Sentences are short passages taken from the Bible that are recited within Christian liturgies.[1] "Opening sentences" sometimes appear in a rite to introduce it or provide commentary upon what is occurring within that act of worship.[2] Sentences can also serves to ground an act of worship in a seasonal context.[3]
History
Opening sentences were introduced to Anglican liturgy within the Morning and Evening Prayers of the Church of England's 1552 Book of Common Prayer. Penitential in nature, the 1552 sentences preceded the confession of sin in both the Morning and Evening Prayers. Sentences came to have additional purposes in later revisions of the Book of Common Prayer.[2] During the Elizabethan era, celebration of the 1559 prayer book's Holy Communion office included use of scriptural passages, both those specifically established as sentences and those unofficially selected for their seasonal or contextual relevance. Following the sentences at the offertory, organists were generally permitted to perform solo.[4]: 129
Lancelot Andrewes introduced his "Peculiar Sentences" during the 16th century. These sentences were part of a broader high church effort to restore oblationary language into the Holy Communion liturgy that had been deleted in the 1552 prayer book. The abortive 1637 Scottish Prayer Book was the first Anglican liturgical book to reintroduce oblationary language, utilizing six of Andrewes's "Peculiar Sentences".[5] All 20 sentences present within the contemporary English prayer book had been targeted for removal within the 1637 prayer book, but ultimately William Laud successfully lobbied for the removal of only ten (including those from the Book of Tobit, part of the biblical apocrypha).[4]: 144
^Davies, J. G. (1986). "Sentences". In Davies, J. G. (ed.). The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship. Westminster Press. p. 484. ISBN0-664-21270-0.