"1662 Book of Common Prayer: International Edition" ed. by Bray and Keane. A Review


 

The 1662 Book of Common Prayer: International Edition

Samuel L. Bray and Drew N. Keane (editors)

IVP

ivpress.com

ISBN: 978-0-8308-4192-9; March 2021; $28.00

 

You either love them, or you hate them. It’s just about that simple. Some feel prayerbooks are constricting, like a bad asthma reaction constricts the airway. Others feel freed up and that they can breathe easier by having the routine and regularity of such a breviary. One either loves them or hates them. Recently Samuel L. Bray, professor of law at the University of Notre Dame, as well as a McDonald Distinguished Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University, and Drew N. Keane, lecturer in the Department of Writing and Linguistics at Georgia Southern University, teamed up to put forth a new rendition of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer (1662-BCP). Actually, this 832-page handy hardback is a lightly touched edition set up for an international audience. It keeps the King’s English and the Queen’s sensibilities, while broadening the prayers out to include other conditions and situations found in global contexts. It’s the right size, the right type of paper, and the right size print for most anyone to use corporately or individually.

 

If you’re already familiar with the 1662-BCP, then you’ll find very little that’s changed in “The 1662 Book of Common Prayer: International Edition”. The petitions for the royal family in Morning and Evening Prayer have been moved to other parts of the book, and their place is filled with petitions that will fit more governmental circumstances. There is also some cleaning up of spelling to ways that are most familiar to 21st Century world citizens.

 

The significant Additions and changes come in the Addenda toward the back of the volume (647-767). There’s a letter to the reader which gives rationale to the bits of modifications, oodles of extra prayers from other parts of the international Anglican communion, and alternative table of readings, and a glossary. The most exciting addition in this backmatter is the “Homily of Justification” or more fully, “A Sermon of the Salvation of Mankind by Only Christ our Saviour from Sin & Everlasting Death (1547)”. This is the homily referenced in Article 11 of the 39 Articles of Religion. As one riffles through those pages, it will become quickly understood what makes the Church of England and the worldwide Anglican network truly Protestant. It’s a delightful read. Even the warning about those who “brawl about words”, those contenders forging “matters of contention, even when they have no occasion thereto”, those who use “captious cavillations to obscure and darken” justification is beautiful in its own right (664).

 

“The 1662 Book of Common Prayer: International Edition” is a nicely edited work ideal for those who love prayerbooks. My only disappointment was that one marking ribbon is not sufficient for the volume, it needs about five. This missal is ideal for Anglicans of any flavor, along with others who desire some format for their times of prayer. Also, for my fellow ministers, this work contains material to aid you in public prayers and worship that you’ll find richly beneficial. I highly recommend the book.

 

My glad thanks to IVP for responding to my request when I asked for a review copy. They happily sent it, and I used it for this evaluation. There were no hostages taken in the process and no animals were hurt in the use of the prayerbook or the writing of this analysis. These sentiments are freely made and freely given.

Comments

Mark Taylor said…
I want to find this in a nice, genuine leather edition but I can’t find one.

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