The teal Ruthenian pew book

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“Orthodoxy light”! 😃
I am not a fan of the abbreviated liturgy found in the teal terror, but hopefully someday - that is, if the Ruthenian Church survives into the future - the new liturgy promulgated a few years ago will be replaced by an accurate English translation of the full Ruthenian Recension.
 
Hi ‘A’,

Good to see you! 🙂
I am not a fan of the abbreviated liturgy found in the teal terror, but hopefully someday - that is, if the Ruthenian Church survives into the future - the new liturgy promulgated a few years ago will be replaced by an accurate English translation of the full Ruthenian Recension.
Would it be fair to say that the UGCC already has a decent one?

I am no fan of the English ‘recited’ liturgy (as sometimes one will encounter), but I think the text must be pretty good.
 
Would it be fair to say that the UGCC already has a decent one?
I am no fan of the English ‘recited’ liturgy (as sometimes one will encounter), but I think the text must be pretty good.
The UGCC Divine Liturgy: An Anthology for Worship is excellent and in addition to the Divine Liturgy and many Liturgy propers and hymns has many other devotional gems, such as the Litttle Hours, the Canon and Prayers in Preparation for Holy Communion and the Prayers After Communion, the eleven Matins Resurrectional Gospels, and lots of other good stuff. As far as “fuller”, that is not always a precise term, but with the Anthology a priest, deacon and congregation can take all three antiphons or Psalms of Typika with the Beatitudes, all of the litanies, Psalm 33, etc. There are separate settings for festal Divine Liturgies and a simpler set of music when a smaller congregation is present.
 
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