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Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Pew Edition
 
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Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Pew Edition [Hardcover]

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 1211 pages
  • Publisher: Augsberg Fortress - eBooks Account (October 31, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0806656182
  • ISBN-13: 978-0806656182
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #366,383 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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38 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice all-in-one worship resource, January 21, 2007
This review is from: Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Pew Edition (Hardcover)
I am not a musician and I can't read music, so I'll leave it to the more musically qualified to weigh in on the merits of the hymns and service settings in this new Lutheran worship resource. But I am a Lutheran, I love a sung service, and I enjoy singing hymns. Just published, Evangelical Lutheran Worship (ELW) is intended to replace the Lutheran Book of Worship (LBW or "green book") published in 1978 which had been serving as the primary worship resource of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America for the past two decades.

What I like about ELW is its abundance of choices, its completeness, and its transparency. Unlike the LBW, this new resource is designed to facilitate private worship as effectively and fully as public worship. The section for the Propers for Sundays and Principal Festivals is clearly laid out, including for those Sundays beginning in Pentecost when churches have the option of pursuing "complementary" or "semicontinuous" Old Testament readings. Unlike the old, two-year Daily Lectionary, the Daily Lectionary in the ELW follows a three-year cycle, making it easier for the worshipers to integrate their priviate devotions with what the larger church is doing on Sundays. Another important improvement is the inclusion of all 150 Psalms, not just the "safe" or "polite" ones. The first piece of service music, which immediately follows the last Psalm, is numbered #151. This is significant. It is a way of reasserting the Psalter's rightful place as the Church's primary collection of worship music. The numbering helps us remember that the Psalms are not to be treated as texts only. They pre-date the church, in fact, and from the beginning have served as important works of musical and spiritual expression. Also important for private devotions is the inclusion of Martin Luther's "Small Catechism" and a short article explaining the Scriptural basis of worship (where the precise verses are identified for all the key phrases that form the skeleton of our worship service). More than its predecesor, ELW gives the motivated Lutheran worshiper the chance to prepare ahead of time for Sunday worship, and to reflect upon it afterwards--a reminder that being a Christian is not just what we do, think, and say on Sunday.

What I mean when I praise ELW's "transparency," is that those who prepared this volume have taken pains to explain why we worship the way we do, to present the logic and rationale behind the options available to us. Each section of the book is introduced with a brief explanation of what is being presented and what makes that element of worship noteworthy. Similarly, there is ample use of rubrics to call attention to worship options within the various settings and services. I even appreciate that they have added a footnote to the Nicene Creed to remind worshipers that the phrase "and the Son" is a later addition to the Creed.

Even more so than the LBW, this hymnal is sensitive to the diversity of the church and demonstates a sense of joy about embracing all lands and cultures. Likewise, it recognizes that the laity is capable and ready to take greater leadership in the "work" of the church; the text distinguishes between "presiding ministers" (i.e., ordained clergy) and "leaders" and "assisting ministers" in a way that is empowering rather than restrictive.

I look foward to exploring the new settings for Communion as part of my Sunday worship. And I encourage all Lutherans to obtain a personal copy of ELW and begin using it as part of your personal devotiions.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for church and home use, October 31, 2009
By 
Prometheus Lass "S.C." (Lost in a remote cornfield somewhere in the midwest) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Pew Edition (Hardcover)
Because my parents are both Lutheran ministers who received a small sample copy including some of the changes they were planning on making from the LBW in updating it, I got to see a copy. Neither my parents, boyfriend, or I were at all impressed. In that sample, they had changed the melody of some well-known and loved hymns to ones that were more difficult to sing, they changed words spuriously on well-beloved hymns that were difficult to sing, not very musically fitting with the melody, and downright awkward.

Thankfully, most of the problems with that sample have been addressed, and overall this book is very good. Often when they have changed a melody to a well-known hymn, they still include the old melody that everyone loves, an example of this being "I heard the Voice of Jesus Say." Also, most of the terribly awkward rewording went away too, not all of it, but at least some.

The biggest benefit of this book, and the reason why this book is much more useful to individual and home use, as opposed to solely church purchase and pew use, is its inclusion of a whole slew of prayers for different subjects, a listing of Luther's small catechism--I do not remember whether the LBW included this, but I don't think it did--a listing of the church seasons, two versions of the Revised Common Lectionary, one for Sundays only and the other a list of the daily scriptures. Also, as with the Lutheran Book of Worship, the ELW includes the psalms.

For church use, it mostly preserves the two most well-known and beloved communion settings, and adds several more contemporary settings in different styles, on the assumption that most churches weekly provide the creed in the bulletin, the full text of them only appears in a couple of the first settings. It preserves the hymns from the LBW while adding many great contemporary hymns that actually have some actual theological content, "You are Holy," "You are Mine" and "The Feast is Ready to Begin" are just a few examples. As with the LBW, it includes some of the daily offices, such as morning prayer, evening prayer, and Compline.

I do have a few gripes with it. At Lutheran Summer Music, a month-long music camp for which you do not have to be Lutheran to attend (or really even Christian, though you will be required to attend evening prayer), I fell in love with the LBW's arrangement of the Evening Prayer service music. For whatever reason, they decided to alter some of the chanting, and change the beautiful melody of the Magnificat, as presented in the LBW. Thankfully, at least, they preserved the melody in, "Let My Prayer Rise before you as incense,"

I especially dislike the way that they arbitrarily chose to include the accompaniments and harmonizations on some hymns and not others. Those of us who are musically inclined but not quite quick enough to get the chordal structure to harmonize without guide, especially while trying to sing the words, and to pay attention to the message of the hymn--even more especially when the melody exceeds our tolerable sounding vocal range-- like to be able to see the harmonies, so that we can switch to one of the lower ones.

This also presents a difficulty to Church accompanists such as I who prefer to practice at home, because it means that we also have to purchase both the liturgy book and the accompaniment edition, both of which are much more expensive than the pew hymnal, since we have no reliable access to all the hymn accompaniments. Formerly, the only thing we had to buy was the liturgy accompaniment if we were willing to put up with the tendency for the pages to refuse to lie flat and to flip themselves occasionally.

This books improvements, greater worship setting options, greater usefulness in personal devotion at home, continuance of the great hymn classics, inclusion of much theologically sound and musically beautiful contemporary music truly outweighs the few gripes I have against it.

I highly recommend this, not only to churches who haven't yet switched over from the LBW, but also for dedicated Christians who would like a rich source of daily devotional material.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Long Overdue, November 27, 2007
By 
Chad (Tulsa, Oklahoma) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Pew Edition (Hardcover)
This is a long time coming and long overdue. The last time the LBW (now the ELW) got a rewrite was in the 1970s.

If you're looking for the Gift Edition the ISBN number is 978-0-8066-5671-7. Currently, it's only available from Augsburg Fortress.
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