Eucharistic Prayers
By Samuel Wells and Abigail Kocher.
Eerdmans. Pp. 365. $40
Review by Robert W. Prichard
As the Episcopal Church edges its way toward supplementing or...
InterVarsity Press’s new 1662 Book of Common Prayer, International Edition surely made it smoothly through all the copyrighting wrangles, but it’s not the first...
By Jordan Hylden
Like everyone else, I found the 2019 parochial report statistics very sobering reading. As David Goodhew summarized, TEC has lost about 40...
A Eucharistic Prayer
By Nathan Jennings and Richelle Thompson
In this series, we offer prayers edited from the corpus of Jeremy Taylor as examples of alternative...
Material for the Holy Communion
By Nathan Jennings and Richelle Thompson
In this series, we offer prayers edited from the corpus of Jeremy Taylor as examples...
Material for the Service of the Word
By Nathan Jennings and Richelle Thompson
The phrase “experimental liturgy” often evoke a sense of leaving behind traditional texts,...
Expansive language presses against the limits of the worst habits of our theological imaginations, especially, for instance, assuming we know what a word like “father” means.
These speakers represent a range of theological positions and disciplinary backgrounds. But what they share is a deep commitment to the life and prayer of the Episcopal Church. Don’t you want to be a part of this conversation? Don’t we need to have this conversation as a church? Prayer book revision is coming. Will you be part of the dialogue, or will you leave it to others?