of the Catholic Church
Initial Book of Divine Worship The
Congregation for Divine Worship gave provisional approval for the Anglican Use liturgy, the
Book of Divine Worship, in 1984, an approval rendered definitive in 1987. This book incorporates elements of the
1928 American Book of Common Prayer, but the Eucharistic liturgy is from the
1979 prayer book, with the
eucharistic prayers taken from the
Roman Missal and the ancient
Sarum Rite (with the modern English
Words of Institution inserted in the latter). New texts were promulgated by the congregation on 22 June 2012, the feast of English saints Thomas More and John Fisher, namely the Order for Funerals and the Order for the Celebration of Holy Matrimony. The
Book of Divine Worship was based closely on the United States Episcopal Church liturgy, which had developed in ways different from that of Anglican churches in England and Australia, making it unsuitable for imposing on all personal ordinariates for former Anglicans. Its Order of Mass drew elements also from the original
Book of Common Prayer, from different later versions of it, from the
Tridentine Mass and from the
Roman Rite as revised after the Second Vatican Council. The Holy See's 'Anglicanae Traditiones Commission' that developed the updated form of Anglican patrimonial liturgy used the
Book of Divine Worship as its "lead" source.
Customary As an interim
Divine Office, the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham in 2012 adopted the
Customary of Our Lady of Walsingham. Combining elements from the most common Roman Rite
books of hours–the
Liturgia Horarum and the
Breviarium Romanum–and both the 1549 and 1662 editions of the Church of England
Book of Common Prayer, the
Customary contained the full
psalter. It also contained
Terce,
Sext, and
None–hours present in the Roman Rite but not in most Anglican prayer books.
Current Divine Worship: the Missal Divine Worship: The Missal is the current
missal containing the complete expression of the Divine Worship Eucharistic liturgy for use in all three
personal ordinariates for former Anglicans that had been established from 2011. It took effect on 29 November 2015. The Mass is a "
use" of the
Roman Rite requiring the
Roman Canon on Sundays, augmented with Anglican features such as wording, the
Prayer of Humble Access and the "Comfortable Words". A number of these extra or optional features have equivalents in the
Tridentine use, notably in the
propers, the prayers at the foot of the altar, the offertory prayers and the Last Gospel. In the new liturgical books for the personal ordinariates, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Congregation for Divine Worship retained the generic title
Divine Worship for the entire liturgical provision for the personal ordinariates, dropping the "Book of" naming convention in favor of
Divine Worship: The Missal. The earlier
Book of Divine Worship has been phased out and is no longer authorized for use in public worship. The term "Anglican Use" has been replaced by "Divine Worship" in the liturgical books and complementary norms. == See also ==