Lectionary
I just came across something called the Daily Office Lectionary when I looked at the ESV Bible on-line. A brief description is included with the reference that I found:
Daily Office Lectionary
This plan follows the Daily Office Lectionary found in The Book of Common Prayer (1979) used worldwide by Anglicans and Episcopalians.
Today's (May 21, 2010) reading included the following passages:
First Psalm: Psalm 102
Second Psalm: Psalm 107:1-32
Old Testament: Jeremiah 31:27-34
New Testament: Ephesians 5:1-20
Gospel: Matthew 9:9-17
Is this included in the LOGOS L4 library? I do not see it listed under this name; but since I do not know much about the liturgical church, I thought I would ask. Thanks for any information that you can give.
Blessings,
Floyd
Pastor-Patrick.blogspot.com
Comments
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<crackle pop hiss> "paging MJ . . . paging MJ . . ."
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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<crackle pop hiss> "paging MJ . . . paging MJ . . ."
Yeah - that is who I was thinking of, but then I have learned never to overlook the less than obvious.[:)] I would accept the answer from anyone who would answer.
Blessings,
FloydPastor-Patrick.blogspot.com
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I just came across something called the Daily Office Lectionary when I looked at the ESV Bible on-line.
No, none of the daily office readings are currently in Logos. While I have collected the information from the Book of Common Prayer, The Book of Lesser Feasts, Alternative Service Book (take the titles with a grain of salt. They are close). The only Anglican resource actually started is the Joint Liturgical Group's Four Year Lectionary. I'm still looking for a copy of the JLG's 2 year lectionary.
If I'd stay off the forums and concentrate on proof-reading you'd start to see the results of the work.[:D]
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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The Book of Common Prayer (1979) is the prayer book of the Episcopal Church USA. It is similar to the prayer books of other Anglican churches worldwide.
A useful page of lectionary resources is The Lectionary page. It includes a number of excel spreadsheets containing various lectionary databases, including both years of The Book of Common Prayer (1979) Daily Office.
Here is the Daily Office Year 1 lectionary (begins with Advent before odd-numbered years) 7823.daily_lectionary1.xls
And Daily Office Year 2 (begins Advent even-numbered years) 4617.daily_lectionary2.xls.
Your readings are those for Friday, week of 7 Easter in the Year 2 database, if I have attached those files correctly.
These are guaranteed not to be in the format required for Logos! Somebody who knows Excel might be able to reformat without re-entering everything. If not, I have volunteered and will find the time this summer sometime.
As in this database, the canticles are not usually specified for the daily office. There is no standard practice for canticles.
Rebecca
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The Book of Common Prayer (1979) is the prayer book of the Episcopal Church USA. It is similar to the prayer books of other Anglican churches worldwide.
These are guaranteed not to be in the format required for Logos! Somebody who knows Excel might be able to reformat without re-entering everything. If not, I have volunteered and will find the time this summer sometime.
Rebecca
I have three people working on getting a variety of lectionaries into Excel or XML. You are correct that some tables can be converted and loaded into Excel but there are a number of additional matters - front matter, calendar, etc. I've I don't get to the Anglican material, let me know and we can coordinate how we present the material to Logos.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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You could take a look at the Year 1 and Year 2 lectionary xls files I attached and determine if they are a starting point.. I'm willing to work on them as I have time, because I want the daily office lectionary in Logos. Your group is also welcome to the files as is or as modified, whenever you are ready to take them up. I can do very simple excel editing, but someone else will need to do anything more than that.
Rebecca
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You could take a look at the Year 1 and Year 2 lectionary xls files I attached and determine if they are a starting point.
I have - thank you for supplying them. We will use them as a base.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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If I'd stay off the forums and concentrate on proof-reading you'd start to see the results of the work.
What proof-reading are you referring to? Why not just let us do it for you and you can make the changes all at once? Maybe i am just off track with this idea.
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thank you all, for your interest and effort in this. I am a relative lectionary newbie, but I like to use them and any resources that we could have within Logos would be great.
For those who would like a good resource in Logos that deals with Worship and makes use of the lectionary--and the arts--check this out:
http://www.logos.com/products/details/2228
it is a trans-denominational work, examining everything from Eastern Orthodoxy to Church of Christ.
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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What proof-reading are you referring to?
Proof-reading of the Excel sheets to send to Logos for them to create additional lectionaries. The ones I am working on currently are:
- Lutheran Book of Worship 1978 Daily Lectionary
- The Methodist Hymnal 1935 tables of readings
- Current U.S.A. Latin rite Catholic Daily lectionary including sanctoral cycle and antiphons
Ones that are essentially done except for basic front material and notes for Logos were chosen to go early because they present interesting problems:
- Lewis' Palestinian Syriac Lectionary
- Jewish 1 year cycle of readings (Ashkenazi)
- Jewish 1 year cycle of readings (Shepardic)
- Season of Creation supplemental lectionary
- World Council of Churches/Catholic readings for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity
There are about 30 in other states - some with typos that I need the source to correct; some partially entered, many simply found. Some of the most difficult to track down are like the last proposed Presbyterian lectionary which was only a few years prior to the adoption of the RCL or the two year Joint Liturgical Group lectionary. Now if I manage to make this an excuse for a trip to the GTU library in Berkeley ...
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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For those who would like a good resource in Logos that deals with Worship and makes use of the lectionary--and the arts--check this out:
http://www.logos.com/products/details/2228
it is a trans-denominational work, examining everything from Eastern Orthodoxy to Church of Christ.
I'll add my recommendation to this as well.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Proof-reading of the Excel sheets to send to Logos for them to create additional lectionaries. The ones I am working on currently are:
- Lutheran Book of Worship 1978 Daily Lectionary
If you want to send the Excel sheet for this I will proof it. I have 4 different WELS churches here and many other LCMS churches in town to get any other materials that might be needed. Just send it along and I will try to help you out. My address is luvmath03 at yahoo
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I am thrilled that folks are working on daily lectionary projects. Is anyone working on the Daily readings for the revised common lectionary? Many ELCA Lutherans are using these readings now that they have been adopted into our new hymnal.
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Is anyone working on the Daily readings for the revised common lectionary?
It is next in line behind the JLG's 4 year lectionary. I also have it's predecessor, the unofficial Ramshaw lectionary that several Lutheran churches used before the RCL daily came out. I did not realize that the daily RCL was in the ELCA's hymnal now. Thanks for the information.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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I was playing around with the 1928 BCP Lectionary. I got as far as the attached spreadsheet. Would it be of any value to continue it?
Greg
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I was playing around with the 1928 BCP Lectionary. I got as far as the attached spreadsheet. Would it be of any value to continue it?
Yes with a couple of caveats:
You need a column that indicates the date (1st Sunday in Advent etc.). And you don't need to repeat the column heading on each entry ... although the way you are doing it it is easily removed. So yes, please go ahead. When you have it completed I'll tell you who to send it to at Logos and add it to our "forum status report".
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Thanks. I set up the 1st two weeks. Could you confirm that this is the necessary format. Column E will be deleted in the final, I am just using it as a reference as I work. Also, Sundays have two sets of propers, I added a column to designate each set. Is this ok, or is there something else I should do to handle that? Should I fill in a value for the days of the week which only have one set?
Greg
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I added a column to designate each set. Is this ok, or is there something else I should do to handle that? Should I fill in a value for the days of the week which only have one set?
Yes, you've got the format down fine. The way you are handling Sundays is just fine and no, you don't need to add entries for other days.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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1067.BCP_Lectionary_1945_1.xls
Ok. I think this is it. Let me know if there is anything else I can do to it. I put a couple of notes at the bottom of the spreadsheet for items I was confused about. Like how to title the before Lent and before Advent lessons that are part of the season before but are dated according to the season that follows. Same thing with Pentecost which is technically the last day of Eastertide - I still left the weekdays that followed as Eastertide so that they would be dated correctly.
I hope this is helpful.
Greg
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Ok. I think this is it.
Fantastic. I'll check it out and forward it to Logos.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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YES!
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Can anyone tell me the status on the RCL Daily Lectionary? If there is a way I can help get this out, I'd like to do so. Also, I know that we Presbyterians sometimes have "alternate" readings (we don't include apocrapha for instance), so I'd be willing to work on data entry for our particular "flavor" but would need some guidance in what the Excel sheet needs to look like.
Agnes Brady
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Check out this thread:
http://community.logos.com/forums/t/27959.aspx
and this product:
http://www.logos.com/product/8648/book-of-common-prayer-1979-daily-office-lectionary
Blessings,
FloydPastor-Patrick.blogspot.com
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I am part of a Presbyterian clergy group that uses the Daily Lectionary that is found in our Book of Common Woship. It is based on the Revised Common Lectionary. I know much of the Lectionary you refered to overlaps, but would like to have a way of not having to check that the readings are the same. That's one reason I said I'd be willing to work on data entry, so I could have the "Presbyterian flavor" if possible.
Agnes Brady
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