Bishop Eric Menees
As we continue our examination of the 2019 BCP Eucharistic
Rite, I’ve spoken about the liturgy gathering the people together for praising
God with our Opening Acclimation, then the Collect for Purity, then the Summary
of the Law, followed by the Kyrie and the Gloria. At this point in the service
we transition to the Liturgy of the Word with the Collect of the Day.
A “Collect” is a short prayer designed to express a
particular theological concept or a particular theme. The structure of a
Collect is always to pray to the Father, through the Son, in the Holy Spirit.
The Collect of the Day is a transitional prayer introducing the theme of the
Holy Day or the scripture readings. (A complete list of the Collects will be
printed in the 2019 BCP, but currently can be found at www.anglicanchurch.net -
Resources Tab - Liturgies Tab)
As we approach the end of the Church Year, the following two
Collects will be offered which reflect the theme of the scriptures. For this
coming Sunday, the harvest theme is reflected in the scriptures, as is the
theme of Christ the King for the last Sunday of November.
Week of the Sunday from Nov 13 to Nov 19
Proper 28
Stir up, O Lord, the wills of your faithful people, that
bringing forth in abundance the fruit of good works, they may be abundantly
rewarded when our Savior Jesus Christ comes to restore all things; who lives
and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Week of the Sunday from Nov 20 to Nov 26 Christ the King
Proper 29
Almighty and everlasting God, whose will it is to restore
all things in your well-beloved Son, the King of kings and Lord of lords:
Mercifully grant that the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin,
may be freed and brought together under his most gracious rule; who lives and
reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
I pray you all a very blessed Lord’s Day and Thanksgiving!
3 comments:
An excellent entry as far as it goes. However, (correct me if I am wrong) it seems that the new 2019 BCP merely adopts all the Collects from 1979 Episcopal BCP Prayer. The editors of the 1979 BCP took the Collects of the 1928 BCP and eliminated some especially penitential ones, revised others and added new ones and changed the Sundays appointed for some of the Collects to reflect the new Three Year Common Lectionary. By adopting the revised 1979 collects, are not the editors of the 2019 BCP merely rubber stamping the revisionism of the TEC without considering the consequences? Only by comparing the Collects of the 1928 BCP with the 1979/2019 BCP Collects can an evaluation be made.
Hi CanonJohn3+,
Thanks for your comment. I have forwarded this to Bishop Menees. Happy Thanksgiving.
Dale+
Canon John, actually there are some big differences... I reached out to Archbishop Duncan, the Chair of the Prayerbook Task Force and he clarified...
"Some of the collects are the same, because about half of the 79 collects are Cranmer’s. Our decision was to return to Cranmer’s collects throughout, generally in Cranmer’s order (so e.g. the Holy Scripture collect which was moved to the next to the last Sunday of Pentecost has been returned to the Second Sunday in Advent.) Some collects, like Christ the King (Last Pentecost) for instance, do not exist from Cranmer’s hand."
Hope that helps! Bp. Menees
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