If you've ever visited an Episcopal or Anglican church, or if you're an
Anglican yourself, you know the weight we place on worship. Not only do
we adhere to historic reformed doctrine and to traditional discipline,
we also take worship seriously. In the act of corporate worship, we
seek to glorify God and bring honor to His name through the reading of
His Word, prayer, and the singing of traditional hymns.
Our worship is marked by the Book of Common Prayer (1928 revision),
which calls for beauty and simplicity in worship. Scripture stands at
the center of traditional Episcopal worship; the Prayer Book is filled
with Biblical passages and prayers crafted on a knowledge of Scripture.
In an age when "any prayer book will do," and when worship is defined
more by human pleasure than by the pursuit of God's glory, we humbly
seek to worship God in Spirit and in truth by keeping to the 1928 BCP
and following its rubrics.
Primarily, though, we seek to honor our majestic Lord‹and to do so decently and in order, as St. Paul admonishes Christians.