HOW TO FOLLOW THE WORSHIP SERVICE
The Book of Common Prayer establishes the
basic pattern of worship in the Episcopal church. While patterns of
worship vary greatly from parish to parish, all Episcopal churches are expected
to use the Prayer Book and to conform to the guidelines it lays down for
worship.
The Book of Common Prayer has a long
history. The first Prayer Book was issued in 1549 and used in the Church
of England -- it was the first complete pattern of Christian worship to be
rendered in the English language. The first Prayer Book has three major
purposes. First, it was composed to ensure that the reading of Scripture
would have a central place in the worship of English churches. Second, the
Prayer Book was written in English to insure that worship would be
understandable to the average person. Prior to 1549 worship in English
churches was in Latin, a language understood by the educated few. Third,
the Prayer Book was intended to facilitate common prayer, the worship of
Christians gathered as a community. The Prayer Book makes the whole of
Christian worship available to each person in a parish. The point here is
that the liturgy of the Church is the common possession of all Christians, not
the possession of the clergy or those "in the know".
The first American Prayer Book was produced in 1789
and was a slightly revised form of the Church of England's 1662 Book of Common
Prayer. The Prayer Book has gone through three revisions since then, one
in 1892, another in 1928 and yet another in 1979. We currently use the 1979 Book
of Common Prayer.
The Big Picture
If you examine a copy of The Book of Common
Prayer you will discover that there are two services of Holy Eucharist, one
entitled Rite I (BCP, pp. 323-349) and one entitled Rite II (BCP, pp.
355-382). The difference between the two rites is both linguistic and
theological. Rite I reflects the language of earlier versions of the Prayer Book
and places emphasis on human sinfulness and the need for
forgiveness. Right II uses modern English and places emphasis on the
Eucharist as a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. The inclusion of the
two rites in the Prayer Book makes the statement that both forms of language and
both theologies have a place in the Church. At Christ Church Rite II is
used most frequently, Rite I is used at the Eucharist during the season of Lent
and Advent.
Each rite contains options for the Great
Thanksgiving or Eucharistic Prayer. Rite I offers a choice of two
Eucharistic Prayers (Prayer I on BCP, p. 333 and Prayer II on BCP p. 340) while
Rite II offers a choice of four Eucharistic Prayers, Prayer D 9BCP, p.
372). Each Eucharistic Prayer has its own emphasis and can be used at
different points during the Church year.
Using Holy Eucharist Rite Two
If you familiarize yourself with Holy Eucharist Rite
II you should be able to easily follow a normal service of worship at Christ
Church. So, let's start here. It would be helpful if you had a
Prayer Book handy and turned to page 355.
While the service may look complicated, it actually
consists of two parts which are clearly labeled in the Prayer Book. The
first part of the service is the Liturgy of the Word, that part dedicated to the
reading of the proclamation of the Word of God (BCP, pp. 355-360). The
second part of the service is the Holy Communion (BCP, pp. 36 1-366).
Prayer Book worship is centered around two major actions, the hearing of God's
Word and the gathering at the Lord's Table to receive the Body and Blood of the
risen Christ. These two actions constitute the basic substance of Anglican
worship.
The Liturgy of the Word
The service begins with an Entrance Hymn.
During this hymn all those who will be leading worship (clergy, choir, lay
eucharistic ministers, lectors, verger, and acolytes) process to the
chancel. There follows an Opening Acclamation (BCP, p. 355). One of
three acclamations is used depending on the season of the Church year.
This acclamation reminds us of why we have gathered together--we have gathered
together to praise God. The Celebrant (the priest presiding at the
Eucharist) then says The Collect for Purity (BCP, p. 355). This collect
appeared in the Prayer Book of 1549 and has been used ever since. This
collect reminds us that we can worthily worship God only if God inspires us with
his Holy Spirit. In fact, all genuine worship proceeds from the work of
the Spirit. The word "collect" indicates the fact that this
prayer is designed to "collect" the individual prayers of those
gathered and to sum them up. The act of gathering for worship is completed
with the Song of Praise (BCP, p. 356). Usually the Gloria in Excelsis
("glory in the highest") is used here but other hymns can be used as
well. The Gloria is an ancient Christian hymn in praise of the Holy
Trinity and comes to us from the early Church.
We pray before we read the Word of God. This
is the significance of the Collect of the Day (BCP, p. 357). This prayer
is offered by the celebrant to "collect" the prayers of the
people. The Prayer Book appoints a different collect for each Sunday of
the Church year and these can be found (in chronological order) in The Book of
Common Prayer, pp. 211-236. The Collect of the Day is followed by the
reading of God's Word (see BCP, p. 357). The Scripture readings follow a
definite pattern. There is a reading from the Old Testament (11:15 am and
5:30 pm only), a Psalm (11:15 am and 5:30 pm only), a reading from the New
Testament (usually an epistle), and a reading from one of the four
Gospels. The Scripture readings are drawn from the Lectionary, a three
year cycle of readings for every Sunday of the Church year. The Lectionary
(divided into years A, B, and C) can be found on BCP, pp. 889-92 1.
Pride of place is given to the reading of the
Gospel. It is read from a gold covered Gospel Book which is carried in at
the beginning of the service and out at the end. There, may be a
gospel procession in which one of the clergy walks to the middle of the church,
preceded by a crucifer and two torches, and reads the Gospel lesson. The
congregation stands for the reading of the Gospel because of the belief that in
the reading of the Gospel we are being addressed by Christ and therefore stand
out of respect. When there is a gospel procession it takes place during
the Gradual Hymn.
Following the reading of the Gospel there is a
Sermon (BCP, p. 358). The earliest Christians gathered to hear Scripture
read and to be instructed from Scripture. The purpose of the sermon is to
focus the congregation's attention on what has been read and to apply it to the
congregation's daily life.
The sermon is followed by The
Nicene Creed (BCP, p. 358)(see beliefs).
Having heard the Word of God read and proclaimed, we now affirm the faith of the
Church as expressed in one of her most important creeds. The Nicene
Creed was formulated by the Council Nicea in 325 and revised by the Council of
Constantinople in 381. It is an ecumenical creed, a creed used by
the whole Church. In saying the Nicene Creed we are not, however, merely
ticking off a series of ideas; the affirmation of the Church's faith is also an
act of praise. The use of the Nicene Creed also reminds us that as
Christian we are bound together by a common faith; we are not a collection of
individuals who share a common interest but we are bound together by sharing in
the common faith of the Church.
The Prayers of the People (BCP, p. 359) are an
important part of the service. Having heard the Word of God read and
proclaimed and having affirmed the faith of the Church, we now engage in one of
the Church's most important works -- intercessory prayer on behalf of the
Church, the world, and ourselves. A prayer life that never takes us beyond
our own needs is inadequate. The Book of Common Prayer provides six
different forms for the Prayers of the People and these can be found on pp.
383-393. T he form being used on any given Sunday will always be indicated in
the bulletin. It is important to really enter into the Prayers of the
People and actually pray rather than simply listen to the congregation
praying. This part of the service can serve as a model for our individual
prayer lives. At the conclusion of the Prayers of the People the celebrant
will say a Concluding Collect. This collect is not listed in the bulletin
but the collects used can be found on BCP, pp. 394-395. Once again, the
purpose of the collect is to "collect" the prayers of the people and
offer them to God.
In order to prepare us to gather at Christ's Table
there is a Confession of Sin (BCP, pp. 359-360). Biblically speaking, sin
is our separation from God; sin refers not to breaking God's rules but to our
alienation from God that leads us to break our lives and those of others.
Sin precedes sins. In confession we acknowledge our alienation and ask for
forgiveness and restoration. The absolution (BCP, p. 360) is pronounced by
a bishop or priest who, by virtue of ordination, has received the authority to
pronounce forgiveness in Christ's name.
The Peace (BCP, p. 360) is not a mere exchange of
greetings or a time to say "hello" to those sitting around us.
Sin is our alienation not only from God but also from our fellow human
beings. Having confessed our sins and received absolution, we now offer
signs of reconciliation to those around us. Having been reconciled to God
we can now be reconciled to each other. The Church is a community of
reconciliation, a community in which divisions are overcome by the reconciling
power of God.
The Holy Communion
The Offertory marks the beginning of the second part
of the service, The Holy Communion (BCP, p. 361). Christian worship is an
offering of ourselves to God in praise and thanksgiving. This is
symbolized in the offering of gifts of money to support the Church's ministry
and in the presentation of oblations (bread and wine to be used in the
Eucharist). Ultimately what we offer is nothing less that our very
selves. While the offering is being collected the choir sings an offertory
anthem. When the offering and the oblations are actually presented at the
altar there is a Presentation Hymn.
The Book of Common Prayer states that Holy
Eucharist is "the principal act of Christian worship on the Lord's
Day" (p. 13). The word Eucharist comes from the Greek verb meaning
"to give thanks". The verb is used in the context of Luke's
account of Jesus's institution of the Eucharist: "Then he took a loaf of
bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it and gave it to them" (Luke
22:19). The Eucharist is the Church's highest act of praise and
thanksgiving.
The Eucharistic Prayer begins with a dialogue
between the celebrant and the congregation called the Sursum corda, a
Latin phrase meaning "lift up your hearts". (Notice that the Sursum
corda introduces all four Eucharistic Prayers, A, B, C, and D). The Sursum
corda makes the central purpose of the Eucharist clear especially when the
celebrant says "Let us give thanks to the Lord our God" (BCP, p.
361). In Eucharistic Prayers A and B the celebrant continues by saying
"It is right, and a good and joyful thing, always and everywhere to give
thanks to you, Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth" (BCP, p. 361)
and then a Proper Preface is inserted (BCP, p. 361 and 367). The Proper
Preface is not identified in the worship bulletin and is simply spoken by the
celebrant. The Proper Prefaces can be found on BCP, pp. 377-381. As
the name implies, each Proper Preface is proper or appropriate to a particular
season or day in the Church calendar.
In Eucharistic Prayers A and B the Proper Preface is
followed by the Sanctus and Benedictus Qui Venit (these are also found in
Eucharistic Prayers C and D). This is the "Holy, holy, holy Lord, God
of power and might...Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord." (See
BCP, pp. 362, 367, 371, and 373). The word Sanctus simply means
holy. This "Holy, holy, holy" is also called the Trisagion or
"thrice holy" and comes from Isaiah 6:3. Here we acknowledge and
praise the God who is holy beyond our ability to describe. Benedictus
Qui Venit is simply Latin for "Blessed is the one who comes" and
is derived from Psalm 118:26.
The Eucharistic Prayer continues with a recounting
of God's saving deeds in history with a recounting of God's act of creation,
calling Israel into a covenant relationship, sending prophets, and finally
sending Jesus Christ. All four Eucharistic Prayers make the point that the
death and resurrection of Jesus is the climax of God's relationship to his
creation and that our salvation is based on this one event. In this sense the
Eucharistic Prayers provide us with a capsule statement of the Christian faith.
(See BCP, pp. 362, 368, 370, and 373-374). It should be remembered
that the whole of the Eucharistic Liturgy is a prayer -- the celebrant is not
talking to the congregation but praying to God on behalf of the
congregation. All four Eucharistic Prayers explicitly recall the
institution of the Eucharist at the Last Supper:
Prayer A: "On the night he was handed over to
suffering and death..." (BCP, p. 362)
Prayer B: "On the night before he died for
us..." (BCP, p. 368)
Prayer C: "On the night he was
betrayed..." (BCP, p. 371)
Prayer D: "When the hour had come for him to be
glorified by you..." (BCP, p. 374)
This part of the Eucharistic Prayer highlights the
connection which Scripture makes between the Last Supper and Jesus's death on
Good Friday. Jesus inaugurates a new Passover, the ultimate and final
Passover, because his death on the cross seals God's new and ultimate covenant
with humankind. This is one reason why the Eucharist is so central
to Christian worship. Each time we gather at the Lord's Table we are
reminded that is was Jesus's own action of offering himself that created the
Church.
All four Eucharistic Prayers also contain a Memorial
Acclamation. This is one of the features of the Eucharist which
Anglicanism has drawn from the Orthodox tradition. In the Memorial
Acclamation the congregation shares in the prayer being offered by the
celebrant. In Prayers A, B and C the Memorial Acclamation explicitly
gathers together all the dimensions of time in praising God:
Prayer A: "Christ has died. Christ is risen.
Christ will come again." (BCP, p. 363)
Prayer B: "We remember his death. We proclaim
his resurrection. We await his coming in glory." (BCP, p. 368).
Prayer C: "Remembering now his work of
redemption, and offering to you this sacrifice of thanksgiving, we celebrate his
death and resurrection, as we await the day of his coming." (BCP, p. 371).
The Memorial Acclamation reminds us, among other
things, that the Eucharist is not simply a memorial meal, a time to remember
what Jesus did in the past. It is also a time to anticipate what Jesus
will do in the future and to celebrate what the risen Christ is doing now.
The Eucharistic Prayer concludes with an epiclesis
or an invocation of the Holy Spirit. This is another element borrowed from the
Orthodox tradition. Thomas Cranmer included an epiclesis in the first Book
of Common Prayer (1549) to emphasize the fact that it is not the priest who
consecrates the bread and wine but the Holy Spirit. The epiclesis gives
a Trinitarian shape to the Eucharist in that the Church prays to God the Father
through his Son Jesus Christ in the power of
God's Holy Spirit. Each Eucharistic Prayer has its
own distinct epiclesis:
Prayer A: "Sanctify them [the bread and wine]
by you Holy Spirit to be for your people the Body and Blood of your Son..."
(BCP, p. 363)
Prayer B: "We pray you, gracious God, to send
your Holy Spirit upon these gifts that they may be the Sacrament of the Body of
Christ and his Blood of the new Covenant." (BCP, p. 369)
Prayer D: "Lord, we pray that in your goodness
and mercy your Holy Spirit may descend upon us, and upon these gifts,
sanctifying them and showing them to be holy gifts for your holy people..."
(BCP, p. 375).
Prayer C does not have an explicit epiclesis
but an implied one: "Accept these prayers and praised, Father, through
Jesus Christ our great High Priest, to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit, your
Church gives honor, glory, and worship, from generation to generation."
(BCP, p. 372). The epiclesis makes an important point: The
Eucharist is ultimately an act of God, and act in which God the Father makes his
Son Jesus Christ present through the power of his Holy Spirit.
The Memorial Acclamation is followed by The Lord's
Prayer (BCP, p. 364). It is appropriate that the Eucharistic Prayer
conclude with the prayer which Jesus himself taught (Matthew 6:9-13). In
the liturgy of the Western Church, the Lord's Prayer has occupied this place
since the sixth century.
The Lord's Prayer is followed by the Fraction (BCP,
p. 364). The celebrant breaks the Eucharistic bread in a gesture which
further reminds us of the connection between the Eucharist and the cross.
From Christ's broken body flows life and salvation and this is because his is
risen. After the Fraction the celebrant says "Christ our Passover is
sacrificed for us" and the congregation replies "Therefore let us keep
the feast". This comes from I Corinthians 5:7 and makes the point
that the Eucharist is the great and final Passover because Christ the great and
final Passover lamb. After the Fraction there is a Fraction Anthem (BCP,
p. 364). The anthem allows the congregation to reflect on what has just
happened and also the serves the practical purpose of allowing time for the
altar to be prepared for the distribution of the Bread and Wine.
After the congregation has received the Body and
Blood of Christ, the service is brought to a close by the Postcommunion
Prayer. The Prayer Book provides two Postcommunion Prayers (BCP, pp.
365-366) and both emphasize the fact that we have been fed at Christ's Table so
that we can go out to serve him in the world. We come to the altar not
merely to receive consolation but to be strengthened to be God's people in the
world. The second Postcommunion Prayer is a modernized version of the
Postcommunion Prayer which was included in the 1549 Prayer Book.
A Word of Encouragement
All this may seem a bit complicated and even
overwhelming. The point to be remembered is that worship is a skill,
something that, like learning a foreign language, can only be learned through
repeated use and practice. The more you truly engage in the liturgy the
easier it will become and you will probably reach the point at which, like
speaking your native language, the liturgy will become second nature to
you. That is really the point. The purpose of the Prayer Book is to
move the liturgy from something that is done in Church into the very center of
your existence so that you will be able to join with the whole Church in
praising God.
Click to see the Bulletin for an order of service (this one happens to
include a Baptismal Ceremony).
The Wednesday evening service is similar to the Sunday service, but a lot less
formal. There are no hymns and instead of a sermon, there is a discussion
of the Gospel reading.

It should be clarified that this is a
re-creation of a typical service.
We felt that it would be disrespectful to photograph an actual Mass.
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