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Paperback Christ's Time for the Church Calendar Book

ISBN: 0687011361

ISBN13: 9780687011360

Christ's Time for the Church Calendar

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Book Overview

A probing but clearly written book, Calendar will find an appreciative audience beyond academia and clergy to the laity of the church: choirs and their directors, worship planners, adult study groups, and others who want to understand better the church's times of preparation and celebration. Calendar centers largely on theological meaning and parish practice in relation to liturgical time. Deliberately, almost no attention is given to...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Calendar: Get it, Read it, Nourish Your Worship!

This has guided my understanding of the liturgical Christian year. Stookey's scholarship is greatly evident, as well as his deep love for the Church and for Christ. This enchanting blend brings an edification of widest breadth in this field of understanding. Because of this, the readily apparent readability of his work proves helpful and allows the reader to feel no shame for being ignorant of the practices the Church has performed for centuries. He takes the reader on a journey of understanding the theory of why the Christian calendar is so, and then walks us through the rationale for why the Church has sought to worship God the way it has for centuries. What is also very helpful is the pragmatic index, for example, where one will find a useful Advent-Christmas and Lent-Easter calendars from 1997 - 2020 CE. The thesis of the book is that Christian people living in the present ought to be mindful (ie connected and engaged) of the Church's past and seek to remain connected to it through the understanding and practice of the liturgical calendar. The chapter I was most interested in was chapter 2, titled, "The Year of Our Risen Lord." It begins with familiarizing the reader with why Sunday (the first and the eighth day) was the chosen day to worship God. It then moves to helping the reader understand the significance of the Week and how to reorder our lives (and schedules) to make Sundays a day of refreshment for ministry during the rest of the week. Then the author moves to the broader category of what the Year of the Lord means and explains the Christian calendar. This chapter helped give me the framework and understanding of what is important in the Christian year and lectionary, so we may appropriately worship God in a way that is consistent historically.

Essential understanding of Christ-time

Calendar is, perhaps, one of the most important books to enter the read-field in the area of liturgical studies, and I would postulate, pastoral theology. In Stookey's classic logical fashion, and his easy readability, he demonstrates the essential nature of understanding the events of the Christian year; in typical Jesus fashion, "You have heard it said, but I tell you...", Stookey helps us to see that our fulcrum for time has been placed in the wrong balance. Indeed, preparation for and the experience of Resurrection are the pivotal events for a Christian life, and it is from these events that all time is derived. His style is inviting and his content is convincing. This book will become a mandate for a new generation of ministerial leaders, both clergy and lay.

Great Book

Stookey's work is a must read. He effectively communicates the gospel message of Jesus as he writes in an accessible style. The author's stated intent was to write so that anyone could read it and he accomplished his goal. This book would be a great book for any worship leader, pastor, or seminary student. Others who are interested in the liturgical year will find some of the terms foreign to them but Stookey quickly defines theological terms. Stookey's point of view is very helpful especially to those who come from a tradition where liturgy seems foreign. I found as I read that my eyes were opened to an entirely new world where marking time through the Church calendar is something to be desired and not something to react against. It is a shame that more churches are not intentionally marking time through observances Stookey describes. This book challenged me to teach a Sunday School class through the four Sundays of Advent. The response to the material was great and warmly received an environment where liturgy is foreign.

Time after time...

Laurence Hull Stookey's book, `Calendar: Christ's Time for the Church', seems to be written for a primarily Protestant readership. There are many clues to this, but perhaps none more telling than the Appendix subtitled This Book in a Nutshell. As I go through each of the pairs of ideas, I find that my upbringing and training has concentrated more on the right column (the column Stookey invites readers to consider as an alternative) rather than the `assumed teaching' column. Thus, one of my tasks was to think about how the `assumed teaching' came about in some traditions, but not my own. Certainly there are historical, developmental reasons for this. As evidenced in class discussions, there can still be a great deal of resistance to ideas such as lectionary cycles or liturgical years. These things seem natural to me, however, and would be greatly missed if not present. Stookey does not delve too deeply into the historical minutiae of how different denominations' calendrical cycles were shaped. While he does discuss differences in catholic, orthodox and protestant practices at times, these are relatively few in number, and even more rarely presented as part of a developmental line. Does this indicate a anti-catholic bias in the author (which I consider unlikely) or in the potential readership? (Stookey's own preferences sneak into the text occasionally, such on page 143, where rather than stating that Charles Wesley has a separate day from John Wesley in the United Methodist sanctoral cycle, he states that `Charles is rightly given a separate commemoration...' [emphasis added].) The overall theological framework for the discussion of the calendar is set out in the first chapter. `As Christians, we ought continuously to be aware that we live at the intersection of time and eternity.' (p. 17) How this is lived out involves forging a connection with a creator who is always active in creation, not a remote observer. How this is enacted liturgically involves anamnesis and prolepsis. In my Anglo-Catholic tradition, the idea of anamnesis, that `the liturgical observance of past events somehow brings them into our own time', is strongly maintained in the way the Eucharist is understood as being the real presence, and that the communion service is not simply a memorial or even a re-enactment, but an ongoing participation. (p. 29) The same holds true for prolepsis, that the future is already made real for us in liturgy. `Liturgical anamnesis and prolepsis constitute a primary means by which we maintain contact with past and future.' (p. 33) Stookey talks about the yearly cycle, beginning with a discussion the week and of Sunday. Stookey mentions the daily office, but fails to speak of it as a possible practice for those outside of cathedral/monastic settings. Stookey presents Sunday as `...the first day of the week and the eighth day of the week are the same day. Yet even in that there is meaning: The creation of the cosmos (which God began on Day One) and t

Concise summary of how to rethink worship

First, I must admit that I read this book as a student of the author. That said, I have to say that this is one of the most clearly written, understandable, and yet educated discussions of worship I have ever read. If you are an interested layperson, head of a worship committee, in charge of a special service (Advent, Lent, Ash Wednesday, Pentecost, whatever), pastor, musician, or all of the above, this book will educate you. Stookey is, I think, on target in his (re)assesment of the relative importance of the various holidays and seasons of the church year. He will make you think and you'll like it!
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