The Challenges of a
Common Liturgy—Part 5
By Robin G. Jordan
During the past 50 odd years a growing number of Anglican
provinces have come to recognize the need not only for new services of Morning
and Evening Prayer and Holy Communion but also for alternative forms of morning
and evening worship. In the West society has become
increasingly post-Christian and secular. Services of Morning and Evening Prayer
and Holy Communion designed for a time period when Christianity was the
dominant if not the established religion and most people attended church
services were based on assumptions that are no longer applicable. The West is
once more perceptibly a major mission field.
The qualification “perceptibly” is an important one. The
West has never ceased to be a mission field from the moment Jesus commissioned
his disciples to take the gospel to all people groups and make them his
disciples too. Going to church is not the same as accepting Jesus as one’s Lord and
Savior and choosing to follow him whatever may be the cost. People may go to
church because it is the respectable thing to do in their community. They may
be attracted by the ambience of a particular church, by the community it may
offer, or how else it may meet their needs. At the same time they may never
enjoy a personal relationship with Jesus or a close fellowship with God.
Both the Liturgical and Parish Communion Movements promoted
the celebration of Holy Communion as the principal service on Sunday in the
twentieth century. A substantial drop in church attendance and a major shortage of clergy has made
the establishment of a Sunday or weekly celebration of Holy Communion as a norm
impracticable and unrealistic. A large segment of the population is not
baptized, much less confirmed, and has very little previous experience of
Christians at prayer.
While the early church may have dismissed inquirers before
the celebration of Holy Communion in the first - fourth centuries, this
practice is viewed as exclusionary and unwelcoming in the twenty-first century.
It is also predicated on the assumption that a typical Sunday service
congregation consists of those who are baptized and those who are seeking
baptism.
In the closing decades of the twentieth century and the opening
decades of the twenty-first century such an assumption has no basis. By the
twentieth century a church’s Sunday service had become its chief point of
contact with unbelievers. In churches that are outward-looking, a typical
Sunday service congregation will include the whole spectrum of unbelievers and
believers. This broad spectrum will include unbelievers who came at the insistence
of a believing friend but have no interest in becoming a Christian; unbelievers
who came on their own initiative for reasons of their own but who are also not
interested in becoming a Christian; unbeliever who are open to becoming a
Christian; unbeliever who are investigating Christianity in an Alpha,
Christianity Explored, Starting Point, or similar group; new believers preparing
for baptism; new believer who have
undergone baptism and are undergoing further discipling; and believers who are
baptized and are at various stages of maturity as disciples of Jesus.
One of the weaknesses of the proposed ACNA catechetical
process is that it based upon perceived similarities between the first – fourth
centuries and twenty-first century but does not take into account their very
real dissimilarities. This lack of sensitivity to the differences between the
twenty-first century and earlier centuries may also explain why the Prayer Book
and Common Liturgy Task Force has to date produced rites and services that are
geared to the preferences and preoccupations of past generations but are not
suited for use in the twenty-first century mission field. They are far removed
from its realities.
The disappearance of Christendom and the advent of a
secular, post-Christian society are not the only factors motivating Anglican
provinces to produce new prayers, new services, and new service books. Among other
factors are the desire to locally adapt worship to a particular culture and the
wish to mobilize the laity in the service of the gospel.
Before undertaking a survey of the newer services of Morning
and Evening Prayer and alternative forms of morning and evening worship, we
need to briefly examine the history of Morning and Evening Prayer. This will
help put a number of liturgical developments into perspective.
The origin of the services of Morning and Evening Prayer can
be traced to the “cathedral,” or popular, offices of Lauds and Vespers. The
“cathedral” offices differ from the later monastic offices as they are more
congregational and participatory, incorporate a number of fixed elements, and
may include a homily or sermon. These two services were typically conducted in
the main church of a town and all the Christian inhabitants of the town were
expected to attend. Their origin can be traced to the prayer services of the
Jewish synagogue. They were primarily services of praise and prayer. Depending
on the locality they also incorporated proclamation in the form of the reading
and exposition of the Scriptures. The language used in these services was the
vernacular.
With the rise of monasticism in the fourth century, the
cathedral offices of Lauds and Vespers eventually would be absorbed and
displaced by the monastic daily offices. At the heart of the monastic daily
offices is the recitation of the entire Psalter with each Psalm or group of
Psalms interspersed with prostrations and prayers.
A more limited selection of Psalms is used in the cathedral
offices, chosen for their suitability to the time of day. Four Psalms that have
a long association with Lauds are the morning Psalm—Psalm 63—and the laudate
Psalms—Psalms 148, 149, and 150; a Psalm that has a similar association with
Vespers is the evening Psalm—Psalm 141. The singing of the Psalms in the
cathedral office was responsorial with a leader singing the parts of a Psalm
and the congregation singing a chorus or refrain. This type of singing is also
known as call-and-response and is found in the folk music of numerous cultures.
It was used in the Jewish synagogues in New Testament times and earlier.
A canticle that has a long association with Lauds in the
West is Benedicite. In the Gallican Church Lauds was called “Benedicto.” Gloria
in Excelsis is the canticle that has similar associations with Lauds in the
East. A canticle having a long association with Vespers in both the West and
the East is Magnificat.
It deserves special mention that the pattern of worship seen
in charismatic praise and prayer meetings of the twentieth century was
essential that of the cathedral offices of Lauds and Vespers with the singing
of choruses and worship songs replacing the chanting of Psalms and canticles
and spontaneous, extemporaneous prayer replacing the recitation of the preces
(West) and the litany (East). The charismatic renewal movement would also
precipitate a revival of call-and-response singing in churches affected by that
movement. The choruses and worship songs used in charismatic worship in the
1980s and 1990s had catchy tunes; simple, easy-to-remember lyrics; and repetition
and refrains characteristic of folk music and were eminently congregational and
participatory.
Since then the pendulum has swung in the opposite direction.
While bands have become ubiquitous in twenty-first century North American
churches, the kind of songs that they sing is far more performance-oriented than
the type of songs that twentieth century music groups sung. In Sing
God A Simple Song: Exploring Music in Worship for the Eighties (1986) Betty
Pulkingham points to our attention: “The music of the church belongs to the
people; they are celebrants.” Twentieth-century music groups that recognized
this important fact saw their role as releasing the whole family of God into
praise and worship. Due to cultural influences contemporary bands have a
different understanding of their role.
What we are seeing in many North American churches on
Sundays is not corporate worship but parallel worship. Parallel worship is
similar to parallel play observable in small children. In parallel play small
children play alongside each other but not together. They are actually playing
alone and not with each other even though they are in the same room and are in
close proximity to each other. Parallel play may also be observed in older
children when playing video games on a smart phone or other hand-held device.
In a gathering in which people are engaging in parallel
worship, some may be singing along with the vocalists in the band during
worship sets; others may be listening to the vocalist’s singing. A number of
people may be praying. Some may sit; others stand. A few may kneel or prostrate
themselves on the floor. Sadly parallel worship is encouraged by contemporary
worship leaders with directions like “feel free to sing along or just listen.”
On at least one occasion I have witnessed a couple
passionately fondling and kissing each other throughout the entire worship set.
Presumably they were trying to provoke a reaction from the congregation. Those
around the couple paid no attention to the amorous pair. They were too absorbed
in whatever they were doing—singing along, listening, or praying.
The phenomenon of parallel worship is not peculiar to the
twenty-first century. In Medieval times the people would pray the Rosary or
otherwise engage in private devotions while the priest and, in cathedrals and
larger churches, the choir intoned the Mass. The use of the vernacular and the
other reforms that Archbishop Cranmer introduced into the liturgy of the
English Church were intended to do away with such practices and to restore
common prayer to the Church.
In his reform of the monastic daily offices Archbishop Cranmer
would conflate elements from the monastic offices into two services, one for
use in the morning and the other for use in the late afternoon. Cramer named
these services Morning and Evening Prayer in the 1552 Prayer Book. The English
parish clergy were obligated to read these two services every day and to ring
the church bells summoning their parishioners to join them. In the process
Cranmer restored the ancient “cathedral” pattern of Lauds and Vespers.
The service of Morning Prayer began with an opening sentence
of Scripture, an exhortation, a confession of sin and declaration of
forgiveness—Reformed elements, followed by the Lord’s Prayer, the Opening Preces,
and the Invitatory Psalm—the Venite
(Psalm 95). The service of Evening Prayer began with the Lord’s Prayer and the
Opening Preces and had no Invitatory.
The Psalter was divided between the two services and recited
in its entirety in course over a period of thirty days. The Old Testament was
read through in one year and the New Testament in three years. The first reading
was followed by a canticle—Te Deum or Benedicite at Morning Prayer and
Magnificat or Cantate Domino (Psalm 98) at Evensong. The second reading was
also followed by a canticle—Benedictus or Jubilate Deo (Psalm 100) at Morning Prayer and
Nunc Dimittis or Deus Misereatur (Psalm 67) at Evening Prayer.
The readings were followed by the Lesser Litany, the
Apostles’ Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, the Suffrages, and three Collects. This is
the basic structure of the traditional Anglican services of Morning and Evening
Prayer to this day.
A number of additions have been made to the services of
Morning and Evening Prayer in various revisions of the Book of Common Prayer
since 1552. They include the addition of the penitential section to Evening
Prayer, a Prayer for the King’s Majesty, a Prayer for the Royal Family, a
Prayer for the Clergy, and People, a Prayer of St. Chrysostom, and the Grace in
1662.
These services are essentially an adaptation of the monastic
daily offices for popular use. They are not a revival of the cathedral form of
the daily offices. This would not occur until the twentieth century.
A major drawback of the services of Morning and Evening
Prayer in the older Prayer Books, including the 1962 Canadian Prayer Book, is
that the chanting of the Psalms and canticles in the services requires strong
musical leadership and the right kind of acoustical environment. This limits
their usefulness on the North American mission field.
The 1962 Canadian Prayer Book was the last Prayer Book
revision of a province of the Anglican Communion, which exclusively uses
traditional or Jacobean English in all its services. While the 2005 REC Prayer
Book retains the use of traditional or Jacobean English for its services, the
Reformed Episcopal Church is an extra-mural Anglican jurisdiction.
By the nineteenth century Morning Prayer would become the
principal service on Sunday in many parishes in the Episcopal Church. In
response to the Muhlenberg Memorial calling for greater flexibility and variety
in liturgical use, the House of Bishops would, in 1856, adopt a resolution that
would recommend the use of the services of Morning Prayer, Litany, and Holy
Communion as separate services, among other recommendations. The Church of
England would see a similar development.
Only in Anglo-Catholic parishes would Mass, or Holy
Communion, be given a prominent place. In a large number of these parishes Mass
would be a service at which only the priest received communion. The twentieth
century Liturgical Movement would be responsible for promoting Sunday or weekly
communion in Episcopal parishes. Morning Prayer would be the principle service
on Sunday in many Episcopal parishes well in to the 1970s.
The late Eric Routley makes an important point in Church Music and the Christian Faith
(1978):“Psalms were originally not primarily for congregational singing and
many of them are better as solos or choral pieces for people to listen to.” This
puts at a decided disadvantage the small congregation that does not have a
cantor or choir and which worship in a poor acoustical environment.
The recitation of the Psalms and canticles is a poor substitute
for the singing of these liturgical texts. This may explain in part why the
Episcopal Church did not enjoy in rural areas and small towns the success that
it enjoyed in large towns and cities.
A comparison of The
Hymnal 1916 and The Hymnal 1940 shows
a definite shift away from the gospel songs and other popular forms of church
music that were the staple of US rural and small town churches. The Hymnal 1940 is modeled on Hymns Ancient and Modern. Its editors
added to the selection of hymns from Anglo-Catholic, ancient, and medieval
sources and employed hymn tunes that are not widely used outside of the
Episcopal Church.
In seeking to give the Episcopal Church a more elevated
style of church music, the editors of The
Hymnal 1940 widened the gap between rural and small town Episcopal churches
and their communities. They also contributed to the unrealistic expectation
that every Episcopal church should have an organ, a robed choir, a trained
organist, and a trained choir director, an expectation that small churches
found difficult if not impossible to meet. This expectation discouraged small
churches from taking full advantage of what music resources they did have.
The quality of their worship is a critical factor for all
congregations irrespective of their size. But it is particularly a critical
factor for small congregations. Small congregations have the most difficulty
attracting and keeping new members due to the poor quality of their worship. A
denominational hymnal can enable a small congregation to provide high quality
worship within the limitations of its musical resources. As in the case of The Hymnal 1940, a denominational hymnal can make this task
more difficult.
Some congregations have experimented with the dramatic
reading of the Psalms by one or more voices with instrumental music carefully selected
to accent their reading played at appropriate points in the reading. Only a few
congregations have the resources to pull off this kind of reading.
One will occasionally read how a church switched from Holy
Communion to Morning Prayer as its principal service on Sunday and saw an
increase in its attendance. But the service to which these churches switched
was choral Morning Prayer. Upon further investigation one discovers that the
churches in question were large city churches with traditional worship centers,
choirs, organs, trained choir directors and organists, good acoustics, and a
population segment appreciative of traditional choral and organ music.
More than five hundred years after Cranmer’s reform of the
Church of England’s daily offices, in 1971, the Roman Catholic Church would
undertake a major reform of the monastic daily offices in use in that
denomination. This reform was quite radical for the Roman Catholic Church. It
would greatly simplify the structure of Matins and Vespers, reduce the number
of Psalms at each service, and assign more biblical canticles.
Among the criticism of these reforms was that the daily offices
remained essentially private offices for the clergy. They were not the daily
prayer of the whole church. Critics would suggest that the only way the Roman
Catholic Church’s reformed Liturgy of the Hours could become popular would be
to include cathedral type elements.
William G. Storey was a professor of liturgics at the
University of Notre Dame and a major critic of the reforms. Dr. Storey and his
students collaborated to produce services of Matins and Vespers that would
include “cathedral” elements and have a popular character. The result was Morning Praise and Evensong (1973), also
known as the Notre Dame Liturgy. Frank C. Senn describes the Notre Dame Liturgy in his Introduction to Christian Liturgy (2012) on pages 92 - 93. The
Notre Dame Liturgy would influence a number of the newer services of Morning
and Evening Prayer.
The criticism of the Roman Catholic Church’s reformed
Liturgy of the Hours would also draw attention to the weaknesses of the
traditional Anglican services of Morning and Evening Prayer. It would prompt
along with the needs of the contemporary church the development of alternative
forms of morning and evening worship as well as new structures for the services
of Morning and Evening Prayer.
In the next article we will survey a number of the services
of Morning and Evening Prayer and alternative forms of morning and evening
worship that have been published in the past 50 odd years. Most of these
services and forms may be found on the Internet. A few have not been posted on the
web, a situation that I hope will corrected in the near future. They are part
of the wealth of more recent liturgical material available to a working group
developing rites and services for a new Anglican jurisdiction in North America.
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