Anglican 101 BCP March 22 2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Anglican 101 BCP March 22 2020 3/9/20 ANGLICAN 101: THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER Canon Ian Alexander March 22, 2020 Why “Common” Prayer? 1. The language of the people. • 1549: Thomas Cranmer publishes first Prayer Book in English. • Whereas St. Paul would have such language spoken to the people in the church, as they might understand and have profit by hearing the same, the service in this Church of England (these many years) hath been read in Latin to the people which they understood not, so that they have heard with their ears only, and their hearts, spirit and mind have not been edified thereby. Preface of 1549 1 1 3/9/20 • Article XXIV of the 39 Articles of Religion: • Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the people understandeth. It is a thing plainly repugnant to the Word of God, and the custom of the Primitive Church, to have puBlic Prayer in the Church, or to administer the Sacraments, in a tongue not understanded of the people. 2 Why “Common” Prayer? 2. Shared – by priest and people, in all times and places • 1549 Preface: And where heretofore, there hath been great diversity in saying and singing in churches within this realm, some following Salisbury use, some Hereford use, some the use of Bangor, some of York, and some of Lincoln, now from henceforth, all the whole realm shall have but one use. 3 2 3/9/20 Why “Common” Prayer? 3. Regularized, Standardized • 1549 Preface: The ancient Fathers . so ordered the matter, that all the whole BiBle (or the greatest part thereof) should be read over once every year. But these many years passed, this godly and decent order of the ancient Fathers hath Been so altered, Broken and neglected . That many times there was more Business to find out what should be read, than to read it when it was found out. • Calendar, liturgical year, lectionary, propers 4 • Tension between the impulse towards spontaneous, personal, emotional forms of worship on the one hand, and formal, ritualized, ceremonial forms on the other. • Whatsoever good things we hear only once, or now and then, though perhaps upon hearing of them, they may swim for a while in our brains, yet they seldom sink down into our hearts, so as to move and sway the affections. William Beveridge, A Sermon on the Excellency and Usefulness of the Common Prayer (1681) • Offices, communion service, sacraments, ordinary 5 3 3/9/20 What’s in this book, anyway? (and what’s a rubric?) • Prefatory material (pp. v – viii) • Calendar / Tables of Feasts, Lessons & Psalms (pp. ix – lv) • Order for Morning & Evening Prayer (pp. 1 – 24) • Additional Canticles, Litany, Prayers & THanksgivings (pp. 25 – 64) • Holy Communion (pp. 65 – 92) • Collects, Epistles & Gospels (pp. 93 – 330) • THe Psalter (pp. 331 – 521) • Sacraments & Orders: Baptism, Confirmation, Matrimony, Burial (pp. 522 – 610) • Additional Services & Forms of Prayer (pp. 611 – 636) • THe Ordinary for Bishops, Priests & Deacons and related forms (pp. 637 – 694) • Creed of St. AtHanasius / 39 Articles / Historical prefaces (pp. 695 – 721) • Compline & Family Prayer (pp. 722 – 736) 6 A History of Change • “Radical” Reform: There was never any thing by the wit of man so well devised, or so sure established, which in continuance of time hath not been corrupted: As, among other things, it may plainly appear by the Common Prayers in the Church, commonly called Divine Service. But these many years passed, this godly and decent order of the ancient Fathers hath been so altered, broken, and neglected . These inconveniences therefore considered, here is set forth such an Order, where the same shall be redressed. 1549 Preface 7 4 3/9/20 • Liturgical change is sometimes treated as a phenomenon unique to the twentieth century, a counter-current in the flow of Anglican piety. The truth is that the distinctive ethos of Anglicanism emerged in a period of reformation even greater than our own. Liturgical continuity has always been maintained in tension with liturgical change. The work of liturgical reform is not finished; in fact, it is never finished. Book of Alternative Services (Canada) 8 Selected Milestones • England: • 1549: Cranmer’s first BCP – conservatively Protestant • 1552: Second Prayer Book – more radically Reformed • 1559: Revision ordered by Elizabeth I – some compromises • 1571: 39 Articles of Religion finalized and incorporated into BCP • 1645: Use of BCP forbidden under the Commonwealth • 1662: Restoration of monarch and of Prayer Book – addition of Ordination, State Services, General Thanksgiving 9 5 3/9/20 • England (cont’d): • Each of the above in turn was sanctioned by an Act of Uniformity passed by Parliament. • 1928: New Prayer Book (never adopted by Parliament) • 1980: Alternative Service Book • 2000: Common Worship The Book of Common Prayer [1662] remains the permanently authorized provision for public worship in the Church of England, whereas the newer liturgies are authorized until further resolution of the General Synod. (2000 Preface) 10 • Canada: • 1893: Solemn Declaration – first General Synod of the Church of England in the Dominion of Canada • 1918: First Canadian Prayer Book • 1952: Unsuccessful attempt at revision • 1959: BCP (“Red Book”) approved in principle by General Synod; ratified in 1962. • 1985: Book of Alternative Services – “not a new Book of Common Prayer, and does not replace it” (1985 Introduction). • Additional liturgical texts and resources published from time to time, e.g. Pray Without Ceasing, versions of the Morning and Evening Offices for the seasons and for Ordinary Time, approved at 2019 General Synod. 11 6 3/9/20 • Elsewhere: • 1637: Scottish Prayer Book causes a riot at St. Giles’ • 1764: Scottish Rite • 1789: American Prayer Book based on Scottish Rite • 1979: new American Book of Common Prayer • Etc., etc. • Common Worship (EnglanD) anD ABCP (USA), along with supplementary volumes, are very useful resources for us. • As are the Lutheran Book of Prayer anD many others. • New ZealanD Prayer Book (1989) has many fine things, anD is uniQue for its incorporation of inDigenous (Maori) language. 12 The Anglican “Middle Way” • 1662 Preface: It hath been the wisdom of the Church of England, ever since the first compiling of her publick Liturgy, to keep the mean between the two extremes, of too much stiffness in refusing, and of too much ease in admitting, any variation from it. • Example: the issue of the “Real Presence” (transubstantiation) (1549) The body of our Lord Jesus Christ, which was given for thee, preserve thy body and soul unto everlasting life. (1552) Take and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee, and feed on him in thy heart by faith with thanksgiving. (1559) Two forms are joined together (as in our BCP). 13 7 3/9/20 • The form of the Communion rite (and the theology behind it) was perhaps the most vexed issue through all the Prayer Book revisions. • Other Examples: • Where the altar is plaCed and how it is deCorated • What vestments the priest should / may wear • The “manual aCts” • When to stand, sit or kneel • EtC. • Of Ceremonies (1549): • And although the keeping or omitting of a Ceremony, in itself considered, is but a small thing; yet the willful and contemptuous transgression of a Common order and discipline is no small offenCe before God. 14 What did Cranmer give us? • The creation of Matins and Evensong out of the old monastic offices. • The collects: short, one-sentence prayers that “collect” and focus the devotional intentions of the congregation in succinct form. They’ve been called “masterpieces of doctrinal concision.” He wrote about two dozen of them, and adapted many others. • The Litany -- predates the Prayer Book; written for Henry VIII in 1544. • Emphasis on scripture, e.g. “sentences” (opening, offertory, burial, etc.) – and an annual calendar of bible readings in church (lectionary). • And particularly on the psalms – phrases from them appear frequently throughout the various services, some are used often (e.g. Venite), and all 150 are to be said or sung every month at Morning and Evening Prayer. • Among many other things! 15 8 3/9/20 And above all, language! • Oxford Dictionary of Quotations has 396 entries from the BCP. • It’s been said that Cranmer virtually invented modern English prose. • “strong, clear, very good in poor acoustics, and often beautiful, with a functional beauty that comes from getting something well said.” • Exhortation, cadence, balance, parallelism, repetition – when to slow things down: “erred and strayed” . “declare and pronounce” • “Through his connoisseurship, his appreciative pilfering of other people’s words, and his own adaptations, he created a prose which is self-consciously formal and highly crafted, intended for repeated use until it becomes polished as smooth as a pebble on the beach.” -- Diarmaid MacCulloch 16 What else did Cranmer give us? • A lot of theology, embedded in liturgy • E.g. Exhortations to Matins, Communion, Matrimony (p. 564) • Rubrics – liturgical directions with theological underpinnings • His changes to the Eucharistic liturgy and Prayer of Consecration – downplaying the sacrificial role of the priest, creating latitude with regard to the nature of the consecrated bread and wine. • Simple, recognizable structures • Fixed and variable elements: ordinary and propers. • Variables: season of church year, day of week, holy day, commemoration, events in life of world, community, individual. • Many forms of words can be poured into the same basic structure. 17 9 3/9/20 The Daily Office • Lauds Matins / • Prime Morning Prayer • Terce • Sext Mid-Day/Noon Prayer • Nones • Vespers Evensong / • Compline Evening Prayer • Vigils Compline / Night Prayer 18 • As says the prophet: “Seven times a day have I offered Thee praise.” The which sacred number of seven we fulfil in this way, if at Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline time we discharge the duties of our service.
Recommended publications
  • The Twentieth Century Reform of the Liturgy: Outcomes and Prospects John F
    Valparaiso University ValpoScholar Institute of Liturgical Studies Occasional Papers Institute of Liturgical Studies 2017 The weT ntieth Century Reform of the Liturgy: Outcomes and Prospects John F. Baldovin S.J. Boston College School of Theology & Ministry, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholar.valpo.edu/ils_papers Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, and the Liturgy and Worship Commons Recommended Citation Baldovin, John F. S.J., "The wT entieth Century Reform of the Liturgy: Outcomes and Prospects" (2017). Institute of Liturgical Studies Occasional Papers. 126. http://scholar.valpo.edu/ils_papers/126 This Conference Proceeding is brought to you for free and open access by the Institute of Liturgical Studies at ValpoScholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Institute of Liturgical Studies Occasional Papers by an authorized administrator of ValpoScholar. For more information, please contact a ValpoScholar staff member at [email protected]. The Twentieth Century Reform of the Liturgy: Outcomes and Prospects John F. Baldovin, S.J. Boston College School of Theology & Ministry Introduction Metanoiete. From the very first word of Jesus recorded in the Gospel of Mark reform and renewal have been an essential feature of Christian life and thought – just as they were critical to the message of the prophets of ancient Israel. The preaching of the Gospel presumes at least some openness to change, to acting differently and to thinking about things differently. This process has been repeated over and over again over the centuries. This insight forms the backbone of Gerhard Ladner’s classic work The Idea of Reform, where renovatio and reformatio are constants throughout Christian history.1 All of the great reform movements in the past twenty centuries have been in response to both changing cultural and societal circumstances (like the adaptation of Christianity north of the Alps) and the failure of Christians individually and communally to live up to the demands of the Gospel.
    [Show full text]
  • Ordinary 31C 11-3-2013 C&B.Pub
    FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH November 3, 2013 Eleven o’clock THIRTY-FIRST SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME ALL SAINTS' COMMUNION THE GATHERING The service of worship begins with the prelude; quiet is requested as you enter the sanctuary and prepare for worship. In the spirit of Christian fellowship, we invite you to wear a name tag which is available from the greeters. As a community that prays with and for one another, we invite you to share your joys and concerns by using the blue cards available from the ushers and in the welcome pad folders. Those parts of the Service of Worship in which the congregation participates in word or song are noted in bold type. Please stand as you are able. PRELUDE Three Chorale Preludes Johannes Brahms O World I Now Must Leave Thee (2 settings) How Blest are Ye Whose Toils are Ended * HYMN 526 For All the Saints Sine Nomine * CALL TO WORSHIP (based on Psalm 145): Leader: Every single day we will bless you, and praise your name. People: Your greatness is beyond our understanding. Leader: Each generation will praise your mighty acts and bear witness to them People: We will meditate on your glorious and wondrous works, O God. Leader: Let our mouths speak words of praise People: We praise you O God, and bless your name forever and ever. INTROIT Proulx Rejoice! Be glad! How great will be your reward in Heaven. WELCOME AND ANNOUNCEMENTS CALL TO CONFESSION PRAYER OF CONFESSION Almighty God, we confess that we are unable to disentangle the good from the bad within us.
    [Show full text]
  • Reverenómo Er Mar Angeica
    Mass of Christian Burial A n d Rite of Committal ReverenÓMoer MarAngeica of the Annunciation, P. C. P. A . Abbess Emerita, Our Lady of the Angels Monastery FRidAy, APRiL 1, 2016 Moer MarAngeica April 20, 1923 – March 27, 2016 Professed January 2, 1947 Mass of Christian Burial a n d Rite of Committal Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament Hanceville, Alabama Table of Contents I. Requiem Mass 3 The Guidelines for Reception of Holy Communion can be found on the inside back cover of this booklet. II. Solemn Procession and Rite of Committal 15 Introductory Rites Processional Requiem aeternam CHOIR Giovanni Martini (1706-1784); arr. Rev. Scott A. Haynes, S.J.C. Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924) from Requiem ANT: Requiem aeternam dona ei ANT: Rest eternal grant unto her, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat ei. O Lord, and may light perpetual shine upon her. PS 130: De profundis clamavit ad te PS 130: Out of the depths I have cried to Domine… thee, O Lord... (CanticaNOVA, pub.) Kyrie Kyrie eleison. R. Kyrie eleison. Christe eleison. R. Christe eleison. Kyrie eleison. R. Kyrie eleison. Collect P. We humbly beseech your mercy, O Lord, for your servant Mother Mary Angelica, that, having worked tirelessly for the spread of the Gospel, she may merit to enter into the rewards of the Kingdom. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. R. Amen. 3 The Liturgy of the Word First Reading Book of Wisdom 3:1-9 He accepted them as a holocaust.
    [Show full text]
  • Explanation of the Lutheran Liturgy Based on LSB Divine Service I
    Explanation of the Lutheran Liturgy Based on LSB Divine Service I Prelude . Lighting of the Candles Greeting . Significance of the Day The Divine Service begins with the Hymn of Invocation (or the Processional Hymn, if there is a Procession), which helps set the tone and mood for the worship service, reminding us early on of God's great love through Jesus our Savior. Already, with the Prelude, the organist is directing our attention to the fact that in worship, "heaven touches earth," just as God's Word declares through the Virgin Mary in Luke 1:68: "Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for He has visited and redeemed His people." Hymn of Invocation: CONFESSION AND ABSOLUTION Congregation shall stand The service continues as we invoke the name of the Triune God, put upon us by Jesus' command in our Baptism (Matthew 28:19) - the name in which we gather. St. Paul captures the eternal significance of our Baptism into Christ when he writes: "as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ" (Galatians 3:27). The sign of the cross may be made as a visible reminder of our Baptism. The congregation responds by saying, "Amen," which means "so let it be!” P In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. C Amen. The Exhortation is an invitation to confession. The inspired words of the Apostle John remind us that God is "faithful and just to forgive our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:8-9).
    [Show full text]
  • An Outline of a Eucharistic Prayer
    An Outline of a Eucharistic Prayer The Eucharistic Prayers used in the Episcopal Church are based on an ancient outline of prayer found in something called “The Text of Hippolytus.” Though the actual words of the eucharistic prayer may vary, every eucharistic prayer contains the same elements. Presider: The Lord be with you. The opening versicles and responses. Here the People: And also with you. presider greets the congregation, reminds them of the joyous purpose that brings us to the table, Presider: Lift up your hearts. and then asks their permission to offer the People: We lift them up to the Lord. eucharistic prayer on their behalf. Known as the “Sursum Corda,” meaning “Lift up your hearts.” Presider: Let us give thanks to the Lord our God. People: It is right to give God thanks and praise. Presider: Good morning, Lord. We are Eucharistic prayers generally include a short your people, gathered at your table to give your recitation of salvation history. Here, the prayer thanks and praise. Thank you for always gives thanks for the ways God reveals God’s self, revealing yourself: in Creation; in your people, fully and completely in Jesus, the Word made gathered and sent; in your Word spoken through flesh. While sometimes the eucharistic prayer the Scriptures; and above all in the Word made may emphasize the offering made on the cross, flesh, Jesus, your Son. You sent him to be this one emphasizes the incarnation…God incarnate from the Virgin Mary, to be the Savior becoming human in Jesus Christ. and Redeemer of the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Narrative of the Institution by Roddy Hamilton
    Narrative of the Institution by Roddy Hamilton The tradition which I handed on to you came to me from the Lord himself: that on the night of his arrest the Lord Jesus took bread, and after giving thanks to God broke it and said: ‘This is my body, which is for you; do this in memory of me.’ In the same way, he took the cup after supper, and said: ‘This cup is the new covenant sealed by my blood. Whenever you drink it, do this in memory of me.’ For every time you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the death of the Lord, until he comes. 1 Corinthians 11:23-26 These are the words that have echoed in the mouths and hearts of countless followers who have gathered round a table in community breaking bread and sharing wine with the Saviour. These are the words that have been whispered daringly in secret gatherings celebrating an illegal feast, breaking bread and sharing wine with the Saviour. These are the words that have had one set of believers dying on the rack whose cogs were turned by another set of believers for the sake of the same bread and wine and the same Saviour. These are the words that have slowed down the liturgy to become the ‘sacred moment’ as the community held its breath as bread was broken and wine poured in the name of the Saviour. But what of their place in the practice of our own tradition in contemporary times and how do they, or rather, how are they allowed to shape our understanding, experience and sharing of the Realm of God in broken bread and shared wine? A Traditional Understanding Marcus Borg1 talks about the pre-critical naiveté of accepting without question whatever has been handed on to us by the authority figures of our faith.
    [Show full text]
  • Aspects of Epiclesis in the Roman Mass
    Aspects of Epiclesis in the Roman Mass For generations in the Roman Catholic Church the so-called Roman Rite held almost universal sway - probably from its beginnings in the early centuries and certainly through to the Second Vatican Council of the nineteen sixties. It was not that there were no other forms: the Mozarabic, the Gallican, the Ambrosian for example, some of which have managed tenuously to survive till our day. But when Latin eventually replaced Greek as the liturgical language of the Church in Rome, and a strong conservatism prevailed, so the form of the mass used in Rome gradually took precedence over other rites in the Western Church This might seem an odd quirk of history. The old Roman rite is markedly different from the ancient liturgies of the east, and even in many respects from the other western rites we have mentioned. Whereas the latter retained some of the elements of the Eastern tradition, the Church in Rome seems to have deprived itself of much of that richness. No doubt this was partly due to the adoption of Latin, with its concise precision of expression, in contrast with the greater profuseness and poetic style of the Greek liturgical language. But the differences also marked a growing divergence in theological understanding. Such differences need not, however, make for insuperable barriers now between east and west, despite the polemics of centuries. The recent liturgical and ecumenical movements have given rise to fresh insights and some change of climate. It is actually possible now to look dispassionately at the old Roman rite and to find, not surprisingly, that many of the so-called eastern emphases are not in fact wholly absent.
    [Show full text]
  • Robert F. Taft, SJ Mass Without the Consecration? the Historic Agreement on the Eucharist Between the Catholic Church and the As
    R.F. Taft SJ / Addai & Mari Robert F. Taft, SJ Mass Without the Consecration? The Historic Agreement on the Eucharist Between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East Promulgated 26 October 20011 My deliberately provocative title, “Mass Without the Consecration?,” I owe to a high-ranking Catholic prelate who, upon hearing of the epoch-making decree of the Holy See recognizing the validity of the eucharistic sacrifice celebrated according to the original redaction of the Anaphora of Addai and Mari—i.e., without the Words of Institution—exclaimed in perplexity: “But how can there be Mass without the consecration?” The answer, of course, is that there cannot be. But that does not solve the problem; it just shifts the question to “What, then, is the consecration, if not the traditional Institution Narrative which all three Synoptic Gospels2 and 1 Cor 11:23-26 attribute to Jesus?” The 26 October 2001 Agreement One of the basic tasks of the Catholic theologian is to provide the theological underpinnings to explain and justify authentic decisions of the Supreme Magisterium. That is my aim here. For the historic agreement on the eucharist between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East is surely one such authentic decision, approved by the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, the Congregation for the Oriental Churches, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Pope John Paul II himself. This decision tells Catholics who fulfill the stated conditions and receive Holy Communion at an Assyrian eucharist using the Anaphora of Addai and Mari, that they are receiving the one true Body and Blood of Christ, as at a Catholic eucharist.
    [Show full text]
  • Thb Reformation in Worship: the Ministry of the Sacraments
    THE REFORMATION IN WORSHIP-THE SACRAMENTS 100 THB REFORMATION IN WORSHIP: THE MINISTRY OF THE SACRAMENTS. By the Rev. Canon J. R. S. TAYLOR, M.A. Principal of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford. "'rHE title of my paper is, "The Reformation in Worship: the 1 Ministry of the Sacraments." The terms of reference are given in the third cause for thanksgiving commended by the promoters of this centenary celebration, namely " The Reformation by its appeal to the Scriptures led to the recognition of more spiritual conceptions of the Church and Sacraments, to the purification of worship, and to renewed emphasis on the ministry of the word." The three phrases pertinent to this paper are : " The appeal to the Scriptures/' " more spiritual conceptions ofthe Sacraments,"" the purification ofworship., I will try to follow the scheme there suggested. I. The Appeal to the Scriptures. Why did the Reformers make this appeal ? They were driven to it by force of circumstances. Luther's conscience was offended by the growing scandal and menace of the system of purchasing pardons and dispensations. He appealed to the authorities of the Church, believing that when the full extent of the evil was made known they would initiate reform, but he was disappointed. The power of vested interests was too strong. What was he to do-to silence his conscience and let the matter rest ? His conscience refused to be silenced. It had been quickened by a new knowledge of God, brought to him in the New Testament, and the voice of God which had spoken in scripture was authoritative.
    [Show full text]
  • The Catholic and Evangelical Origins of the Anglican Franciscans
    "The Catholic and Evangelical Origins of the Anglican Franciscans: how receptive ecumenism can work and where it might be leading us" Fr Thomas Matthew Sharp nTSSF SCP [email protected][email protected] Durham University – Newcastle Cathedral – Anglican Third Order Franciscans The reception of Roman liturgy into the Church of England was largely facilitated by the Anglican Franciscan communities and their disobedience (or flexible relationship with the spirit of the canons of the Church of England) and by their background both catholic and evangelical. They provide a model for receptive ecumenism within experimental communities and projects which can test elements of reception before their adoption into wider church structures. On the 13th of March 2013 as we sat eating dinner at Hilfield Friary, Brother Sam burst in. "We've got a new Pope," he shouted, "and his name's Francis!" Much laughter and a few cheers. And the voice of Brother Hugh cutting through it all: "He's not my Pope!" Ecumenical rubber meets the Anglican road. Today I want to offer the evolution and influence of SSF, in its sometimes ecumenically messy way, as fruit for the wider church as we attempt to grow together in unity. Defining Terms Before we begin, let us start with some terminology. I won't describe the Church of England as "protestant", partly because the meaning of the term is so contested within Anglicanism, but really because I want to avoid the term protestant being applied as "not catholic" or even worse "against what is catholic." I don't want, from the very start, to set the Church of England and the Church of Rome against one another conceptually.
    [Show full text]
  • Aspects of Epiclesis in the Anglican Tradition
    Aspects of Epiclesis in the Anglican Tradition Anglicanism, now an almost worldwide phenomenon, owes itself to the English Church. It has its own distinctive characteristics, naturally, but claims nothing for itself other than to be recognised as part of Christ’s One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. Its origins date back to the first preaching of the gospel in Britain during Roman times but its ethos and particularity stem to a large extent from the turbulent years of the Reformation and its aftermath, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This ‘Church of England’ emerged not only as a church of the Book, ie the bible but also of the Prayer Book, a liturgical church where clergy and people are held together as the body of Christ by Eucharist and daily office. Thomas Cranmer, 1489-1556, the genius behind this liturgical revolution, sought, as far as the Eucharist was concerned, to restore communion to the people, to open up the treasures of their inheritance to them by the use of the English tongue and to rectify the perceived ‘abuses’ of the medieval mass. Naturally, therefore, he looked behind immediate practice in the Latin church to the Fathers and to the early Greek liturgies that were available in his day. He also drew on liturgical rites other than the Latin rite of the Roman Church, rites which were current to some extent still in the Western Church of his era, in particular the Gallican and Sarum rites. These had already been formative of the English Church and notably they contained traces of the earlier Eastern liturgical and Patristic tradition.
    [Show full text]
  • The Making of the Church of Ireland Book of Common Prayer 2004 HAROLD MILLER
    The Making of the Church of Ireland Book of Common Prayer 2004 HAROLD MILLER In the 2004 Church of Ireland Book of Common Prayer the Preface describes the work of compilation in the following words: • We sought to unify the worship of God’s people, while allowing reasonable scope for diversity within the essential unity of the Church’s prayer. • We were determined to produce a book which would have equal capacity to enrich private as well as corporate devotion. • We desired that this book, like previous editions of it, should properly articulate and embody the Church’s faith. • We hoped that the book would strengthen our bonds of unity with sister churches who share our approach to common prayer, and we were therefore fully attentive to the reports of successive meetings of the International Anglican Liturgical Consultation. These sentences capture, in a brief and simple form, some of the key elements that have been distinguishing features of Irish Anglican worship and ethos over the centuries, and that are of great importance to our self-understanding in the Church of Ireland. To put them in other words: the commonality of prayer; the relationship between public and private worship; lex orandi, lex credendi; and a sense of worldwide catholicity. In this lecture, I will take these four areas one by one, and use them as windows into the making of the new Church of Ireland Book of Common Prayer. Unity in Diversity: The Commonality of Prayer We sought to unify the worship of God’s people, while allowing reasonable scope for diversity within the essential unity of the Church’s prayer.
    [Show full text]