (1966)
  • Unanimité dans le pluralisme. (1972)
  • Unanimity in pluralism. (1967)
  • Unity: man's tomorrow / by Roger Schutz (1962) Translation of L'unité, espérance de vie.
  • Violence des pacifiques. (1968)
  • Violent for peace. (1970) Translation of Violence des pacifiques. ISBN 0-664-24922-1
  • Violent for peace (1970) Translation of Violence des pacifiques. ISBN 0-232-51093-8
  • Vivre l'inespéré : journal 1972–1974. (1976)
  • Taizé: lieu de communion. (1972)
  • Mary, Mother of Reconciliations / by Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Brother Roger of Taizé (1989) ISBN 0-8091-3063-7
  • Meditations on the way of the cross / by Mother Teresa of Calcutta and Brother Roger of Taizé (1987) Translation of: Kreuzweg ISBN 0-8298-0585-0
  • Seeking the heart of God : reflections on prayer / Mother Teresa and Brother Roger (1993) Translated from the French. ISBN 0-06-068238-8

Distinctions edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "The beginnings". Taizé.
  2. ^ Mother Teresa; Schutz, Roger (1992). Prayer: Seeking the Heart of God. Fount. ISBN 9780006276463.
  3. ^ Taizé: non-lieu psychiatrique pour la meurtrière présumée de Frère Roger July 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b c At His Funeral, Brother Roger Has an Ecumenical Dream Fulfilled
  5. ^ Simons, Marlise (August 18, 2005). "Brother Roger, 90, Dies; Ecumenical Leader". International New York Times. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  6. ^ a b Magister, Sandro (August 25, 2008). "Was the Founder of Taizé Protestant, or Catholic? A Cardinal Solves the Riddle". www.ChiesaOnline.
  7. ^ Lichfield, John (2009-04-01). "Murdered sect leader 'was secret Catholic'". The Independent. Retrieved 2020-12-31.
  8. ^ "Something that was without precedent - Taizé". www.taize.fr. La Croix. Retrieved 2020-12-31.
  9. ^ . Archbishop of Canterbury. 8 November 2004. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2017.

External links edit

  • Times Online Obituary
Taizé Community
Preceded by
Founder
Prior
1940–2005
Succeeded by

brother, roger, roger, schutz, 1915, august, 2005, popularly, known, french, frère, roger, swiss, christian, leader, monastic, brother, 1940, schutz, founded, taizé, community, ecumenical, monastic, community, burgundy, france, serving, first, prior, until, mu. Roger Schutz 12 May 1915 16 August 2005 popularly known as Brother Roger French Frere Roger was a Swiss Christian leader and monastic brother In 1940 Schutz founded the Taize Community an ecumenical monastic community in Burgundy France serving as its first prior until his murder in 2005 Towards the end of his life the Taize Community was attracting international attention welcoming thousands of young pilgrims every week which it has continued to do after his death BrotherRoger SchutzPrior of TaizeBrother Roger Schutz in 1991Installed1940Term ended2005SuccessorBrother AloisPersonal detailsBornRoger Louis Schutz Marsauche 1915 05 12 12 May 1915Provence Vaud SwitzerlandDied16 August 2005 2005 08 16 aged 90 Taize Saone et Loire FranceNationalitySwissDenominationReformed Christianity later reconciliation with CatholicismEducationReformed theologyAlma materUniversity of StrasbourgUniversity of Lausanne Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Background and early life 1 2 Taize Community 2 Assassination 3 Ecumenism 4 Personal life 4 1 Religious affiliation 4 1 1 Posthumous claims 5 Successor 6 Publications 7 Distinctions 8 References 9 External linksBiography editBackground and early life edit Born on 12 May 1915 in Provence Vaud Schutz was the ninth and youngest child of Karl Ulrich Schutz a Protestant pastor from Bachs in the Zurcher Unterland in Switzerland and his wife Amelie Henriette Marsauche a Huguenot from Burgundy France From 1937 to 1940 Schutz Marsauche studied Reformed theology in Strasbourg and Lausanne where he was a leader in the Swiss Student Christian Movement part of the World Student Christian Federation Falling ill with tuberculosis during his convalescence he began to feel drawn to a monastic way of life 1 Taize Community edit Main article Taize Community nbsp Schutz at prayer in Taize 2004In 1940 at the start of World War II Schutz Marsauche felt called to serve those suffering from the conflict as his maternal grandmother had done during World War I He rode a bicycle from Geneva to Taize a small town near Macon about 390 kilometres 240 mi southeast of Paris The town was then located within unoccupied France just beyond the line of demarcation from the zone occupied by German troops He bought an empty house where for two years he and his sister Genevieve hid refugees both Christian and Jewish before being forced to leave Taize after being tipped off that the Gestapo had become aware of their activities In 1944 he returned to Taize to found the Community initially a small quasi monastic community of men living together in poverty and obedience open to all Christians 1 Since the late 1950s many thousands of young adults from many countries have found their way to Taize to take part in weekly meetings of prayer and reflection In addition Taize brothers make visits and lead meetings large and small in Africa North and South America Asia and in Europe as part of a pilgrimage of trust on earth The spiritual leader always kept a low profile rarely giving interviews and refusing to permit any cult to grow up around himself Prior to his death Brother Roger was due to give up his community functions because of his advanced age and ill health which had seen him suffer from fatigue and often use a wheelchair citation needed Brother Roger was a prized author and wrote many books on prayer and reflection asking young people to be confident in God and committed to their local church community and to humanity He also wrote books about Christian spirituality and prayer some together with Mother Teresa with whom he shared a cordial friendship 2 Assassination edit nbsp Wikinews has related news Taize ecumenical community founder Frere Roger assassinated nbsp Brother Roger s grave in TaizeBrother Roger was stabbed to death during the evening prayer service in Taize on August 16 2005 by a young Romanian woman named Luminița Ruxandra Solcan who was later deemed mentally ill and was stabbed as well in 2011 3 He was stabbed several times and though one of the brothers carried him from the church he died shortly afterward The assailant was immediately apprehended by members of the congregation and was placed in police custody The funeral took place on 23 August 2005 Horst Kohler the President of Germany and Nicolas Sarkozy at that time Minister of the Interior of France were in attendance Brother Roger s community and friends attended the liturgy in the vast monastery church at Taize while thousands more followed it on a huge screen in fields outside the church Brother Roger s simple wooden coffin a wooden icon lying upon it was carried into the church by members of the community In a highly unusual move the funeral was presided over by a Catholic cardinal Walter Kasper the president of the Vatican s Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity who celebrated the Mass with four priest brothers of Taize concelebrating In his homily he said Yes the springtime of ecumenism has flowered on the hill of Taize 4 In reference to Brother Roger s concern for social justice Cardinal Kasper said Every form of injustice or neglect made him very sad 4 Brother Roger s successor Brother Alois Loser prayed for forgiveness With Christ on the cross we say to you Father forgive her she does not know what she did 4 Ecumenism editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Brother Roger with Catholic and Protestant clergy leaving an ecumenical service in St Stephen s Cathedral Vienna c 1975 All his life Roger devoted himself to reconciling the different Christian denominations He especially addressed Christian youth Part of his appeal may have been his dislike of formal preaching while encouraging a spiritual quest as a common endeavor During a Taize gathering in Paris in 1995 he spoke to more than 100 000 young people who were sitting on the floor of an exhibition hall We have come here to search he said or to go on searching through silence and prayer to get in touch with our inner life Christ always said Do not worry give yourself 5 Personal life editReligious affiliation edit Although Brother Roger had a Presbyterian Protestant background he received the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist at the Catholic Mass celebrated every morning in his monastery In addition he received the sacrament from both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI seemingly in contravention of canonical prohibitions reserving the sacrament exclusively to those in full communion with the Catholic Church According to Cardinal Walter Kasper this was accomplished as though there was a tacit understanding between Brother Roger and the Catholic Church crossing certain confessional and canonical barriers through what Brother Roger called a gradual enrichment of his faith with the foundations of the Catholic Church including the ministry of unity exercised by the bishop of Rome 6 Brother Roger thus appeared to have undertaken a step without precedent since the Protestant Reformation entering progressively into full communion with the faith of the Catholic Church possibly without a formal conversion that would imply a break with his origins citation needed In 1980 during a European Meeting in Rome he said in Saint Peter s Basilica in the presence of Pope John Paul II I have found my own identity as a Christian by reconciling within myself the faith of my origins with the mystery of the Catholic faith without breaking fellowship with anyone 6 Posthumous claims edit It was reported in the early 2000s that Brother Roger had in fact converted to Catholicism in 1972 when he received his First Communion from the local ordinary the Bishop of Autun The journalist reporting claimed to have confirmed this with the Vatican explaining his unfettered reception of Communion there from the sitting Pope on two different occasions He reportedly kept his conversion a secret for the sake of the ecumenical mission of Taize 7 Brother Rogers successor at Taize Brother Alois confirmed that the sacrament occurred but denied that there was a formal conversion stating that he merely affirmed the Creed 8 That said this is the historic mode of conversion modern requirements notwithstanding Successor editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Brother Roger news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1998 Brother Roger had designated Brother Alois a German Catholic who had originally come to Taize as a youth and became one of the brothers as his successor This was confirmed by the community and in January 2005 it was announced that Alois would soon be taking Roger s place as Prior of Taize but this had not yet occurred at the time of Roger s death when Alois was attending the World Youth Day 2005 celebration in Cologne Germany He was installed as prior shortly thereafter Publications edit1944 Introduction a la Vie Communautaire 1953 La Regle de Taize 1958 Vivre l Aujourd hui de Dieu Living Today for God 1962 L unite esperance de vie Unity Life s Hope 1965 Dynamique du provisoire The Power of the Provisional 1968 Violence des pacifiques Violent for Peace 1971 Ta fete soit sans fin Festival Without End diary February 1969 May 1970 1973 Lutte et contemplation Struggle and Contemplation diary May 1970 April 1972 1976 Vivre l inespere A Life We Never Dared Hope For diary May 1972 September 1974 1979 Etonnement d un amour The Wonder of a Love diary September 1974 December 1976 1980 Les Sources de Taize The Sources of Taize 1982 Fleurissent tes deserts And Your Deserts Shall Flower 1985 Passion d une attente A Heart that Trusts 1988 Son amour est un feu His Love Is a Fire 1989 Marie Mere des Reconciliations Mary Mother of Reconciliations written together with Mother Teresa 1992 La priere fraicheur d une source Prayer Seeking the Heart of God written together with Mother Teresa 1995 En tout la paix du cœur Peace of Heart in All Things 2001 Dieu ne peut qu aimer God Is Love Alone 2005 Pressens tu un bonheur Do You Expect happiness Editions listed alphabetically as found in the Library of Congress Catalog shortly after his death Afire with love meditations on peace and unity ISBN 0 8245 0474 7 Amour de tout amour les sources de Taize 1990 ISBN 2 85040 107 2 Awakened from within meditations on the Christian life 1987 ISBN 0 385 23536 4 Brother Roger of Taize Essential Writings Modern Spiritual Masters Series 2006 ISBN 1 57075 639 2 Dynamik des Vorlaufigen 1967 Translation of Dynamique du provisoire Dynamique du proviso ire 1965 En tout la paix du Coeur 1995 ISBN 2 259 18389 1 Essential Writings 2006 ISBN 978 1 57075 639 9 Etonnement d un amour journal 1979 Festival 1973 a translation of Ta fete soit sans fin ISBN 0 8164 2583 3 Fleurissent les deserts du coeur journal 5e volume 1977 1979 1982 ISBN 2 85040 006 8 Life from within prayers 1990 a Translation of Aus dem Innern leben ISBN 0 264 67214 3 and ISBN 0 664 25162 5 Living today for God 1962 Originally published under the title Vivre l Aujourd hui de dieu Lutte et contemplation journal 1970 1972 1973 No greater love sources of Taize 1991 ISBN 0 8146 2029 9 and ISBN 0 264 67253 4 Parable of community the rule and other basic texts of Taize 1980 ISBN 0 8164 2301 6 Passion d une attente journal 6e volume 1979 1981 1985 ISBN 2 02 008948 3 Peace of heart in all things meditations for each day of the year 1996 ISBN 0 941050 96 3 The power of the provisional 1969 Originally published as Dynamique du provisoire ISBN 0 340 02544 1 Le Regle de Taize 1966 Revelation a Protestant view the Dogmatic Constitution on divine revelation a commentary by Roger Schutz and Max Thurian 1968 The Rule of Taize in French and in English 1968 Translation of Le Regle de Taize ISBN 0 8164 2564 7 The Rule of Taize in French and in English 1967 French title Le Regle de Taize Struggle and contemplation journal 1970 2 1974 Translation of Lutte et contemplation ISBN 0 8164 2106 4 Struggle and contemplation journal 1970 2 1974 Translation of Lutte et contemplation ISBN 0 281 02809 5 Ta fete soit sans fin 1971 Ta fete soit sans fin journal 1969 1970 1971 Unanimite dans le pluralisme 1966 Unanimite dans le pluralisme 1972 Unanimity in pluralism 1967 Unity man s tomorrow by Roger Schutz 1962 Translation of L unite esperance de vie Violence des pacifiques 1968 Violent for peace 1970 Translation of Violence des pacifiques ISBN 0 664 24922 1 Violent for peace 1970 Translation of Violence des pacifiques ISBN 0 232 51093 8 Vivre l inespere journal 1972 1974 1976 Taize lieu de communion 1972 Mary Mother of Reconciliations by Mother Teresa of Calcutta Brother Roger of Taize 1989 ISBN 0 8091 3063 7 Meditations on the way of the cross by Mother Teresa of Calcutta and Brother Roger of Taize 1987 Translation of Kreuzweg ISBN 0 8298 0585 0 Seeking the heart of God reflections on prayer Mother Teresa and Brother Roger 1993 Translated from the French ISBN 0 06 068238 8Distinctions editJohn Templeton Foundation Templeton Prize 1974 Borsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels 1974 University of Warsaw Honorary doctorate 1986 UNESCO UNESCO Prize for Peace Education 1988 City of Aachen Charlemagne Prize 1989 Catholic University of Leuven Honorary doctorate 1990 Alfred Toepfer Stiftung Robert Schuman Prize 1992 Notre Dame University Notre Dame Award 1996 Saint John s University Dignitas Humana Award de 2003 Archbishop Rowan Williams Lambeth Cross for Ecumenism 2004 9 References editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Brother Roger news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b The beginnings Taize Mother Teresa Schutz Roger 1992 Prayer Seeking the Heart of God Fount ISBN 9780006276463 Taize non lieu psychiatrique pour la meurtriere presumee de Frere Roger Archived July 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b c At His Funeral Brother Roger Has an Ecumenical Dream Fulfilled Simons Marlise August 18 2005 Brother Roger 90 Dies Ecumenical Leader International New York Times Retrieved September 18 2013 a b Magister Sandro August 25 2008 Was the Founder of Taize Protestant or Catholic A Cardinal Solves the Riddle www ChiesaOnline Lichfield John 2009 04 01 Murdered sect leader was secret Catholic The Independent Retrieved 2020 12 31 Something that was without precedent Taize www taize fr La Croix Retrieved 2020 12 31 Archbishop makes Cross of St Augustine and Lambeth Cross awards Archbishop of Canterbury 8 November 2004 Archived from the original on 13 August 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frere Roger nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Brother Roger Times Online ObituaryTaize CommunityPreceded byFounder Prior1940 2005 Succeeded byBrother Alois Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brother Roger amp oldid 1192638283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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