Then likewise he shall say,
"Priest: Lord, open thou our lips.
Observations:
1. The Church or individual using the BCP has confessed his sins. He has considered and appropriated the Word of God with its plenipotent potency. He has embraced the infallible promises and assurances of forgiveness and absolution. He has exercised justifying faith in Christ alone. The LORD’s prayer followed. We considered this earlier. A google search at the blogsite will pull up earlier comments on "Why I Use the Book of Common Prayer."
2. In the "versicles" at hand, we offer our imploring prayer for the divine opening of the worship of praise, the hearing of God’s Word, our responses to God’s Word, and further prayers that follow. Again, Anglicans are a people who corporately pray. It is at Book of "Common" Prayer, that is, it is a book for the "commoners" or Churchmen, a book used throughout the national church--during the heydays when Anglicanism was the norm rather than the exception (as here in enthusiast-land).
b. This reflects the ethos of Psalm 119 and that God and God alone empowers praise and worship.
c. One correspondent with our blogspot, a Reformed Anglican pastor, noted that some people dislike the “Anglican penitential flavour” of the Prayer Book. There may be some truth to that on first glance—that those who unfamiar and first-time users of the book might draw that conclusion. The claim is unfounded, premature, and reflects lack of exposure to the services.
d. However, having noted that above, let no Anglican take a back-seat to these enthusiasts thinking they have the “corner” on Praise & Worship. They equate their loudness, drum-driven enthusiasms and narcissistic sense of superiority with genuine piety. The Anglican earnestly prays and desires that his lips, mind and heart would be opened to praise God. How often we've heard and patiently endured their fruitless objections.
e. Let Anglicans resist this modern nonsense. Why? We are at this point beseeching God “to open our lips” and, as a consequence of justification and our redemption, then we “open our mouths and show forth thy praise.” The jaws move, the lips move, the tongue is employed, the heart is engaged, the mind is thinking and is focused. There's even "joy deep, deep down, moving joy." Undergirding this prayer is the Sovereign God who does that, helping, enabling, and encouraging our praises. Where two or three are gathered in His name, there is Christ.
f. This is exactly what is done when we move forward in the service. There are a few more versicles, but then—momentarily in seconds, we say or sing the 95th Psalm. Again, we use God’s infallible Word for praise. We highly prefer singing. This scribe uses the Covenanter Psalter for the congregational ease and simplicity of the tunes. Some have used the Anglican chant, although that can be difficult for a congregation to learn or use. Here's how we move from the versicles to the 95th Psalm, entitled the Venite.
1. “O Come, let us sing unto the Lord…
2. “Let us heartily rejoice in the strength of our salvation…
3. “Let us come before His presence with thanksgiving…
4. “Let us show ourselves glad in Him…
g. Never let any non-BCP user say or accuse us of “poor praise” or that we are subdued by our Biblical form. That’s the enthusiast talking.
h. “Our lips shall show forth thy praise.”
1. That is, “our tongues,” in a known language, not the Babylonics, histrionics and theatrics of confused tongues that Pentecostal Babylonians babble about. Yeah, press on others. If the English Reformation did nothing else, it surely advanced informed use of the English tongue for worship, not the Latin. It advanced literate and intelligible worship.
Interpretation:
Dependent fully upon His Majesty, His graciousness, and His Majestic Presence, the Prayer Book Anglican earnestly prays and seeks that his lips, mouth, mind, heart and soul will praise the LORD. What a great prayer we find as we enter more fully into divine worship---having proceeded from and through the Confession of Sin, Absolution, and the LORD's Prayer.
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