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Books > Christianity > Christian liturgy, prayerbooks & hymnals
Using Coverdale's translation of the Psalms from the Book of Common
Prayer, the very best of Anglican chant is married to texts that
have been used to sing the transcendent glory of God for three
thousand years. The Psalms are ruthlessly honest in their portrayal
of conflicting human emotions, and many psalters have excised the
verses that speak of vengeance, hatred and anger. Acknowledging
that these emotions are also part of human experience, the Anglican
Psalter retains this material, to be included or omitted as local
preference or the occasion dictates. Includes work by renowned
composers past and present including Elgar, Parry, Stanford,
Stainer, Wesley, Malcolm Archer, David Willcocks, John Barnard, and
many more.
"Prayer is God's gift to us, a banquet of good things to feed our
inner life, as we respond to the invitation to his feast of peace,
forgiveness, challenge and love." If our lives are an open book to
God, prayer is the dialogue we share with him over its pages. The
Book of a Thousand Prayers is a collection of wise and honest
prayers to God about his concerns and ours: who he is to us and who
we are to him, and how we experience life, death, relationships,
the church, and the world. Ideal for private prayer and public
worship, and containing practical advice on how to pray, this book
offers a spiritual feast that will nourish you for the rest of your
life. "A moving and inspiring medley of prayers--an invaluable aid
for individuals, home groups, and those people who lead worship."
Joyce Huggett X
This book examines various rhetorical ways in which the motif of
Yahweh's Kingship functions in the Book of Ezekiel and explores
what these arguments contribute to our understanding of the
prophetic book as a whole.
Prayer practitioners Eddie Smith and Michael L. Hennen identify
twenty-seven principles that will equip you to pray more
purposefully and effectively. Using them, you will * focus on the
Lord's answers rather than your requests * understand strategies
for a successful offensive * grasp the critical importance of
timing * learn the enemy's goals and strategies * and prepare for
victory as God's glory is revealed Complete the practical survey
that follows each principle to spiritually map your prayer target.
Then use your map to effectively focus both personal and corporate
prayer. This goal-based, proactive approach to prayer will bring
results in individuals, churches, cities, and nations as you enter
into partnership with God.
This is a critical assessment of the Liturgical Reform after the
second Vatican Council that seeks the origins of failure in
pre-conciliar developments. If the suppression of the traditional
Roman liturgy against the wishes of the Second Vatican Council was,
in the words of Silvio Cardinal Oddi, 'a crime for which history
will never forgive the Church', why, at the end of the 1960s, did
the vast majority of Latin Catholics abandon, with little or no
regret, their time-hallowed forms of worship? "The Banished Heart"
seeks to account for this cultural and spiritual catastrophe by
demonstrating what will surprise many: how the present mainstream
Catholic Church, with its modernistic and secular aura, grew
directly from the official conservatism of the Church as it was
before the Council. T Clark Studies in "Fundamental Liturgy" offer
cutting edge scholarship from all disciplines related to liturgical
study. The books in the series seek to reintegrate biblical,
patristic, historical, dogmatic and philosophical questions with
liturgical study in ways faithful and sympathetic to classical
liturgical enquiry. Volumes in the series include monographs,
translations of recent texts and edited collections around very
specific themes.
This study examines the collects assigned to the Sundays and major
feasts of the proper seasons in the ordinary and extraordinary
forms of the Roman rite. The Latin collects assigned to each day in
the typical editions of the respective missals are compared and
contrasted both with their respective sources and with one another.
Pertinent discussions and decisions of the Consilium study groups
responsible for the post-Vatican II revisions of the liturgical
calendar and Mass collects are also presented and considered. The
goal of the study is to determine whether the two sets of collects
present the same picture of the human situation, approach God in
the same way, seek the same things from him, and, where they do
not, to identify significant changes in theological and/or
spiritual emphases.
The English Office contains daily offices for Mattins and Evensong
(Morning and Evening Prayer) taken from the Book of Common Prayer,
with additional material from Sarum, Roman and other sources. A
complete resource for the recitation of morning and evening prayer
throughout the year, it also includes: * seasonal propers * propers
of saints * commons of apostles, martyrs and saints * an office of
Mary * an office of the dead * the Litany * an order of commending
a soul * an itinerarium (prayers before a journey) * prayers before
and after mass * the Psalms and psalm antiphons First published in
1956, this classic Anglo-Catholic text is a companion volume to The
English Missal and The English Ritual. A high-quality hardback with
ribbon, it features rubrics printed in red to aid daily use.
In 1549 Thomas Cranmer published the first "Prayer Book" in
English. Based on a medieval form of worship, its language is both
sublime and majestic. "Later Prayer Books" produced by the Anglican
Communion are derived from it - and in the eyes of many are
inferior. All Christian denominations in England and America owe an
incalculable debt to Cranmer's pioneering work. This new edition
presents Cranmer's services in a form which is practical,
accessible and easy to follow. This is the first edition designed
for use in worship since the original publication over 450 years
ago. As in the original, the instructions - the "rubrics" - are
printed in red. The present publishers hope that churches and
informal Christian groups may use if for occasional - or even
regular - acts of worship.
This is a serious, scholarly of liturgy analysis combining
historical, philosophical, musicological and liturgical. The
volume, like the series, will be aimed at moving the debate about
liturgy out of the narrow confines of either 'pastoral liturgy',
'reform of the reform' or nostalgia and bemoaning of the ruination
of liturgical tradition to an entirely higher plane, of serious,
scholarly, measured analysis combining historical, philosophical,
musicological and liturgical. This book advances a provocative and
controversial set of proposals for the development of future
liturgical reform in its attempt to re-engage with a traditional
sense of the Roman Rite. The author is uniquely placed to make the
case he does. A mediaevalist and musicologist of unparalleled
experience and breadth, Dobszay combines - almost uniquely - a
profound knowledge of the history of the development of the Roman
Rite - especially the Antiphonary - with a personal interest and
passionate concern for the lived experience of the rite itself. The
result is a lively and vigorous text based around the idea of the
actual liturgical sense of the Roman Rite - meaning a respect for
its integrity as an historical tradition that found multiform
expression across Europe and also across at least 1600 years,
combined with a sympathy for the fact that the rite is still a
living entity with a long future ahead of it. "T&T Clark
Studies in Fundamental Liturgy" offer cutting edge scholarship from
all disciplines related to liturgical study. The books in the
series seek to reintegrate biblical, patristic, historical,
dogmatic and philosophical questions with liturgical study in ways
faithful and sympathetic to classical liturgical enquiry. Volumes
in the series include monographs, translations of recent texts and
edited collections around very specific themes.
This book explores one of the great paradoxes of our era. Western
culture has almost imperceptibly come to secularize the sacred,
while at the same time sacralizing the secular. The authors
endeavor to show the debilitating effects that this paradox has had
on the foundations of Christian worship with special reference to
the history of worship and in particular the Presbyterian Church in
Australia. The authors show how the theological predilection for
'minimization' has become inextricably woven into the fabric of
what we call 'the theory of transformative subjugation' which
drives the rationale for religious secularization. The book argues
that it is necessary to consider a serious reconstruction of
theological education in which its framework is located in a
specific Christian theory of knowledge which engenders the Lordship
of Christ and encourages a spirit of transformative love and
connectedness. It is only in this context that the theology of
worship and the beauty and usefulness of liturgical forms can be
appreciated.
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