Many contemporary people are longing for a faith that was not started yesterday and is not driven by fads or personalities. Our Common Prayer offers a refreshing alternative to our postmodern world by helping us reconnect to the historic prayers of the Christian faith. Your faith will be refreshed and renewed through this wonderful field guide to the historic Book of Common Prayer. Come and see what millions of Christians around the world have come to know and love in the regular practice of common prayer!
I have to agree with the other reviewers and say I was pretty disappointed with this book. It appeared to be a sort of guide on how to use the BCP in your own devotions, but instead it is basically an abridged BCP with some lengthy introductions to each chapter. For what it's worth, the introductions were quite interesting, but I would have preferred to have turned these into a full book on their own without reprinting large sections of the BCP.
While it was nice to be able to collect a number of pieces for my own prayer life, this book makes two mistakes: it doesn’t teach you how to use the Book of Common Prayer but essentially continues to tell you what it is/was, and it tries to modernize the concept of common prayer a point too far. Case in point - I don’t think Thomas Cranmer had a specific prayer for the American President seeing as he lived and wrote some two hundred years before the United States of America were even established.
A very good distillation of the Book of Common Prayer with selections to last one the entire church year for personal devotion and prayer. Bevins offers comments about sections he highlights in the book, albeit brief. I wish the book had more breadth in the commentary.
I should have just read Alan Jacobs' Biography of the Book of Common Prayer, but I don't own a copy of that, and I was given this one as a present. I still love Bevins and his work, and I would love to meet him in person someday. But this book is really for a neophyte to liturgical prayer, and after over a dozen years now in Anglican churches, I'm not in that category anymore. Really, I would have loved it if someone gave me this book in 2005. I just went to the bookstore at Wheaton College, bought myself a Book of Common Prayer, and did my best to figure it out. I don't know about you, but I found that difficult on its own. Reading this as a companion text would have been nice.
He still has good things to say in the introductory sections, but those are too short. I do look forward to loaning this book out or giving it away, because it would be right up there as a great book to recommend to someone new to a liturgical tradition or Anglicanism.
Short Review: This is an okay introduction to the structure and form of the Episcopal services and the book of common prayer. But I was really looking for how to actually use the book (flipping pages and using it as a devotional) and this wasn't that book. Eventually I found a kindle version of the book of common prayer that had everything written out as a daily devotional so there is no flipping and trying to figure out what you are supposed to be doing.
As an introduction, this isn't bad, but it is in that difficult place of being too basic for anyone that has much background but not specific enough for people that have no background.
This book might be a gentle introduction to the Book of Common Prayer. But, it is not a guide for using the Book of Common Prayer in spite of what its title implies. It is a simple prayer book for a contemporary audience that has never used a liturgical form of prayer. There is some nice background information that should make the idea of praying from a prayer book seem less odd to our modern worldviews. But, it will not help you navigate the actual Book of Common Prayer.
As one who comes from a non liturgical background I find this book to be very helpful in shaping my prayer life. The history of the Book of Common Prayer is also very interesting.