Monday, October 31, 2022

The Renewed Ancient Text: An Evaluation with Suggestions for Use—Planning and Celebrating the Holy Eucharist—Part 1

 


In this article, the fifth in the series, I will be offering suggestions for planning and celebrating the Holy Eucharist, using the Order for the Administration of the Lord’s Supper, Renewed Ancient Text, from The Anglican Church in North America’s The Book of Common Prayer (2019). I had originally planned six articles but subsequently decided to divide what was to be a single article on planning and celebrating the Holy Eucharist into two parts and discuss planning the Preparation for the Lord’s Supper and the Liturgy of the Table in a separate article.


It must be borne in mind that the 2019 Book of Common Prayer has no official standing in the Anglican Church in North America. It has never been adopted as the official Prayer Book of the ACNA and whether its use is permitted in a particular diocese of the ACNA is up to the bishop of that diocese. In some cases, the bishop of a diocese has authorized its use in his diocese and may have given specific instructions concerning its use. In other cases, clergy and congregations have the option of using other Anglican service books and in one case the Church of England’s Common Worship (2000) is the only service book whose use is permitted in the diocese for services of public worship.

If the bishop of the diocese has not given specific instructions concerning its use, then I recommend following the advice of William Palmer Ladd, American Episcopal priest, liturgical scholar, seminary dean, and the author of Prayer Book Interleaves: Some Reflections on How the Book of Common Prayer Might Be Made More Influential (1943, 1957), and disregarding the rubrics of the book and omit material from the book where it is necessary. The bold may choose to make other changes. I will suggest a few. The timid may choose to adhere to the rubrics but pare down the rite to make it more usable on the North American mission field.

The Gathering of God’s People. All celebrations of the Holy Eucharist begin with the gathering of God’s people. Their coming together begins outside of the building in which they will meet. It begins in their homes or places of employment or wherever they are, the day that a particular celebration is held and even the night before. As they assemble in the place where they will celebrate the Holy Eucharist, they may greet each other and chat with each other. This is itself a part of the gathering process—the coming together of a congregation of the faithful to celebrate the Holy Eucharist. The purpose of the introductory rite is to complete this process, in which a loose aggregate of people becomes a worshiping assembly, a visible manifestation of the Body of Christ. It enables those present to settle their thoughts and to focus their attention on God.

Worship planners can help those present make this transition in a number of ways. Let’s take a look at some options.

A traditional method of summoning a congregation to prayer in the Western Church is to ring a church bell several times twice with an interval in between and followed by a period of silence. The practice of ringing a bell to summon a congregation to prayer can be traced to the seventh century In the absence of a church bell, tubular bells or stacked bells struck with a rawhide mallet may be used or an audio recording of a church bell played. The tolling of a church bell not only calls the congregation to prayer but also sets the mood.

In the churches of the East, however, a semantron, a percussion instrument, consisting of a wooden plank or a metal plate, is struck instead of or in addition to a bell for this purpose. The different kinds of semantrons are described in this Wikipedia article.  A wooden box drum struck with a pair of soft mallets might double as a semantron for congregations wishing to employ this method of summoning a congregation to prayer. A gong with a deep, resonate tone, Claves  or a woodblock are other possibilities.

The performance of sacred music can also help a congregation make this transition. In some churches this music has typically been an organ voluntary. Rather than limit ourselves to one form of music, it is a good idea to use a variety of pre-service music. The time before the service provides an opportunity to introduce a new tune to the congregation or to use the musical talents of members of the congregation. The choir or a small ensemble might sing a choral call to worship. A soloist might sing a selection that introduces the theme of the celebration. For example, if the theme of the celebration is “Love One Another…,” a soloist might sing the Shaker song, “Love Is Little.” The congregation might be invited to join in singing a medley of simple worship songs. Songs from the Global Church like “Come All You People, Come and Praise Your Maker” and “Come O Holy Spirit, Come” work well at this juncture.

Key is not to do the same thing Sunday after Sunday. One of the risks of doing the same thing every Sunday (or whenever the congregation celebrates the Holy Eucharist) is that congregation may come to pay no attention to the pre-service music, treat it as background music, and continue to socialize. Regardless of whether the congregation participates in the music, we want to engage them with the music, employ it to shift their attention to God and to put them in the right frame of mind for what is to follow.

An effective way of helping a congregation to begin the transition from a loose aggregate of people to a worshiping assembly is to conduct a preservice congregational rehearsal. Such rehearsals enable congregations to learn new hymns, other forms of liturgical songs, and service music and to practice unfamiliar ones. They convey to the congregation that congregational singing is an important part of a congregation’s weekly celebration of the Holy Eucharist and that the congregation as a worshiping assembly is the principal musical instrument of the congregation.

The most effective musical instrument for teaching new lyrics and new tunes to a congregation is a high quality upright piano or electric piano. It is also the best instrument to accompany congregational singing particularly in small congregation in rented facilities and other non-traditional worship settings. The notes of a tune sound crisper and sharper on a well-tuned piano than they do on an organ and are easier to follow. The advantage of an upright piano over a grand piano is that the sound travels outward and not upward. Pianists are easier to find than organists. Many people learn to play the piano but very few learn to play the organ.

Despite its popularity an acoustic or electric guitar is not the best instrument for teaching new lyrics and new tunes or leading and accompanying congregational singing. The chords the guitarist plays on the guitar are not the melody of the tune. Unless the guitarist is able to sing and has the right kind of voice to lead congregational singing or has a vocalist who knows the lyrics and who can sing them to the guitar accompaniment, the congregation has nothing to follow. This is one of the reasons that we are seeing a decline in congregational singing in churches were the guitar is used. This is not to say that we should not use the guitar in corporate worship, but we should be mindful of its limitations. When a music group leads congregational singing, it is the keyboard and the vocalists who actually lead the singing.

In liturgical forms of services, a percussionist who can play a variety of percussion instruments—box drum, claves, conga drums, djembe, gongs, stacked bells, tube bells, woodblock, xylophone, and like is preferable to a percussionist who is familiar only with a drum kit.

Among the ways that a church can help its congregation or its congregations if it has more than one weekly celebration of the Holy Eucharist to learn new music is to post audios or videos of the music on its website. This also conveys to a congregation that the church is serious about its participation in the music of the liturgy.

Whether a congregation has a choir or a musical ensemble (also known as a music group or a musical group) or both, it is best to have the choir and the musical ensemble assume their places quietly and unobtrusively before the service. This will enable them to lead and support the congregational singing when it is time to sing the opening song of the service. It is also desirable for the bishop or priest who is presiding over the celebration and the other liturgical ministers to assume their places at the same time. It is best to leave processions with choir, incense, lights, and a processional cross to solemn occasions such as church festivals and major feast days. In many non-traditional worship settings, a procession decidedly looks out of place, especially when it consists of a priest and one assisting liturgical minister carrying a processional cross. What may have been customary in one setting may not be the best choice for another setting. When we fail to consider the setting and other key factors in planning a celebration of the Holy Eucharist, the celebration will be weak and unsatisfactory in more ways than one.

There are several misunderstandings about the function or role of the opening song, or gathering song, in a celebration of the Holy Eucharist. One of these misunderstandings is that the purpose of this song is to accompany the entrance of the ministers. Its real purpose is to be the first thing that a congregation does together as a worshipping assembly. It is the first ritual action of the liturgy. As well as creating an atmosphere of celebration, its function or role is to help put the congregation in the right frame of mind for hearing the Scripture readings and the sermon. The opening song “serves to galvanize the room of individuals into a connected community of faith and prayer.” It helps them see themselves as a worshipping assembly. The opening song is also, in a very real sense, the opening prayer for all who have gathered to celebrate the Holy Eucharist.

For these reasons this song should be easy to sing and familiar to the congregations, a song in which all who are present should be able to participate. It may be a hymn, a psalm, a canticle, the Kyrie, the Trisagion, or some other worship song. It should not be too long or too slow. It also should not be cut off abruptly partway through. In selecting the song, worship planners should carefully choose what stanzas of the song will be sung so that the stanzas selected to be sung make sense together. We do not honor God when we ask the congregation to sing nonsense.

The choice of the opening song is an important one. How well it goes will often determine how well the liturgy goes. If the liturgy gets off to a slow start, it may drag throughout.

During penitential seasons like Advent and Lent worship planners may wish to choose a nine-fold or twelve-fold Kyrie or Trisagion for the opening song. A second option is profound silence.

On some occasions it may be appropriate to sing a medley of worship songs in place of a single opening song, in which case it is a good idea to start with an upbeat song of praise and transition to a slower song of adoration. Care should be taken that the focus of these songs is God and not ourselves.

In planning the songs of the liturgy, I recommend first choosing the song between the first two lessons and the song before the Great Thanksgiving, then communion songs and the final song, and last of all, the opening song. During seasons like Advent, Christmas, Lent, and Easter, the service music can be selected for the entire season. In the longer seasons of ordinary time, the season after Epiphany and the season after Pentecost, it can be chosen for several Sundays in a row. By service music, I mean the Kyrie or Trisagion, the Gloria in Excelsis or some other song of praise, the Alleluia or Gospel Acclamation before the Gospel reading, the Sanctus-Benedictus, Memorial Acclamation, the Great Amen, and the Fraction Anthem if one is used.

Unless the bishop has given specific directions regarding the use of the rites and services in the 2019 BCP, I recommend going immediately from the opening song to a very brief introduction to the celebration in which the president over the celebration welcomes all present and those viewing on cable TV and online, followed by the greeting and response, “The Lord be with you; and also with you” or “The Lord be with you; the Lord bless you” and the Collect for the Day. If the Sunday or other occasion is a special occasion, a collect related to the occasion may be said immediately after the Collect of the Day or after the Post-Communion Prayer. These two junctures are where such prayers are most commonly said in Anglican service books. Saying one or more such prayers before the sermon as directed in the rubrics of the 1928 BCP adds needlessly to the gap between the reading of God’s Word and its exposition and is not recommended. An alternative is to include a special petition or thanksgiving in the Prayers of the People.

For worship planners who feel rubric-bound, the Renewed Ancient Text does not offer many options for the introductory rite. They are given the choice of one of three penitential opening rites or an opening rite suitable for a papal visit.

Option #1. After the opening song the minister presiding over the celebration say an opening acclamation and the congregation say the response. It is recommended that only one of the three opening acclamations printed in the rite itself be used. The president alone or the president and the congregation together say the Collect for Purity, after which the president or some other minister reads the Decalogue, and the congregation say the responses. The Decalogue may also be sung instead of being read. The president and the congregation then sing or say the Kyrie or the Trisagion. The president then greets the congregation with the salutation “The Lord be with you” to which the congregation responds, “And with your spirit,” as in the 2011 translation of the Roman Rite, or “And also with you,” as in the lion’s share of Anglican rites from the 1970s on. The president then says, “Let us pray,” followed by the Collect of the Day.

While the rubrics do not make provision for a period of silence before the president says the Collect, it is strongly recommended. Having invited the congregation to pray, it is highly appropriate to give the congregation an opportunity to do so. The function of a Collect is “to gather the intentions of the people and the focus of worship into a succinct prayer.”

This option is rather lengthy and is best reserved for Lent. The Kyrie and the Trisagion are songs, and they should be sung, rather than said. Many settings of these two songs can be sung without accompaniment. The Kyrie is best sung in its nine-fold or twelve-fold form and the Trisagion in its three-fold form at a minimum. A perfunctory “Lord, have mercy upon us, Christ, have mercy upon us, Lord, have mercy upon us” falls short as does singing or saying the Trisagion only once. Since the compilers of the rite have saw fit to make one of these songs a requisite part of the opening of the service, worship planners should make the best use of the song as an opening devotion.

Option #2. After the opening song the president says an opening acclamation and the congregation says the response after which the president alone or the president and the congregation together say the Collect for Purity The president reads the Summary of the Law, and the congregation says the response. All sing or say the Kyrie or Trisagion.

This option is the shortest and the least front-heavy and is the option that is likely to see the most use. The recommendations which I made for Option #1 apply to this option and the remaining two options.

The Kyrie and the Trisagion are congregational songs and consequently, the settings used should not be too elaborate or difficult. The setting should have a straightforward melody that the congregation can learn and sing. This does not mean that the setting cannot have embellishments that choir or musical ensemble sings but these embellishments should not obscure the melody. During the long seasons of ordinary time, the Season after Epiphany and the Season after Pentecost several settings may be used during the season, each setting for several Sundays in a row. While relatively new to the opening rite of the Holy Eucharist in the Anglican Church the Trisagion has long been used at the opening of the service in the Eastern Churches and was used at the beginning of the service in the early Gallican rites, It is a good choice for these seasons of the Church Year. The Kyrie might be best saved for Advent and Lent and for the occasions when Option #4 is used.

Option #3.  The Additional Directions Concerning Holy Communion make provision for a rather lengthy Penitential Order, for use at the opening of the liturgy, or for use on other occasions. After the opening song the president says an opening acclamation and the congregation says the response after which the president alone or the president and the congregation together say the Collect for Purity. After the Collect for Purity the Additional Directions then state “then kneeling as able.” This direction presumably refers to the congregation, but the Additional Directions do not specify. The president reads the Decalogue or Summary of the Law, and the congregation says the responses. It is a longstanding practice for the minister who reads the Decalogue or the Summary of the Law to remain standing. The Exhortation may then be read.

It would have made sense to have omitted the direction to kneel since a congregation might be gathered to celebrate the Holy Eucharist in a setting that does not permit kneeling. For example, they may be using a rented sanctuary of some other church, which is not equipped with kneelers or hassocks. A rubric at the beginning of the service pointing out that the rubrics are suggestions only as in An Australian Prayer Book (1978) would have been a useful addition to the rite.

The Additional Directions make no provision for a deacon or the person appointed to invite the congregation to confess their sins or for a period of silence following the bidding in which the congregation can examine themselves before God and confess specific wrongdoings and sins to God. The Penitential Order goes immediately from the Kyrie or Trisagion or the Exhortation if it is used. It is strongly recommended that a deacon or the person appointed giving the invitation to confession allow the congregation ample time to examine themselves and confess their sins in silence before proceeding to the Confession of Sin.

While the rubrics permit a deacon to lead the Confession of Sin in the penitential preparation before the exchange of the Peace, the Additional Directions do not specify who may lead the Confession of Sin in the Penitential Order. One of the weaknesses of the 2019 BCP is that, like the 2011 translation of the Roman Rite, it assumes that every congregation has a deacon and does not make provision for authorized lay persons to lead the Confession of Sin and perform other functions in the liturgy in the absence of a deacon as do many other Anglican service books. It has a very limited view of the role of the laity in the liturgy, which is after all “the work of the people.” This constricted view of the laity’s role reflects the Anglo-Catholic influence in its rites and services.

The Confession of Sin is followed by the Absolution and may be followed by the Comfortable Words. The Additional Directions specify that the Kyrie follow the Absolution or the Comfortable Words if used. They make no mention of the Trisagion. They also make no mention of the president and the congregation exchanging the greeting of the salutation before Collect of the Day or the president inviting the congregation to pray. As the rubrics are presently written, the president may immediately go to the Collect of the Day after the Kyrie.

I do not recommend the use of this Penitential Order except on the First Sunday of Lent and the First Sunday of Advent and then with the Decalogue. If it is used on those occasions, I recommend that the opening song should be omitted, and the service should be proceeded by a profound silence. If the liturgical ministers normally enter in procession, they should enter in a silent procession. The processional cross, if one is used, should be veiled. during Lent as should be all crosses in the sanctuary or worship center.

Option #4. This option follows the same pattern as options #1 and #2 with the addition of the Gloria in Excelsis or some other song of praise following the Kyrie or Trisagion.

This option is not suitable for Sundays in Ordinary Time, the Season after Epiphany and the Season after Pentecost, or in Advent or Lent. The combination of opening song, Kyrie, Gloria in Excelsis, Salutation, and Collect of the Day were the Medieval opening rite of the Latin Mass on the occasion of a visit from the Pope. It is best reserved for major church festivals and the seasons of Christmas and Easter. The rubrics of the 2019 BCP permit the use of some other song of praise in place of the Gloria in Excelsis and I strongly recommend worship planners take advantage of that permission. I recommend the following scheme for substituting some other song of praise for the Gloria in Excelsis/

Christmas Day and the Christmas Season: Gloria in Excelsis

Feast of the Epiphany: Gloria in Excelsis

Easter Sunday and the Easter Season: Dignus est (also known as the Song to the Lamb, Splendor and Honor, and Glory and Honour)

The Feast of Pentecost (or Whitsun)
: Veni Sancte Spiritus (Taizé); Holy Spirit, Lord of Light (Val Goldsack); or some other hymn to the Holy Spirit

Trinity Sunday: Te Deum laudamus

Marian Feasts: Magnificat

Patronal Feasts: Gloria in Excelsis

A number of accessible settings of the Gloria in Excelsis and the other canticles of praise have been composed in the last 50 odd years. They include metrical versions of these canticles. The song of praise, like the opening song, the Kyrie, and the Trisagion are congregational songs, and with so many accessible settings of the canticles available, there is no reason that the song of praise should not be sung. It is, after all, a song of praise. Reciting the Gloria in Excelsis or some other song of praise is simply lame as is reciting the Kyrie and the Trisagion!

The Liturgy of the Word. The rubrics of the 2019 BCP permit the reading of two or three lections from Scripture at celebrations of the Holy Eucharist. On Sunday or the principal day on which a congregation celebrates the Holy Eucharist all three lections as appointed in the 2019 BCP’s lectionary should be read.

It is desirable that the first two lections should be read by lay people and that a different individual read each lection. It is a good idea to have different individuals read these two lections from those who lead the Prayers of the People or assist in the distribution of the communion elements. It is also desirable that the lay people reading these lections dress as they normally would for a church service and not wear vestments of any kind.

Regrettably the 2019 BCP does not permit an authorized lay person to read the gospel as do a number of recent Anglican service books but like the 2011 English translation of the Roman Missal only permits a deacon or priest to read the gospel.

It is highly recommended that a period of silence for reflection and prayer follow the reading of each lection, including the gospel. When the reading of a lection is immediately followed by the instrumental music or singing, the attention of the congregation is drawn away from what they just heard, and the words of the lection are not given an opportunity to percolate down to deeper levels of the minds of the congregation. Instrumental music or singing can act like the birds that flew down and gobbled up the seed in the Parable of the Sower. The Word is not given a chance to germinate and sprout, much less to grow. Silence has a place in the liturgy.

A psalm or canticle is customarily sung between the first two lections. The 2019 BCP’s lectionary recommends a psalm for use at this juncture in the service. If a canticle is sung in the place of a psalm, it should echo themes and imagery found in the psalm or serve as a reflection on the first lection or a response to it or as an introduction to the second lection. Ideally it should tie the two lections together but that may not always be possible.

If an anthem is sung instead of a psalm or canticle, the preceding criteria should be considered in its selection. A number of anthems are based on psalms or canticles.

Normally, however, the psalm or canticle sung between the first two lections is a congregational song. It may be a responsorial setting of the psalm or canticle, in which case a cantor, the musical ensemble, or the choir sing the verses and the congregations sing a repetitive refrain after each group of verses. Alternately, a metrical paraphrase of the psalm or canticle may be used. A number of settings are metrical and have a repetitive refrain. Refrains and repetitions permit the younger children in the congregation to participate in a song, and their presence in the congregation should be considered in selecting the music for a celebration.

Some congregations are able to learn to sing plainsong or other simple forms of chant, in which case they can join in singing the verses of a responsorial setting of a psalm or canticle. In my experience if a responsorial setting of a psalm or canticle is repeated enough time, the congregation will learn the verses. This includes children as well as adults. During the time that I was involved in planning the worship of former parish, my congregation learned Richard Hillert's setting of the Dignus est, "This Is the Feast of Victory;" David Ashey White’s setting of the First Song of Isaiah, “Surely It is God Who Saves Me;” and Michael Jonas’s setting of Psalm 91, “On Eagle’s Wings.”

On occasion it is appropriate to have a soloist sing a psalm, psalm portion, or a solo based on a psalm. Some of the psalms, particularly the more personal and penitential ones may be best sung by a single voice.

On occasion a hymn or worship song based upon a psalm or canticle can also be used at this time in the service. It is a good idea to vary what is sung between the first two lections so as not to fall not the rut of doing the same thing Sunday after Sunday.

An important consideration in selecting a psalm or canticle to sing between the first two lections is its length. If it is too long, it can interrupt the flow of the service and cause this part of the service to fall apart.

As in the case of the lections, a period of silence for reflection and prayer should follow the psalm, canticle, anthem, solo, hymn, or worship song.

Normally the Gloria Patri is not sung at the end of a psalm or canticle at a celebration of the Holy Eucharist unless is a part of the setting itself.

Anglican chant is best left to choirs and reserved for Evensong.

The singing of a gospel acclamation before the reading of the gospel is strongly recommended. A gospel acclamation typically consists an alleluia sung by itself or with one or more verses in Advent, Christmas, the Season after the Epiphany, Easter the Season after Pentecost, and a Lenten acclamation sung by itself or with one or more verses in Lent and Holy Week. I introduced this practice at my former parish while it was a small mission congregation. The same gospel acclamation can be sung throughout the shorter seasons and a different gospel acclamation can be sung for several Sundays in a row in the longer seasons. Among the advantages of using gospel acclamations to introduce the reading of the gospel is that a congregation can learn a number of them in a relatively short period of time and they require only the musical leadership of a cantor. New ones can be taught to a congregation in a preservice congregational rehearsal before the service at which they are to be used. They can also be sung without any accompaniment. Children as well as adults are able to quickly master the tune.

If the gospel is read from the midst of the congregation, the gospel acclamation is sung before the reading of the gospel. The gospel procession sets out after the gospel acclamation is begun and the gospel is not read until the gospel acclamation is concluded. The gospel acclamation should not be cut off because the gospel procession has arrived at the location from which the gospel will be read. The gospel acclamation is not traveling music to cover the movement of the gospel procession! Its purpose is to herald the reading of the gospel and the presence of Christ in the Word. After the gospel is read, a profound silence should be allowed to settle over the congregation and the gospel procession should return in silence to the front or wherever its participants. were seated.

Among the practices that worship planners will wish to carefully avoid is sandwiching the gospel reading between two halves of a hymn and preceding the sermon with a hymn. Dividing a hymn into two parts and singing one part before the reading of the gospel and other part of it mutilates the sense of the hymn. Singing a part of a hymn after the reading of the gospel draws attention of the congregation away from what the congregation has just heard and does not give the congregation any time to digest what it heard. The gospel procession does not need traveling music to cover the return of its participants to the places where they sit. Rather they should return to their places in silence.

Singing a hymn before the sermon not only creates a gap between the reading of the lections and their exposition in the sermon but also the congregation will not see the connection between the hymn and the sermon.

As with the Scripture readings the sermon should be followed by a period of silence for reflection.

The rubrics of the 2019 BCP direct that the Nicene Creed should be sung or read after the sermon except on when the Athanasia Creed may be read. The 2019 BCP breaks with the American Prayer Book’s long tradition of permitting the Apostles’ Creed to be sung or read in place of the Nicene Creed, a practice permitted by the rubrics of other Anglican service books and the 2011 translation of the Roman Missal. Traditionally the Nicene Creed is omitted at weekday celebrations of the Holy Eucharist.

William Palmer Ladd in Prayer Book Interleaves recommends the omission of the Nicene Creed at Sunday celebrations of the Holy Eucharist, noting that it was a late addition to the liturgy and serves no useful purpose. Attendees at celebrations of the Holy Eucharist who do not subscribe to what it affirms can recite it without hesitation!

Among the options from which worship planners who are not wed to the rubrics can choose is to follow the period of silence after the sermon with a hymn as is the Lutheran practice. This hymn should echo themes and imagery found in the lections and/or the sermon or should be appropriate to the season. Alternately the Te Deum laudamus or a metrical version of that canticle, which is itself a Trinitarian affirmation of faith might be sung. This last practice is permitted some more recent Anglican service books.

Bishop Timothy Dudley Smith, noted British hymn writer, was commissioned to write a metrical paraphrase of the Nicene Creed for the Church of England’ service book Common Worship (2000). Other metrical paraphrases of the Nicene Creed have been written.

A modern affirmation of faith as found in several recent Anglican service books might also be used.

If the Nicene Creed is sung or said, I do not recommend omitting the Filoque Clause. The Filoque Clause is retained in the versions of the Nicene Creed in the historic Anglican formularies—the 1571 Articles of Religion and the 1662 Book of Common Prayer. There is no agreement among the Anglican provinces on its omission. To my knowledge the Anglican Church in North America is the only Anglican province that permits its omission and therefore it must be regarded as an innovation particular to that province.

The Liturgy of the Table concludes with the Prayers of the People. In addition to the two forms printed in the eucharistic rites in the 2019 BCP, other forms may be used, taken from other recent Anglican service books or composed for the occasion, provided they meet the requirements in the Additional Directions Concerning Holy Communion.

Since they are the prayers of the people, the form used should encourage maximum congregational participation. They should also be led from the midst of the congregation, from the midst of the people. A lectern and a can be placed in their midst for this purpose. Or the appointed person or persons can lead the prayers from their places in the congregation.

A practice which is not recommended is the priest reading what are the prayers of the people as a single whole without congregational responses from the front of the room in which the church celebrates the Holy Eucharist. A different person should lead the prayers of the people from those who read the lections for the celebration, and if a deacon is not available, a lay person should be appointed to lead the prayers. Even if a deacon is available, there is no reason a lay person cannot be appointed to lead the prayers of the people. Indeed, two or more lay persons can be appointed to lead the prayers, each taking turns to read a petition or thanksgiving and bidding the congregational response after the petition or thanksgiving if the form includes a bidding after each petition or thanksgiving. The celebration of the Holy Eucharist is the celebration of the entire worshipping assembly, the gathered people of God, and not just that of a priest and an assisting minister. All who are present at the celebration are celebrants! A priest, or a bishop if he is present, presides over the celebration.

The priest or bishop presiding over the celebration concludes the Prayers of the People with these words or a suitable collect.

Heavenly Father, grant these our prayers for the sake of Jesus Christ, our only Mediator and Advocate, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

In a number of Anglican service books the congregation joins with the president in saying these or similar words. This is a practice that a church may wish to adopt when these words are used.

In a number of Anglican service books the Lord’s Prayer may also be said after these words or similar words or the concluding collect. When the Lord’s Prayer is used at this juncture, it is omitted after the Great Thanksgiving or after the distribution of the communion elements or wherever else it may be used in the service. The advantage of singing or saying the Lord’s Prayer at this time in the service is that it reduces the delay between the consecration of the communion elements and their distribution.

While the Additional Directions Concerning Holy Communion contain instructions for what is sometimes called a “Deacon’s Mass,” in which a deacon administers Holy Communion from elements previously consecrated for later distribution, they do not make provision for a Service of the Word using the Introductory Rite and the Liturgy of the Word, one of a number of drawbacks of the 2019 BCP. All previous American Prayer Books made such provision as do most other Anglican service books. Congregations which do not find that the services of Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer, and Holy Communion meet their needs due to their particular circumstances have no alternatives to which they can turn. A growing number of Anglican service books provide such alternatives, recognizing that a need for them exists.



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Saturday, October 29, 2022

All Hallows Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer for Sunday (October 30, 2022) Is Now Online

 


This Sunday All Hallows Murray once again offers two services—Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer. The order of service for both services comes from The Church of England’s service book, Common Worship (2000). The morning readings are different from the evening reading, as are the songs and the homily.

The morning service begins at the top of the page at the Acclamation of Christ at the Dawning of the Day. Scroll down the page for the beginning of the evening service as the Blessing of the Light.

Morning Readings:

Old Testament: Isaiah 1:10-18 A Call to Repentance

New Testament: Luke 19: 1-10 Jesus and Zacchaeus

Morning Homily: " We Are Called to Be Ministers of God's Grace"

Evening Reading:

New Testament: Colossians 1: 3-14 Paul’s Thanksgiving and Prayer

Evening Homily: " How We Can Make Paul's Thanksgiving and Prayer Our Own"

The link to this Sunday’s services of Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-morning-prayer-and-evening_29.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May these services be a blessing to you.

Friday, October 28, 2022

Saturday Lagniappe: '4 Church Frustrations That Can Get The Best Of You' And More


The human experience will always include imperfection; good leadership focuses on all the good the church can do and, in a constructive spirit, deals honestly with the flaws that merit attention.

The Collateral Damage of Sin
Worse than what “missing the mark” does to our soul is what it does to our neighbors.

More Pastors Influencing Church Members’ Response to Halloween
As most Americans celebrate Halloween, few pastors are refraining from influencing their church members’ engagement with the holiday.

12 Thoughts on Christians and Halloween
Because this question comes up every year, Chuck Lawless is updating and reposting his thoughts. Here are his thoughts on Halloween.

An Interview with Keith Getty: The Queen of England, a New Album, the Resurgence of Hymnody in the Church, and a Few Funny Thoughts (Part 2)
Part 2 of Thom Rainer and Mark Clifton’s interview with Keith Getty on a wide range of thoughts.

Why Your Church Should Sing New Songs (Not Only Old Songs)
We faithfully steward our music when we sing the best of the old and find the best of the new. And we can do that only if we will sing!

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (October 29, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

At one time we could say that congregations sung their faith. But what about today?

The readings for this Saturday are Sirach 28:14-26 A Warning Against a Slanderous Tongue and John 14: 15-31 Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit.

The homily is titled “Why Singing and What We Sing Matters.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_28.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday's Catch: 'Anglican Diocese of the West Bishop Has Left the Church of Nigeria' And More


Plans by its primate to expand the Church of Nigeria in North America have led Bishop Felix Orji and Suffragan Bishop Scott Seely to seek residence and license in the Anglican Church in North America and the Anglican Diocese of the West to vote to withdraw from the Church of Nigeria and remain under the oversight and leadership of Bishop Orji.

The Crisis of "Followship"
There may not be a lack of leaders in local churches as much as there is a lack of followers.

5 Unfair Criticisms of Large Churches It’s Time To Drop
Here are 5 criticisms of large churches it’s finally time to drop.

Medieval England’s Daily Round
Lay Canon Nicholas Orme of Truro Cathedral is one of the most prolific historians of religion in England, with more than 30 extraordinary titles to his name. Now that he’s in retirement from a long teaching career at the University of Exeter, Canon Orme’s newest book, Going to Church in Medieval England, brings together a lifetime of work with a comprehensive account of medieval life in England’s nearly 10,000 parish churches.

Something Fake and Wicked This Way Comes
When our Halloween celebrations domesticate evil, we often miss a chance to see true darkness through the light of Christ.

The Art (and Science) of the First-Time Guest Follow-Up Phone Call
We’re gradually building a series on why and how to follow up with your church’s first-time guests.Today: the phone call. If you’ve determined you should make one, what’s the best way to do so?

25… + 5
James Emery White shares the leadership lessons he has learned.

Connecting College Students to the Church
As church leaders, it’s vital for us to pour into college students and help them see the importance of connecting to the body of Christ.

Don’t Let Missions Fall Prey to ‘Genericide’
By broadening the concept of “missional” activity, are we diluting our focus on the core of the Great Commission?

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Thursday's Catch: Study: Gen Z Wants to Know More About Jesus


Study: Gen Z Wants to Know More About Jesus Despite long-term trends away from religion, Barna Group finds openness in teens.

A Reflection on Barna's Open Generation Report
This is a brief reflection on Barna's first two reports in the Open Generation study, with a few major themes for youth workers and parents to consider.

4 Types of Itching Ears and What Pastors are Charged to Do

According to the apostle Paul, people will find teachers to tell them what their itching ears want to hear rather than what the Scripture teaches. Here are four types of itching ears that seem to be common....

How Your Church Can Embrace the Future of Digital Communications
What will be the next big thing as digital communication continues to evolve?

What the Bible Says About Social Media
Philippians 4:8 teaches us how to engage online.

Three Creative Ways to Connect Better with Our Audiences Online
What if we could continue to grow in how we impact people online, not just inform them? Joel Gorveatte invite us to consider three approaches to shape how we craft our online presence.

5 Ways to Optimize Your Church's Giving Page
Here are five ways you can optimize the giving page on your church’s website.

3 Qualities Necessary to Learn from our Critics
When we need to heed a message from a critic, how can we position ourselves so that we can benefit from it? Charles Stone suggest three ways we can do so.

Finding God’s Plan for Your Life
Jason Robinson shares five ways that he believes God has directed his steps and revealed his plans to him.

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Wednesday's Catch: 'Post-Christian and Searching for Meaning' And More


Post-Christian and Searching for Meaning
Gen Z on college campuses.

No Tricks! Church Trunk or Treats Are a Halloween Tradition
Trunk or treats have grown in popularity in recent decades, many hosted by churches as outreach to their surrounding communities.

Why You Need Senior Adults in Your Church
"Don't get so focused on reaching the next generation that you forget to reach and disciple senior adults as well," writes Dale Hudson.

Pastors with Initiative Build Healthier Church Relationships
Leadership requires initiative. Healthy relationships require initiative. You’re the leader as the pastor. You must take the initiative, especially with relationships in the church. Many pastors rigorously protect their study time in God’s Word. The same intensity should apply to personal relationships.

Strategies for Preaching to the Polarized
How can our sermons bridge the division of our contentious moment?

3 Reasons We Can Trust the Bible
Curiosity about how we got the Bible has led many in our churches to wonder whether they can trust it. Here are three reasons we know we can.

10 Changes Many Pastors Need to Make to Strengthen Evangelism in Our Churches Chuck Lawless offers a number ofchanges pastors can make to take the lead i evangelism in their churches.

A new Anglican Province for Europe?
Hull has much to commend it, but it is not famed for being a place where church history is made. That may all be about to change.

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (October 26, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

How do you view the teaching of Jesus—suggestions for how we should live our lives or something more? How does that affect how you follow his teaching?

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday is 1 John 4: 7-21 Loving One Another.

The homily is titled “The Place of Jesus’ Love Commands in the Life of a Christian.”

The link to this Wednesday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_26.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. If a song begins partway, click pause, move the slider back to the beginning and then click play. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Tuesday's Catch: 'What’s Wrong with Winsomeness?' And More


What’s Wrong with Winsomeness?
The fruit of the Spirit still apply in a hostile culture.

How Well Do We Love the Strangers Among Us?
The practice of caring for others--including strangers and even enemies--is connected to loving God.

Why Christians Should Oppose Marijuana Legalization 
Joe Carter explains why he believes that Christians should not support the legalization of marijuana.

Online Seminary Isn’t B-League
Virtual degrees are affordable and accessible. They can even be rigorous.

11 Doctrines You Can’t Assume Your Church Members Understand
You may take these 11 theological doctrines for granted, but you should stop assuming your church members understand them.

Should We Combine Worship Services?
More churches are combining worship services than at any point in recent history. In this postcast Mark Clifton and Thom Rainer look at several issues you should first consider if this possibility is on the table.

What to Do with a Sanctuary You Are No Longer Using
Some churches have moved out of their worship centers to another space such as a fellowship hall or a gym. In this podcast Mark Clifton and Thom Rainer provide guidance on what to do with the sanctuary space you are no longer using.

How to Talk with Your Kids About Transgender Ideology
The question for Christian parents is not whether but how to talk about transgender ideology with our kids. Josh Glaser and Paula Rinehart suggest three specific ways parents can counter bad ideas that might be shaping their children’s understanding of gender.

Going Missional in Rural America
Jeff Caves describes how Northstar Church abandoned traditional church ways and opted for what he sees as a cutting-edge missional model.

8 Easy Ways to Be Missional
Missional is not an event we tack onto our already busy lives. It is our life. Mission should be the way we live, not something we add onto life....

Monday, October 24, 2022

Monday's Catch: 'Remember This about Spiritual Fruit' And More


We forget two essential lessons about fruit. Fruit is incredibly slow. Fruit is seasonal.

How the Spirit Can Heal the Church (Again)
Review: ‘On the Holy Spirit’ by Basil of Caesarea

How Churches Can Help Domestic Violence Victims
Local churches should be encouraged that God has given us the tools we need to fight against domestic violence and help victims.

The Ministry of Public Bible Reading
In some churches, the public reading of God’s Word is not much more than a formality before the sermon—which is treated as the “main event.”
In Anglican and Episcopal churches those appointed to read the Scripture lessons could do a better job of reading them. A microphone and a sound system cannot compensate for Scripture poorly read.
New Study Suggests Religion Is Good for Youth Mental Health
Results of a new large-scale study by the Springtide Research Institute have seemingly confirmed decades of previous research pointing to a positive relationship between religion, spirituality and mental health. And Josh Packard, the organization's executive director, has suggested ways churches can ensure they remain relevant institutions for the younger generation as physical church attendance dwindles.

Recruiting Group Leaders for Maximum Participation
When you recruits leaders is just as important as how you recruit leaders. Timing is everything. Not only do you need to choose the right season, you also need to make the invitation often enough for people to get the message, but not so much that you dilute the message.

Saturday, October 22, 2022

ACNA Bishop Stewart Ruch, Accused of Spiritual Abuse, Ends Voluntary Leave


Ruch had stepped down after admitting serious mistakes in responding to abuse in his diocese. He still faces an investigation into alleged spiritual abuse.

By Bob Smietana

A controversial and popular bishop in the Anglican Church of North America has decided to return from a voluntary leave of absence by the end of October, despite an ongoing investigation into spiritual abuse allegations.

“I am writing to inform you that Bishop Stewart Ruch has decided to come off his voluntary leave of absence and he has chosen to return to the diocese in his capacity as Bishop of the Diocese of the Upper Midwest on October 30, 2022,” Archbishop Foley Beach said in a letter to ACNA members on Friday (Oct. 21).

Ruch stepped away from leadership in July of 2021, after admitting he had made “regrettable errors” in responding to allegations of sexual abuse by a lay minister in the diocese. Read More

All Hallows Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer for Sunday (October 23, 2022) Is Now Online

 


This Sunday All Hallows Murray once again offers two services—Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer. The order of service for both services comes from The Church of England’s service book, Common Worship (2000). The morning readings are different from the evening reading as are the songs and the homily.

The morning service begins at the top of the page at the Acclamation of Christ at the Dawning of the Day. Scroll down the page for the beginning of the evening service as the Blessing of the Light.

Morning Readings:

Apocrypha: Sirach 35:12–17 God hears the prayer of the humble.

New Testament: Luke 18:9–14 Parable of the Pharisee and Tax Collector.

Morning Homily: "A Parable for Today"

Evening Reading:

New Testament: Luke 18:31-43 Jesus again predicts his death and heals a blind beggar.

Evening Homily: "Jesus Heals Now As Then!"

The link to this Sunday’s services of Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-morning-and-evening-prayer.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May these services be a blessing to you.

Friday, October 21, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (October 22, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

How ready are we to forgive the failings of others? How seriously do we take the words of the Lord’s Prayer, “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us?”

The Scripture reading for this Saturday is 2 Timothy 4:6–8, 16–18 Paul’s Final Words.

The homily is titled “A Mark of a True Disciple—A Readiness to Forgive.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_21.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday's Catch: 'A Proposal for the 81st General Convention' And More


In this last essay in his four-part series on a proposed amendment to the Episcopal Church's constitutio affecting The Book of Common Prayer Matthew S. C. Olver looks to the future in two movements. First, he considers the rather extensive Rationale that accompanied 2022-A059, which outlines some intentions and hopes for the next General Convention in Louisville, Kentucky, in 2023 by the bishops. Finally, he offers some specific proposals for a moderate path forward.

Public Schools Aren’t Godless. Ask the Christians Who Feel Called to Stay.
Amid pandemic shifts and concerns over controversial curricula, more families have opted for private or homeschool. But many believers see their place in the system.

Seven Reasons Why We Need to Move Beyond the Church Size Debate
Thom Rainer points out point out seven reasons why a debate on church size bears no good fruit.

Stop Throwing Pastors Under the Bus
Brett McCracken has noticed an increasingly prevalent genre of online evangelical Christian commentary in which pastors are shamed because they’re insufficiently vocal about this or that outrage or not militant enough in the culture war. Increasingly, it seems, there’s a lot of social media mileage in throwing pastors under the bus.

3 Ways to Turn Against Your Pastor
Most people don’t set out to dislike their pastors. Something just happens.

When Is An Elder Disqualified From Ministry?
If we read the qualifications of an Elder as “one strike and you are out,” then we are grossly underselling the Gospel of Jesus Christ — and we wouldn’t truly understand grace in light of godly living. The qualifications are meant to be taken in light of the Gospel, not to replace the Gospel. Jesus is looking for men who are quick to repent and have their overall character across the course of their lives be above reproach and set apart for His purposes.

How to Plan a Daily Quiet Time with God
One of the reasons we struggle to start and maintain this practice is that we over-complicate it. We make it a ritual, with rules attached about what we can and cannot do in order to call it a real quiet time.

5 Ways the Eemy Lures Us into Sin
Every one of us is responsible for his or her sin, but we still wrestle against an enemy who seeks to devour us (1 Pet 5:8). In fact, we could list multiple ways he tries to trap us in sin. Here, though, are some reminders we likely all need....

At Age 80, ‘The Screwtape Letters’ Is Still Worth Reading
C. S. Lewis worried his book The Screwtape Letters would be quietly banished “toward spare bedrooms, there to live a life of undisturbed tranquility.” But the book sold well, and in the 80 years since it was published, the series of letters from a senior devil Screwtape to his underling Wormwood remains a regular on Christian bestseller lists.

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Thursday's Catch: '7 Things I Wish Christian Leaders Understood About Mental Illness' And More


7 Things I Wish Christian Leaders Understood About Mental Illness
The struggles with mental illness are deep and complex. Here are seven things Christian leaders need to understand about mental illness.

4 Myths Christians Should Stop Believing About Depression
There are so many myths about depression Christians should stop believing—for example, “True believers don’t suffer from depression.”

Suicide and the Church
James Emery White urges pastors, elders, and other church leaders to educate themselves and heir congregations about depression and suicide.

Study: Religion and Spirituality Can Aid Youth Mental Health Crisis
Religion and spirituality could help remedy the youth mental health crisis, Springtide Research finds.

Celebration in a Divided World
“Who do you choose to be for this time? Are you willing to use whatever power and influence you have to create islands of sanity that evoke and rely on our best human qualities to create, produce, and persevere?”

Christian Orthodoxy Is Your Ticket to a Land of Adventure
Playing in the fields of heresy and ambiguity might offer short-term kicks, but only sound doctrine can supply a lifetime of thrills.

5 Myths about How We Got the Bible
As with anything of historical importance, the Bible has accumulated its share of mythical distortions in the popular mind. Many of these swirl around its origins. Maybe this is because the Bible’s origins span such a long time or because our culture is primed to distrust authority. Whatever the cause, these are five myths found both inside and outside the church about the history of history’s most important book.

An Interview with Keith Getty: The Queen of England, a New Album, the Resurgence of Hymnody in the Church, and a Few Funny Thoughts (Part 1)
Part 1 of Thom Rainer and Mark Clifton’s interview with Keith Getty on a wide range of thoughts....

Grow Your Ministry by Growing Your Leaders
Mike Bullock describes how to grow a follower into a leader.

Building a Small Group Ministry is Like Building a House
Jeremy Sauve shares several important lessons he has learned about building a small group ministry.

Political Empathy Takes Work
Developing our theory of mind can help us understand the “other.”

Is Christian Republicanism the Best Cure for Christian Nationalism?
Opponents of Christian nationalism shouldn’t try to defeat the Christian right, but to foster its most republican impulses.

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (October 19, 2022) Is Now Online

 

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

We are living in a time in which people claim to be Christian but do not attend a church and do not follow Jesus’ teaching and example. While this development is not entirely new, it gives all the signs of having a much more harmful effect on the witness of those who are genuinely disciples of Jesus than it has in the past. It is something against which those truly seeking to walk in their Lord's footsteps will be on guard.

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday is Luke 17:20-37 The Coming of the Kingdom.

The homily is titled “What Did Jesus Say about the Kingdom of God and His Return?”

The link to this Wednesday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_19.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. If a song begins partway, click pause, move the slider back to the beginning and then click play. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Wednesday's Catch: 'Living With Good Cheer Through Suffering: The Example of C. S. Lewis' And More


How can we have good cheer when our lives are turned upside down? This is not a speculative question but one everyone faces at some point.

An Explanation and Exploration of 2022-A059
In this essay, Matthew S. C. Olver take us through the history and process of the resolution that was actually passed and what it means.

Churches Closed and Pastors Arrested in Ukraine
Christians in occupied regions of Ukraine are being driven underground by the hostility of pro-Russian forces who have been closing churches and arresting pastors, says Release International.

American Idol: How Politics Replaced Spiritual Practice
Christian formation is central to civic renewal, not the other way around.

Debates About Interracial Marriage, Childbearing Emerge as Christian Nationalism Continues To Gain Support
Once understood to be a derogatory term, support for Christian Nationalism is continuing to gain support among right-leaning evangelicals, with a number of prominent voices advocating for a vision of America defined by a set of cultural and ideological values that comports with their faith tradition.

How to Get Gen Z to Church
Two-thirds of young adults between the ages of 18 and 22 leave the church for at least a year, many never returning. Church dropout percentages climb as members of Gen Z reach their 20s and enter the world of college and career, with only one-third attending church regularly.

7 Misunderstandings Younger Generations Have about Older Generations
Based upon his own observatios Ron Edmondson identifies 7 misuderstandings young people have about older people.

Follow-up Calls with Church Guests: What to Do and What Not to Do 
Phone calls are an important connection point with church guests. Not all guests will give you their phone numbers. For those who do, here are some guidelines to consider.

8 Terrible Reasons People Leave Churches
There are some good reasons to leave a church. What I’m seeing of late, though, doesn’t fit in the “good reason” category. The pandemic launched several more pandemics — fear pandemic, anger pandemic, political pandemic, racial pandemic, and a church pandemic.

5 Misconceptions about Spiritual Abuse: #4: “Spiritual Abuse Is Not As Harmful As Other Kinds of Abuse, So We Shouldn’t Worry Too Much About It”
Michael J. Kruger thinks there needs to be a fresh assessment of the type of damage done by spiritually abusive behavior, so the phenomenon can be understood better. His book covers this in more depth, but in this article he offers a few quick thoughts.

Wise Anger
Scripture warns repeatedly about the foolishness often associated with our anger.

Golden Bowls Filled with Prayer
Revelation gives us a fascinating picture of golden bowls filled with our prayers at the throne of God. What is this telling us? Why would our prayers be presented this way? Let us look at the basic biblical interpretation of this passage and then close with one point of speculation.

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Tuesday's Catch: 'Natural Disasters Drive Hunger: Here Are Six Ways to Help' And More


Natural Disasters Drive Hunger: Here Are Six Ways to Help
Follow these guidelines to help those affected in meaningful, lasting ways.

The Forgotten Christian Cause: Preserving Democracy
This election season, love your neighbor by supporting voter results, a free press, and a peaceful transfer of power. 

Ex-Atheist Lee Strobel Shares 4 Powerful Facts That Prove Jesus Resurrected from the Dead
Atheist turned Christian apologist Lee Strobel is one man who is not easily swayed without evidence.

Will We Be Solid or Will We Be Ghosts?
In reflecting on The Great Divorce’s vision of the afterlife as an extension of this present era, Trevin Wax is struck by the question of whether we as people are growing more and more selflessly solid or becoming more and more selfishly shadowy.

Episcopal Diocese of Newark Ignores Allegations of Impaired Clergy
The Episcopal Church in the Dioceseof Newark risks a repeat of the Heather Cook situation.

Religious Polarization in India Seeping into US Diaspora
Hindu nationalism has split the Indian expatriate community just as Donald Trump’s presidency polarized the U.S., according to one expert.