The hymnal employed the Common Service of 1887, the first common liturgy for the Divine Service among English-speaking Lutherans in the United States and Canada. The work of the inter-Lutheran committee that produced the Common Service and the hymnal itself was instrumental in bringing about the formation the ULCA.[3]
The text only edition, first published in 1917, did not contain the music for the hymns; the hymnal edition, first published in 1918, included the music.[1] The Occasional Services section was also published separately.[4]
References
^ abCommon Service Book of the Lutheran Church. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Columbia, South Carolina: The Lutheran Publication Society, The General Council Publication Board, and The Lutheran Board of Publication. 1917.
^The Occasional Services from the Common Service Book of the Lutheran Church. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Columbia, South Carolina: The Lutheran Publication Society, The General Council Publication Board, and The Lutheran Board of Publication. 1918.