ABSTRACT

Tracing the origins of daily prayer from the New Testament and Patristic period, through the Reformation and Renaissance to the present, this book examines the development of daily rites across a broad range of traditions including: Pre-Crusader Constantinopolitan, East and West Syrian, Coptic and Ethiopian, non-Roman and Roman Western. Structure, texts and ceremonial are examined, and contemporary scholarship surveyed. Concluding with a critique of the present tenor of liturgical revision, Gregory Woolfenden raises key questions for current liturgical change, suggests to whom these questions should be addressed, and proposes that the daily office might be the springboard for an authentic baptismal spirituality. The author explores how prayer and poetic texts indicate that the thrust of the ancient offices was a movement from night to morning - from death to resurrection.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction and Survey of Research

chapter 3|16 pages

The Church Orders

chapter 8|28 pages

The East Syrian/Chaldean Tradition

chapter 9|22 pages

The West Syrian and Maronite Traditions

chapter 11|28 pages

The Roman and Benedictine Offices

chapter 12|26 pages

The Old Spanish Offices

chapter 14|19 pages

The Shape and Theology of the Office