Lant, G.D.2019-09-252019-09-252016-09-2619550950-1703http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/157743"THE Lord's Supper is the central act of Christian worship and it is a great loss to Protestants that the Reformation did not leave us with a Church life where it had its rightful place. Some of the Reformers battled hard to make it the chief service of Sunday, but lost the battle, and left us with a form of service which is not an adequate vehicle for Christian worship. Similarly the Church of England inherited a form of morning and evening prayer compiled from the Breviary, and, while the liturgical hours were an excellent form of devotion for the religious houses, who centred their worship in the Mass, a truncated form is not adequate as the central act of worship for Christians on a Sunday"engWith permission of the license/copyright holderPublic WorshipLord's SupperProtestantsReformationChristian denominationsDogmaticsCreeds, confessionsPractical theology and theological educationLiturgy, spiritual formationSome Problems in Public WorshipArticle