Proceedings of the North American Academy of Liturgy 2022

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NAAL Proceedings 2022

transportation to about fifty notable American liturgical scholars and practitioners to a conference held in honor of the tenth anniversary of Sacrosanctum Concilium. It was also sponsored by Theological Studies, in no small part through Walter Burghardt, who was the editor at the time. Burghardt and John Gallen were the two people on the point for this event. Both Worship and Theological Studies were planning special editions which together would publish the proceedings of this event. Here is a rather healthy excerpt of the letter of invitation sent by Gallen that is the touchstone of our academy.    The renewal of the Church’s liturgy has proven to be a massive and delicate undertaking and it is time, on this tenth anniversary of the Constitution, to take stock. Taking stock can be accomplished in several ways. We could, for example, look back, asking what we have done right, done wrong. Again, we can look forward, asking ourselves what we think are the dimension of the present situation, what particular needs, problems and opportunities we have—and in what direction we think the emphasis should be for the future.

Moreover, many of us who are deeply involved in the liturgical apostolate have found that these ten years have indeed been busy ones. We have worked on committees, taught courses on all levels in educational programs, organized liturgical programs, lectured and discussed, assisted dioceses and religious congregations and orders in their own projects for renewal, have been involved in an almost endless variety of tasks to help the work of liturgical reform.

One thing we haven’t had the chance to do is this: professional liturgists of our country have not had the opportunity to come together as liturgists speaking to each other, offering opinions, listening, suggesting and discussing out of a background of both training and experience the most central questions of worship today and in the future.

This letter is an invitation to you. Because of the gracious hospitality of the Franciscan Renewal center in Scottsdale, Arizona, and the marvelous generosity of the Center’s friends, we are able to send an invitation to about fifty American liturgists to meet this winter in Scottsdale for a major conference. We will begin our conference on the evening of December 4, 1973 (Tuesday), and spend our time till noon on Friday, December 7th, in study, discussion and prayer together.

This is a special kind of conference in the sense that it will not be built around a continued series of major addresses, followed by response and discussion. We plan two major addresses: on the opening night Walter Burghardt will offer a challenge that asks what theology and the American Church can rightly expect of liturgy and its renewal in America. Later in the week, Professor Langdon Gilkey will discuss the question of symbol-making in America. The rest of the time, our plan is to organize our rather manageable group into several smaller groups to work together through several central topics that we judge most demanding of our attention. (We would appreciate your suggestions on these topics even now, in answer to this letter.)

And our work together is planned in the context of prayer together. For this reason, we have asked the Monks of Weston Priory in Vermont to undertake this diakonia for us, this work of service: to lead us in prayer during the week. The entire community of fourteen will be with us for these days.

The focus of our conference: to bring together, on the tenth anniversary of the Constitution, persons with “liturgical credentials” in our country to pray and to study what we judge to be principal opportunities, needs and problems of liturgical renewal in the years that are before us. So it is really more future-oriented than directed towards a consideration of the past.20


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Articles inside

TABLE OF CONTENTS

2min
pages 5-6

FOREWORD

4min
pages 7-8

TITLE PAGES AND COPYRIGHT

2min
pages 1-4

Repenting the Evil Done on Our Behalf: The Penitential Aspect of an Expanded Advent Season

26min
pages 125-136

A Liturgical History of the Organ Prelude in Presbyterian Churches

30min
pages 100-111

Transcending Tradition: A Reappraisal of Methods for Studying Charismatic Worship

36min
pages 84-99

Eucharistic Prayers at St . Gregory Nyssen Episcopal Church, San Francisco

42min
pages 137-158

Art-Based Training to Increase Capacity of Church Leadership at the Convergence of Worship, Preaching, and Justice

33min
pages 112-124

Queering Liturgy

5min
pages 67-70

Mirror of the Church: Liturgy as Ecclesial Self-Recognition

20min
pages 71-83

Problems in the History of Early Liturgy

4min
pages 64-66

Liturgy and Cultures

1min
page 61

Modern History of Worship

1min
pages 62-63

Liturgy and Comparative Theology

2min
page 60

Liturgical Theology

4min
pages 58-59

Liturgical Music

0
page 57

Liturgical Language

1min
page 56

Liturgical Hermeneutics

2min
pages 54-55

Issues in Medieval Liturgy

3min
pages 51-53

Feminist Studies in Liturgy

1min
page 49

Formation for Liturgical Prayer

1min
page 50

Exploring Contemporary and Alternative Worship

2min
pages 47-48

Eucharistic Prayer and Theology

1min
page 46

Ecology and Liturgy

1min
pages 43-44

Introduction of the Berakah Recipient

5min
pages 20-21

The Advent Project

3min
page 39

Christian Initiation

4min
pages 40-41

Vice-Presidential Address To Be Determined

28min
pages 4-19

Berakah Response

19min
pages 23-32

President’s Report to the Academy

16min
pages 33-38

Critical Theories and Liturgical Studies

2min
page 42

The Berakah Award

2min
page 22
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