
Liturgical Celebration: |
Positive Infinity is pleased to present the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, an ostensibly dry and formal book which found itself at the centre of controversy. | |
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The 1928 prayer book was the Protestant Episcopal Church's third prayer book (the first two were in 1789 and 1892.) At the time it was considered an extensive revision, but as it happened it was the Episcopal Church's last truly "Anglican" prayer book. The introduction of its replacement (heralded by the aptly named "trial liturgies" in 1971) created an uproar; adherence to it became a "litmus test" for a true conservative, and still is for many. The church's hierarchy, in typical style, went ahead and replaced it with the 1979 book. You can download the prayer book by on the cover to the left or at the link below. Significance to Non-AnglicansIts importance to traditional Anglicans in the U.S. is self-evident, but it has significance to non-Anglicans as well:
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Important Note: Non-Anglicans may have a hard time "contextualising" what they're looking at in the Book of Common Prayer. Some help may be found in The Island Chronicles, especially the two parts At the Inlet and The Final Decision. About this EditionThis Adobe Acrobat edition was prepared by Charles Wohlers. The 1928 book was designed so that every prayer book would have the same pagination and page layout (as is the case with the Book of Mormon.) Reproducing this electronically is a real feat, with the fonts and other obstacles. Wohlers' achievement is thus remarkable. The advantage of this edition over others on the Internet is that the entire book can be downloaded in one shot, as opposed to pieces. In this age of file swapping the 2 MB download of this prayer book isn't that big of a deal. Some Personal ReflectionsGrowing up in the Episcopal Church, I always thought of the liturgy as antiquated. Part of the problem was that my home church was "high church" in the extreme, which accentuated that feeling. When the prayer book controversy hit, I was a little mystified at the significance of the whole thing.But it wasn't of much import by that time, as I was in the process of converting to Roman Catholicism. Doctrinal problems set aside (and these are important,) in my view what the Episcopalians came up with in 1979 could not tie the shoes of the "Novus Ordo Missae" that the Catholics were just starting with. To tell the truth, the 1979 book couldn't tie its own shoes either! The prayer book controversies, however, are an illustration of one of the banes of the English speaking world: debating substantive issues by arguing over documents. Today in the U.S. we debate many issues in our society, not on their merits, but by their constitutionality. The basic problem with the newer prayer book is that many of the people who produced it did not believe some or all of the essentials of the Christian faith, while the older ones, with their difficult prose, were produced by people who did. Recent events are finally focusing everyone on what's important, and all Christians who believe in the Truth need to support those who are fighting for it. |
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