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5.0 out of 5 stars
Revisiting, November 28, 2009
This review is from: The Orthodox Liturgy: The Development of the Eucharistic Liturgy in the Byzantine Rite (Paperback)
"Sometimes a light surprises
The Christian while he sings..."
--William Cowper (1731-1800), 'Olney Hymns,' XLVIII [Joy and Peace in Believing]
The people called the Byzantines came from the direction where morning light appeared for many Christians of the ancient and medieval world. East of Athens and Rome, the ancient name for the region, called Anatolia, is derived from the Greek word translated "east." This provides a poetic analogy to theme and content of Wybrew's text, which still satisfies readers three decades after initial publication. The book ignites interest to experience Byzantium's light through development of Eucharistic Liturgies composed by Sts. Basil the Great and John Chrysostom in the fourth century.
Canon Hugh Wybrew, the author, remains on faculty at Oxford University after having released his vicarage of St. Mary Magdalen Church (Anglican), Oxford, UK. Having studied Orthodox theology for many years prior to the book's 1988 debut (1989, SVSP; revised 1997), he produced this monograph that attracts cradle and converted Orthodox Christians as well as an audience of beginners and scholars, thanks to combined prayerful and critical voices. Wybrew had been Dean of St. George Cathedral (Anglican), Jerusalem, when the book was first published.
Maintaining a steady hand on the wheel of controversies, Wybrew explores textual studies and cultural history of Byzantium without judgment. Added to his even hand are other important correlates of the Divine Liturgy. By other correlates, I am thinking of the book's nine black-and-white illustrations of Orthodox church floor-plans, significant references to Greek, Slavic, and Antiochian interpretations in choral music, icons, vestments and paraments, as well as successive efforts to standardize the Orthodox Divine Liturgy.
Numerous reviewers have cited appreciation for the book's pastoral tone, reflected in combined prayerful and critical voices. Of particular note among reviews, I would like to mention a review by Bishop Kallistos of Diokleia (Timothy Ware) that appears in the Foreword, and elsewhere reviews by Professor Robert Burns ('The Expository Times,' 2001--an ecumenical and interdisciplinary journal), and the V.Rev. Professor Peter Galadza ('Logos,' 1993--journal of the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies, St. Paul University, Ottawa, Canada).
A fourth review praising the book appeared in the 'Concordia Theological Quarterly,' which addresses the author's emphasis on North American readers especially in the first chapter and Epilogue. For these reasons, I have recommended this book to Christian readers from Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Melkite-, Greek- and Maronite-Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and other denominations with unqualified satisfactory feedback.
William Cowper, an 18th-century poet, probably never experienced the Orthodox Eucharistic Liturgy. Few British people at the time could do more than read about it; indeed, there were few who read about it. Yet the following quatrain, from another 'Olney Hymn,' conveys in metered rhyme a direct parallel to St. John Chrysostom's very own sentiment, that heaven appears before his eyes during the Divine Liturgy:
'Here may we prove the pow'r of pray'r,
To strengthen faith, and sweeten care;
To teach our faint desires to rise,
And bring all heav'n before our eyes.''
Wybrew notes in the Introduction to this book that he had wished from the start for such a book as 'The Orthodox Liturgy' he would later write. He clears a path for others to anticipate a direct experience of heaven in the Divine Liturgy. He states that he wanted to clear a path so that others would not get lost and revert to the western practice of closing the eyes in prayer. For in the Divine Liturgy, even the eyes pray to see the way home to Paradise. He succeeds, and we have much to see for ourselves.
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