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BCP Large Print Edition Prayer Book Burgundy calfskin leather 707 [Illustrated, Large Print] [Leather Bound]

The Church of England (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 30, 1981 Prayer Book
This Prayer Book is bound in the finest calfskin leather, with gilt edges and ribbon marker and comes in an attractive slipcase that will protect it throughout its life. The larger type size will prove a boon to people who are visually impaired – or who just require reading comfort. The Book of Common Prayer of 1662 is the old and well-loved prayer book of the Church of England – and one of the classic English texts; its prayers and expressions have helped to mold the English language into what it is today. Such phrases as 'with this ring I thee wed' and 'in sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life' have become familiar words with which we mark events in our lives. This Prayer Book provides the complete 1662 services – including the traditional forms of the baptism and marriage ceremoniesnies. It will make a perfect gift for those who want to mark a special occasion with this enduring text.


Editorial Reviews

Book Description

The Book of Common Prayer is not just the old and well-loved prayer book of the Church of England. It is one of the classic texts of the English language. This larger size Prayer Book provides the complete 1662 services, and is bound in an attractive blue French Morocco leather with gilt edges and blocking. The larger type size caters for those who are have a visual handicap – or those who just require reading comfort.

Product Details

  • Leather Bound: 696 pages
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press (July 30, 1981)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0521506182
  • ISBN-13: 978-0521506182
  • Product Dimensions: 7.2 x 5.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,509,152 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Neat Piece of History, September 6, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: BCP Large Print Edition Prayer Book Burgundy calfskin leather 707 (Leather Bound)
The Church of England's first duty as an established church was to create a prayer book. Separating from the Roman Catholic church meant Mass and other services in English, not Latin. This created the need for a book from which educated people could follow the order of Mass. Be edict of Queen Elizabeth, a guidebook to Mass and the Administration of the Sacraments according to the church of England was created. This was the product of that edict. The Elizabethan language is absolutely beautiful. Imagine a living piece of testament to the protestant reformation right there beside you. A great guide for daily prayer or a unique addition to any church service. I loved it, and the large print was especially easy to read!
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31 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Misrepresentation, January 20, 2005
This review is from: BCP Large Print Edition Prayer Book Burgundy calfskin leather 707 (Leather Bound)
I am of mixed opinion about the "1662 Book of Common Prayer". My chief complaints and comments are:

a. The slipcase incarcerating the book that arrived on my doorstep was of plain brown cardboard, NOT the attractive-looking case shown on the Amazon website.
b. It took me 10 minutes to pry the book loose from this slipcase and after opening and reading the book, it will no longer go back into the case. A nice feature, that.
c. For some inexplicable reason, I expected an exact replica or reprint of the "1662 Book of Common Prayer". Silly me. While an attractive volume arrived, it was NOT what I expected.
d. The frontispiece states, "This edition includes the various amendments to the 1662 Book of Common Prayer..." and then lists them from 1964, 1965, and 1968....which in itself is odd since the tables for calculating the dates for Easter start at 1983. Furthermore, there are references on some pages to King Charles I, and then suddenly, on a subsequent page, to Elizabeth II and Prince Philip.
e. I was expecting, from the advertisement, a faithful copy of the "1662 Book of Common Prayer". It is in my mind, a misrepresentation.
f. As a result, for any given text in this volume, one can't be sure which period in history the words actually originate. If you are a scholar of the period, forget this edition, because this book isn't sure what it is trying to be.
g. The paper has a questionable look and feel, suggesting it may not age well. On the other hand, it is attractively bound in burgundy leather and the text is "large" as advertised.

Don't misunderstand me. The Word of God is always a joy to read...no matter the format. It's just that the format of this particular book is not being honestly advertised.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars With all my heart, and mind, and strength..., March 18, 2005
This review is from: BCP Large Print Edition Prayer Book Burgundy calfskin leather 707 (Leather Bound)
This Book of Common Prayer (1662) is the 'primary' BCP, used by the Church of England proper, the original branch of the Anglicans. There have been many books that have had the title 'Book of Common Prayer' since the first one appeared in 1549; it has been used continuously in one edition or another in the Anglican tradition since 1559; the 'main' edition remains this 1662 edition. Churches in other nations (Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, the United States, Canada) have done revised Books of Common Prayer, but they always use this as the touchstone.

A bishop in the Episcopal church once said to me, 'We don't have a theology that we have to believe -- what we have is the prayerbook.' Please forgive the absence of context for this phrase -- while he would say that this statement in isolation is an exaggeration, and I would agree, nonetheless his statement serves to highlight both the importance of and the strength of the Book of Common Prayer.

To be an Anglican, one does not have to subscribe to any particular systematic theological framework. One does not have to practice a particular brand of liturgical style. One does not have to have an approved politico-theological viewpoint. One can be a conservative, liberal or moderate; one can be high church, low church, or broad; one can be charismatic, evangelical, or mainline traditional -- one can be any number of things in a rich diversity of choices, and the Book of Common Prayer can still be the book upon which spirituality and worship is centred.

The Book of Common Prayer is not, in fact, a book that changed my life. It is a book that changes my life. Even though it is not the primary book of my own church, it continues to provide for spiritual insight and development; it continues to guide my worship and my theology. It continues to help me grow. The words are part of a liturgy now shared by Catholic, Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian and other liturgical churches, in different combination and priority.

Gerry Janzen, an Anglican professor at my seminary, said to me recently as we were lunching and having a fascinating and wide-ranging conversation (in a unique way that only Gerry Janzen is capable of doing) that he strives for that kind of memory and understanding that is so complete that one forgets what one has learned. He recounted to me his experience of working with his book on Job -- he had done a lot of research, development of ideas, writing, and organisation, and then set it aside for a time. When he picked up the topic later, he decided to begin by writing, and then go back to the research, other notes and writings he had done earlier. He was surprised to see, in comparing the work, that he had in fact duplicated much of the material -- he had internalised the information, incorporated it so well into his thinking and being, that it came forward without effort. It is this kind of relationship I feel I have developed with the Book of Common Prayer.

To be sure, there are pages of information that I don't know. I haven't memorised the historical documents; I still consult the calendars; I haven't learned all of the collects by heart. But it has become a part of me. When was asked to put together a liturgy for a houseblessing for Episcopalian friends, there were rooms that called for collects that had not been written -- I wrote new collects and inserted them into the liturgy.

'Can you do that?' the householder asked, worried about the flow and the approval of the priest doing the blessing.

'I trust Kurt to write collects -- his probably belong in the BCP,' the priest said in response, and I appreciated her vote of confidence. That was perhaps the first confirmation to me of this sense of incorporation of the book into my life.

From his first edition, Cranmer distinguished in his terminology the words minister and priest, and the two should not be viewed as interchangeable. A priest is a minister, but a minister need not be a priest. This become part of the early development of the idea of all people being ministers to each other, which is also a concept that has varying acceptance and fulfillment in actual practice over the history of Anglicanism.

One of my favourite prayers derives from this book, part of the English prayer book from the very first one in 1549:

Almighty God, who hast given us grace at this time with one accord to make our common supplication unto thee, and hast promised through thy well-beloved Son that when two or three are gathered together in his name, thou wilt be in the midst of them: Fulfill now, O Lord, the desires and petitions of thy servants, as may be best for us, granting us in this world knowledge of thy truth, and in the world to come, life everlasting. Amen.

This prayer, like many things in the BCP, has moved to a new location from the first edition, but nonetheless the spirit of the BCP shows a circuitous but continuous development from the first English Prayer Book to the current varieties. Likewise, other denominations have gleaned insights, prayers and structures from this and other versions of the BCP.

The Book of Common Prayer, as a single unit and as a greater tradition of which this book is a part, is an Anglican gift to the world.
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