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Louis Weil looks back on his work shaping the liturgical life of the Episcopal Church through his involvement with the development of The 1979 Book of Common Prayer¿ and looks forward to the future of the church and its liturgical life. Through stories and first-person anecdotes, Weil does ¿narrative theology¿ as only he can. Although most points of reference are to the 1979 BCP, the book is aiming at a more fundamental level¿not just Episcopal or even Anglican liturgy, but liturgical rites as such: how do they ¿do what they dö?¿or NOT do when they are done badly! ¿Liturgical Sense¿ is two dimensional: both the ¿common sense¿ of liturgical rites and also their ¿aesthetic sense.¿ It is Dr. Weil¿s contention that in American culture we have an inherent inability to ¿think symbolically.¿ Dr. Weil seeks to encourage a return to ¿liturgical sense¿ across the church.
2015 marks the 30th anniversary of Lee Mitchell¿s great standard work on the 1979 Book of Common Prayer. As his student, protégée, and colleague, Ruth Meyers takes this classic work and updates it for the Church in its current era and for the future.
Of particular interest to scholars and practitioners across the Anglican Communion with contributions from a wide breadth of scholars.Liturgical Spirituality is a collection of Anglican reflections on the spirituality of the liturgy, inviting readers into the Church¿s patterns of prayer, seasons of the year, and sacramental action. With contributions from all over the world, from the North Atlantic to Australia, the collection helps develop a comprehensive understanding of contemporary Anglican spirituality.
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