Bishop encourages young people to 'slow down' in
Scotland
Bishop John Keenan (Diocese of Paisley, Scotland) outside St Mirin's Cathedral - RV |
(Vatican Radio) A bishop in Scotland is encouraging young
people to ‘slow down’ and get involved in a Taizé movement, explaining that it
will help them to think about some of the more important questions in life.
Bishop John Keenan is the bishop of the Diocese of Paisley.
He is one of the youngest bishops in the UK and has made youth ministry an
important part of his episcopacy since he was consecrated in 2014. In the past
three years, a new university chaplaincy has been established and young
pilgrims have travelled to Lourdes, to assist sick and elderly members of the
faithful from the diocese, and Krakow, joining Pope Francis at the World Youth
Day celebrations.
Now, following a recent visit to a Taizé weekend event in
Birmingham, England, the bishop is reflecting on how much the young people –
from his diocese and the Diocese of Galloway – enjoyed experiencing something
different. Speaking to the Scottish Catholic Observer, Scotland’s
national Catholic newspaper, the bishop said, “Life is very busy for young
people, and there’s an awful temptation to live life on the surface without
thinking why they’re really here on earth.”
On further reflection, he explained that getting involved in
the Taizé event allowed the young people to spend a few days with hundreds of
young people, and that it ‘slowed them down’. He added that this ‘slowing down’
allows the young people to think about important questions concerning identity,
faith and purpose.
Across Scotland, more and more parishes are establishing
Taizé groups. Bishop Keenan said that it is something he would encourage at
parish and deanery levels in his diocese. He is also keen that groups should be
established in secondary schools and university chaplaincies. He said, “I would
love to see those revived. They’re so simple, they’re so easy. I think
especially to give young people an opportunity to come together in a way that
is characteristically young.”
Looking forward, Bishop Keenan is thinking about bringing
more young people together in 2019 for the World Youth Day festivities in
Panama, when young members of the Church will once again gather around the Holy
Father. He said that the young people who attended the recent Taizé event were
keen to go. “They enjoyed it and I think they’ve decided that for World Youth
Day in Panama, Paisley and Galloway are going to do a joint pilgrimage for
that, too.”
The Taizé community is an ecumenical monastic order that was
founded in 1940 by Brother Roger Schütz,
a Reformed Protestant. There are now more than 100 brothers,
from the Catholic and Protestant traditions. There is a special emphasis in the
community on the importance of music. Songs and hymns are sung in several
languages and often the lyrics are simple phrases taken from Scripture and
repeated often.
The Hidden Treasure Taizé event allowed young people from
all over Europe to gather in a spirit of prayer and solidarity. Over 600 people
attended the event, which was organized in cooperation with the local churches
in Birmingham.
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