enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Liturgical book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_book

    The first liturgical book published for general use throughout the church was the Book of Common Prayer (BCP) of 1549, edited by Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury. The work of 1549 was the first prayer book to contain the forms of service for daily and Sunday worship in English and to do so within a single volume; it included morning ...

  3. Creator ineffabilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creator_ineffabilis

    "Creator ineffabilis" (Latin for "O Creator Ineffable") is a Christian prayer composed by the 13th-century Doctor of the Church Thomas Aquinas.It is also called the "Prayer of the St. Thomas Aquinas Before Study" (Latin: Orátio S. Thomæ Aquinátis ante stúdium) because St. Thomas "would often recite this prayer before he began his studies, writing, or preaching."

  4. Book of Common Prayer (1549) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Common_Prayer_(1549)

    Communion of the sick was also provided for in the prayer book. While the Catholic practice of reserving the sacrament was forbidden, the priest could celebrate a shortened Communion service at the sick person's house or the sacrament could be brought directly from a Communion service at the parish church to be administered to the sick. [79]

  5. Book of Common Prayer (1662) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Common_Prayer_(1662)

    Among the approved offices in Common Worship is the 1662 Communion office, considered an alternative in the text. The favouring of Common Worship and decline in parishes using the 1662 prayer book has led groups such as the Prayer Book Society to sponsor the 1662 edition's usage, with some success. [60]: 266

  6. Exhortation and Litany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhortation_and_Litany

    The litany was prefaced with an "Exhortation to Prayer", which was a homily-styled discourse on the nature of prayer. The "Exhortation" was intended to be read in public before the procession started. [10] Published on 27 May 1544, the litany was the first authorised English-language service. [1] It was to be used for Rogation and Lenten ...

  7. Spiritual communion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritual_communion

    Spiritual Communion, as St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Alphonsus Liguori teach, produces effects similar to Sacramental Communion, according to the dispositions with which it is made, the greater or less earnestness with which Jesus is desired, and the greater or less love with which Jesus is welcomed and given due attention.

  8. Book of Common Prayer (1559) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Common_Prayer_(1559)

    The 1559 Book of Common Prayer, [note 1] also called the Elizabethan prayer book, is the third edition of the Book of Common Prayer and the text that served as an official liturgical book of the Church of England throughout the Elizabethan era. Elizabeth I became Queen of England in 1558 following the death of her Catholic half-sister Mary I.

  9. Black Rubric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Rubric

    The "rubric" was omitted from the Elizabethan prayer-book of 1559, probably as part of the Queen's policy to retain the support of moderate traditionalists (she believed in the Real Presence without a definition of it; and, had she got her way, the celebration of the Prayer Book Communion would have looked like a Mass), [7] but possibly also on ...