Then the Minister shall kneel, and say the Lord's Prayer with an audible voice ; the people also kneeling, and repeating it with him, both here, and wheresoever else it is used in Divine Service. The Quarterly Review - Page 235edited by - 1851Full view - About this book
| Charles Wheatly - 1819 - 576 pages
...Absolution. IMMEDIATELY after the Absolution in the morning service, follows this general rubric: U The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen. Amen, The word here enjoined to be used is originally Hewhatitiig brew, and signifies the same in English... | |
| Thomas Harwood - Devotional literature - 1826 - 262 pages
...draw near in full assurance of faith,"' could not more properly begin, than with "The Lord's Prayer." The People shall answer here, and at the end of all other Prayers, Amen. " Amen " employs consent and approbation. It is the assertion of truth. The use of this word has prevailed... | |
| 1833 - 82 pages
...strengthen you in all goodness; and bring you to everlasting life ; through Jesus Christ our Lord. The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen, Then shall the Minister rehearse distinctly all the Ten Commandments ; and the people, still kneeling,... | |
| Theology - 1836 - 746 pages
...congregations, will be seen from Dean Comber's classification of them. 2. Does not the direction at the end of the absolution, " The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen," seem to suggest that the mental prayer, for a space, of all assembled, to which the conclusion of the... | |
| 1836 - 742 pages
...congregations, will be seen from Dean Comber's classification of them. 2. Does not the direction at the end of the absolution, " The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen," seem to suggest that the mental prayer, for a space, of all assembled, to which the conclusion of the... | |
| Rev. Molesworth - 1837 - 424 pages
...the object you ought to have in view. AMEN. THE direction of the rubric after the Absolution is, " the people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen." In our account of Ash Wednesday, (No. 9. vol. 1.) we pointed out the different meanings of the word... | |
| Richard Mant (bp. of Down, Connor and Dromore.) - 1838 - 584 pages
...kneeling." After the Absolution, which is " to be pronounced by the priest alone," the Kubrick directs, " The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, Amen." The direction follows, "Then the minister shall kneel, and say the Lord's Prayer with an audible voice... | |
| Henry Stebbing - 1838 - 776 pages
...pure, and holy; so that at the last we may come to his eternal joy ; through Jesus Christ our Lord. ^T The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers. Amen. ^ Then the Minister shall kneel, and say the Lord's Prayer toith an audible voice ; the people also... | |
| 1840 - 746 pages
...are to unite ; but as the rubrick, at the end of the absolution in the Morning Prayer, directs that " the people shall answer here and at the end of all other prayers, Amen," it must be evident that as there is nothing to restrict these prayers to the sponsors, the congregation... | |
| Theology - 1841 - 776 pages
...is a hint to the minister that he is still to go on ;" but this is not authority. The rubric says, " The people shall answer here, and at the end of all other prayers, amen" — not a word that the minister shall. I believe that the general practice of the clergy, whatever... | |
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