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Varför ska vi bry oss om ordo?

Borgehammar, Stephan LU orcid and Lathrop, Gordon (2019) In Årsbok för Svenskt Gudstjänstliv 94. p.81-102
Abstract
Reflection on the widely shared pattern or shape for the principal acts of Christian worship – on what has been called ordo – offers us several important gifts. It enables and supports a renewed accent on the central matters of that worship, the matters that N. F. S. Grundtvig called “bath, word, prayer, and table,” that Luther called “signs of life” and “marks of the church,” and that both Lutheran confessional writings and contemporary ecumenical liturgical ecclesiologies call “church as assembly around word and sacrament.” These matters can be seen as ordinary and local human practices ritualized to bear the gospel of Jesus Christ. Furthermore, this ordo can become a major tool for organizing materials for liturgical use, planning... (More)
Reflection on the widely shared pattern or shape for the principal acts of Christian worship – on what has been called ordo – offers us several important gifts. It enables and supports a renewed accent on the central matters of that worship, the matters that N. F. S. Grundtvig called “bath, word, prayer, and table,” that Luther called “signs of life” and “marks of the church,” and that both Lutheran confessional writings and contemporary ecumenical liturgical ecclesiologies call “church as assembly around word and sacrament.” These matters can be seen as ordinary and local human practices ritualized to bear the gospel of Jesus Christ. Furthermore, this ordo can become a major tool for organizing materials for liturgical use, planning and leading a liturgy, teaching liturgical practice and meaning, and perceiving ecumenical communion. That communion includes a perception of the links of Christian communities through the ages, especially helped by our seeing the way something like our ordo also plays a role in such classic texts of Christian tradition as the liturgical descriptions found in the writing of Justin Martyr and Tertullian. Finally, however, the most important use of ordo may be as a tool for illuminating liturgical meaning: just as in biblical intertextuality, the juxtaposition of one thing to another – texts and actions – leads us to new meanings. Indeed, ordo is the juxtaposition. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
translator
LU orcid
organization
alternative title
Why do we need to think about Ordo?
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Liturgy, liturgical theology, ordo
in
Årsbok för Svenskt Gudstjänstliv
volume
94
pages
81 - 102
publisher
Artos & Norma
ISSN
0280-9133
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
423f7396-2682-4bec-843b-9f75f846efb1
date added to LUP
2019-06-26 16:40:49
date last changed
2020-02-06 02:19:43
@article{423f7396-2682-4bec-843b-9f75f846efb1,
  abstract     = {{Reflection on the widely shared pattern or shape for the principal acts of Christian worship – on what has been called ordo – offers us several important gifts.  It enables and supports a renewed accent on the central matters of that worship, the matters that N. F. S. Grundtvig called “bath, word, prayer, and table,” that Luther called “signs of life” and “marks of the church,” and that both Lutheran confessional writings and contemporary ecumenical liturgical ecclesiologies call “church as assembly around word and sacrament.”  These matters can be seen as ordinary and local human practices ritualized to bear the gospel of Jesus Christ.  Furthermore, this ordo can become a major tool for organizing materials for liturgical use, planning and leading a liturgy, teaching liturgical practice and meaning, and perceiving ecumenical communion.  That communion includes a perception of the links of Christian communities through the ages, especially helped by our seeing the way something like our ordo also plays a role in such classic texts of Christian tradition as the liturgical descriptions found in the writing of Justin Martyr and Tertullian.  Finally, however, the most important use of ordo may be as a tool for illuminating liturgical meaning: just as in biblical intertextuality, the juxtaposition of one thing to another – texts and actions – leads us to new meanings.  Indeed, ordo is the juxtaposition.}},
  author       = {{Borgehammar, Stephan and Lathrop, Gordon}},
  issn         = {{0280-9133}},
  keywords     = {{Liturgy; liturgical theology; ordo}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  pages        = {{81--102}},
  publisher    = {{Artos & Norma}},
  series       = {{Årsbok för Svenskt Gudstjänstliv}},
  title        = {{Varför ska vi bry oss om ordo?}},
  volume       = {{94}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}