Turning Points in Prayer Book History

Regular price €28.50
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
A01=Matthew S.C. Olver
A01=Nathan G. Jennings
A01=Nathan Jennings
Act of Uniformity
American Prayer Book
Anglican
anglican heritage
Anglican history
Anglican theology
Anglican tradition
Anglo-Catholic
Archbishop of Canterbury
Author_Matthew S.C. Olver
Author_Nathan G. Jennings
Author_Nathan Jennings
Baptism
BCP
Book of Common Prayer
Category=QRMB31
Category=QRMF
Category=QRVJ2
Christian
Christian history
church history
Collects
commentary
Communion
Confirmation
Daily Office
English Reformation
Episcopal
Episcopal church history
Episcopal history
Epistles
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Eucharist
forthcoming
Gospels
Liturgical History
liturgy
praying
Protestant Reformation
Psalter
Ritual
Sacramental history
theology
Thomas Cranmer
Tudor England

Product details

  • ISBN 9781640657601
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Church Publishing Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

From the publisher of The Living Church and a leading Anglican scholar, the story of the development of the American Prayer Book through nine critical turning points. 

The Book of Common Prayer has a central place in the faith and practice of Anglicans around the world and, within the United States, in The Episcopal Church. In their exciting and comprehensive new work, Nathan Jennings and Matthew Olver offer a fresh and original argument: the American prayer book tradition is not merely a historical artifact but a living body of binding precedent — similar to a constitutional tradition that actively governs liturgical interpretation and revision today. Drawing on the analogy of common law, Jennings and Olver identify nine decisive moments in prayer book history, from Thomas Cranmer's founding criteria for liturgical reform in 1549 to the contested marriage rites of the contemporary Episcopal Church, showing how each turning point set precedent that still bears upon decisions made in worship planning and General Convention alike.

Unlike conventional prayer book histories that narrate events chronologically, Turning Points in Prayer Book History argues that tradition is something earned through active engagement, not merely inherited. Clergy, ordinands, and lay leaders who have vowed to uphold the doctrine, discipline, and worship of The Episcopal Church will find here both the historical grounding and the theological framework to make those vows meaningful. Enriched by archival photographs of rare prayer books, discussion questions, and a liturgical glossary, this is an essential resource for seminary courses, book studies, and anyone navigating the current moment of prayer book revision.
 


 

Nathan G. Jennings is the J. Milton Richardson Professor of Liturgics and Anglican Studies at the Seminary of the Southwest. He is the author of Theology as Ascetic Act: Disciplining Christian Discourse and Liturgy and Theology, Economy and Reality. He lives in Austin, Texas.  Matthew S.C. Olver is Associate Professor of Liturgics and Pastoral Theology and assistant director of liturgy at St. Mary’s Chapel at Nashotah House Theological Seminary. Before moving to Wisconsin, he was the assistant rector of Church of the Incarnation, Dallas, and undertook his previous studies at Wheaton College and Duke Divinity School. Olver is an assisting priest at Zion Episcopal Church, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, and was a member of the Anglican-Roman Catholic Consultation in the U.S. He has published extensively in the Harvard Theological Review, Ecclesia Orans, Anglican Theological Review, Journal of Ecumenical Studies, Worship, Questions Liturgiques, Studia Patristica, the Journal of Anglican Studies, Nova et Vetera, Studia Liturgica, Antiphon, was a contributor to entries in the new Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, and has a chapter in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook to the Book of Common Prayer. He is the publisher of The Living Church. He was the Alan Richardson Fellow at the Department of Theology and Religion at Durham University. He lives in Nashotah, Wisconsin.

More from this author