No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2014
Fr Arthur Gabriel Hebert SSM is perhaps best known for his role in the Parish Communion Movement (PCM), a predominantly Church of England based offshoot of the wider liturgical reform movement of the early and mid-twentieth century. The PCM made the case for Holy Communion to be the main act of Sunday morning worship, rather than the then more widely used Matins service.
Today Hebert's name is most often associated with liturgical reform, and the systematic theology which underpinned his work has fallen largely into obscurity. This paper explores the theology that informed Hebert's liturgical arguments, drawing out his understanding of a faith that transcends denominational and stylistic differences, and makes the case that Hebert's theology has much to contribute to present-day ecumenical and missional dialogue.
Revd Philip J. Morton, Church of England.
2. Crockett, Williams R., ‘Holy Communion’, in Stephen Sykes, John Booty and Jonathan Knight (eds.), The Study of Anglicanism (London: SPCK, rev. edn, 1998), p. 315.Google Scholar
3. Hebert, A.G., Liturgy and Society: The Function of the Church in the Modern World (London: Faber & Faber, 1935).Google Scholar
4. Hebert, A.G. (ed.), The Parish Communion: A Book of Essays (London: SPCK, 1937).Google Scholar
5. For a biography of Hebert's life with a summary of his work, see Irvine, Christopher, Worship, Church and Society: An Exposition of the Work of Arthur Gabriel Hebert to Mark the Centenary of the Society of the Sacred Mission (Kelham) of which he was a Member (Norwich: Canterbury Press, 1993).Google Scholar
6. Unity, Faith and Order: The Church as Communion (published by the Anglican Communion Office, and can be found at http://anglicancommunion.org/ministry/ecumenical/dialogues/catholic/arcic/docs/... (accessed 24 November 2011).Google Scholar
7. Unity, Faith and Order, p. 1.Google Scholar
8. The Eucharist: Sacrament of Unity (An Occasional Paper of the House of Bishops of the Church of England, Church House Publishing, 2001).Google Scholar
9. Unity, Faith and Order, p. 2, para. 2.Google Scholar
10. Weber, Max, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, trans. by Talcott Parsons (London: Unwin University Books, 1930).Google Scholar
11. Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, pp. 98–128.Google Scholar
12. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, pp. 148–49.Google Scholar
13. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 149.Google Scholar
14. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, pp. 81–84.Google Scholar
15. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 42.Google Scholar
16. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 83.Google Scholar
17. Hebert, A.G., The Form of the Church (London: Faber & Faber, 1944), p. 61.Google Scholar
18. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 61.Google Scholar
19. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, pp. 9–11.Google Scholar
20. Hebert, A.G., ‘The Parish Communion in its Spiritual Aspect’, in Hebert (ed.), The Parish Communion: A Book of Essays (London: SPCK, 1937), pp. 12–13.Google Scholar
21. Hebert, ‘The Parish Communion’, p. 13.Google Scholar
22. Irvine, Christopher, ‘A.G. Hebert’, in C. Irvine (ed.), They Shaped our Worship: Essays on Anglican Liturgists (London: SPCK, 1998) p. 67.Google Scholar
23. Paul, Avis, The Anglican Understanding of the Church: An Introduction (London: SPCK, revd edn, 2013); see ch. 4.Google Scholar
24. Avis, The Anglican Understanding of the Church, p. 40.Google Scholar
25. Avis, The Anglican Understanding of the Church, p. 31.Google Scholar
26. 1 Cor. 12.14.Google Scholar
27. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 61.Google Scholar
28. Webster, Douglas, ‘The Mission of the People of God’, in David M. Paton (ed.), The Parish Communion Movement Today: The Report of the 1962 Conference of Parish and People (London: SPCK, 1962), p. 108.Google Scholar
29. Webster, ‘The Mission of the People of God’, p. 111.Google Scholar
30. A.G. Hebert, ‘The Mystery of the People of God’, in Paton (ed.), The Parish Communion Movement Today, p. 23.Google Scholar
31. Irvine, ‘A.G. Hebert’, p. 66.Google Scholar
32. Irvine, ‘A.G. Hebert’, p. 69.Google Scholar
33. Henry De Candole, ‘The Parish Communion after 25 Years’, in Paton (ed.), The Parish Communion Today,p. 8.Google Scholar
34. Hebert, ‘Parish Communion’, p. 3.Google Scholar
35. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 80.Google Scholar
36. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 74.Google Scholar
37. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 154.Google Scholar
38. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 85.Google Scholar
39. Hebert, Form of the Church, pp. 74–75.Google Scholar
40. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 62.Google Scholar
41. Lk. 22.19.Google Scholar
42. Hebert, ‘Parish Communion’, p. 4.Google Scholar
43. Hebert ‘Parish Communion’, pp. 9–10.Google Scholar
44. Hebert ‘Parish Communion’, p. 7.Google Scholar
45. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, pp. 152–53.Google Scholar
46. Irvine, ‘A.G. Hebert’, p. 65.Google Scholar
47. Irvine, ‘A.G. Hebert’, p. 66.Google Scholar
48. Hebert, ‘Parish Communion’, p. 7.Google Scholar
49. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 74.Google Scholar
50. 1 Pet. 2.5.Google Scholar
51. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 77.Google Scholar
52. Eph. 1.10.Google Scholar
53. Col. 3.11.Google Scholar
54. Irving, ‘A.G. Hebert’, pp. 66–67.Google Scholar
55. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 91.Google Scholar
56. Hebert, Form of the Church, pp. 77–78.Google Scholar
57. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 64.Google Scholar
58. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 90.Google Scholar
59. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 67.Google Scholar
60. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 63.Google Scholar
61. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 152.Google Scholar
62. Hebert, ‘Parish Communion’, pp. 17–18.Google Scholar
63. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 153.Google Scholar
64. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 12.Google Scholar
65. Hebert, Liturgy and Society, p. 147.Google Scholar
66. Hebert, Form of the Church, p. 64, quoting the Book of Common Prayer.Google Scholar
67. Hebert, Form of the Church, pp. 68–70.Google Scholar
68. Hebert, ‘Parish Communion’, p. 22.Google Scholar