Like Lost Sheep: General Confession, Morning Prayer

I mentioned the other day that for several centuries, Morning Prayer became the normal form of Sunday morning worship in much of the Anglican world. Trying to go back to the more traditional, Eucharistically-focused model of worship, sparked an inevitable backlash — though an ironic one, since the move towards the more traditional model was … Continue reading Like Lost Sheep: General Confession, Morning Prayer

What Satisfies: A Reflection on John 4:5-42

It’s safe to say that we live in a hedonistic society. Our culture values ease, comfort, and pleasure above all else. What makes this interesting to me is that we may be the first society to actually try this. Most ancient societies rejected hedonism as a viable option, and it wasn’t because they valued discomfort … Continue reading What Satisfies: A Reflection on John 4:5-42

The Sheep of His Hand: The Venite

Today we shift gears from the evening and nighttime prayers to start morning prayers, and specifically the Anglican Morning Prayer tradition, which combined elements of different morning-time prayers of the Hours. One of the strange peculiarities of Anglican worship was that for several centuries, its Sunday morning liturgical life was dominated by Morning Prayer, with … Continue reading The Sheep of His Hand: The Venite

In Every Season and Every Hour: The Prayer of the Hours

Christian monasticism has always grounded its life and its days in prayer. Its whole day, from the lighting of lamps in the evening, through to bed time, to the middle of the night, to waking, to morning and to noon, was punctuated by prayer services. Today I’d like to look at a prayer that is … Continue reading In Every Season and Every Hour: The Prayer of the Hours

Give Rest, O Lord: Prayers for the Dead

One thing that definitely marks contemporary Western society apart from traditional cultures (including our own) from around the world, is a decided lack of culturally-sanctioned ways of processing grief and loss. As much as we may look askance at ritualized performances of grief, we are ourselves ironically left bereft of bereavement. This means we don’t … Continue reading Give Rest, O Lord: Prayers for the Dead