I have been reading through the forms, prayers, and liturgies if various continental Reformed churches as well as Westminster's and the OPC's Directories of Public Worship. Something that has become blatantly clear to me is that you do not have to be Anglican to have a robustly
Reformed Catholic liturgy. They don’t have a copyright on that. Yes, I think the Book of Common Prayer takes the cake for the best Reformed liturgical form in the English language, but dang is the URCNA's new Liturgical Forms and Prayers quite fantastic.
Another thing that has become increasingly clearer to me is that basically everything that initially attracted me to the Anglican tradition was already present in the best of the Reformed tradition: catholicism (the non roman meaning), patristic continuity, robust biblical
liturgy in line with the tradition of the church, and high sacramentology. I am not quite sure what that means for my own personal theological journey, but it has definitely caused me to start rethinking somethings.
Anyway, those are my musings for the night. Thank you for joining me in my ramble. -JM
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