Methodist Worship

Regular price €52.99
A01=R. Matthew Sigler
American Methodism
American Methodist Worship
Author_R. Matthew Sigler
Category=QRVS
Charles Wesley
Congregational Singing
Early American Methodists
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Golden Censer
Hymnal Committee
hymnody tradition
inculturation studies
James F. White
John Wesley
Liturgical
Liturgical Heritage
Liturgical History
Liturgical Movement
Liturgical Piety
Liturgical Presidency
liturgical reform
Liturgical Renewal
Liturgist
Lord's Supper
Lord’s Supper
Matthew Sigler
MECS
Mediating the Wesleyan Liturgical Heritage
Methodism
Methodist
Methodist Episcopal Church
Methodist Episcopal Church South
Methodist Hymnody
Methodist Liturgical
Methodist liturgical scholarship
Methodist Liturgy
Methodist Worship
Nolan B. Harmon
Protestant Episcopal Church
Protestant Worship
religious ritual analysis
Sunday Service
Thomas O. Summers
United Methodist
Wesley Hymns
Wesleyan Hymnody
Worship
worship history

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367588946
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What makes Methodist worship "Methodist" or "Wesleyan?" How do Methodists evaluate emerging forms of worship in light of their own liturgical heritage? This book considers these questions by bringing to light the work and significance of three Methodist liturgists who have until now received precious little scholarly focus: Thomas O. Summers (1812-1882), Nolan B. Harmon (1892-1993), and James F. White (1932-2004). Exploring each one’s contribution to the Methodist movement, it evaluates their continuing legacies as scholars and practitioners of Methodist worship.

Importantly, the work of all these men occurred during times of cultural change, which gave rise to new ways of worship within the landscape of American Methodism. Addressing them in chronological order, this study shows how each figure enacted liturgical reform and renewal by drawing from the liturgical textual tradition inherited directly from John Wesley’s Sunday Service of the Methodist in North America as well as the hymnody of Charles Wesley. It also demonstrates how they sought to inculturate the Wesleyan liturgical tradition in the midst of these significant changes.

Evaluating historic and emerging trends in Methodist liturgical praxis, this is a book that will be of great interest to scholars of Methodism, the History of Religion, Liturgical Studies and Theology.

Matthew Sigler is Assistant Professor of Wesleyan Studies and United Methodist Liaison at Seattle Pacific University, USA. He is particularly interested in how the faith practices of communities of the past can affect the church today and has published articles on these subjects in journals such as Worship and Liturgy.