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Missal
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=== Anglicanism === {{see also|Anglican Missal|English Missal}} [[File:The_Anglican_Missal.jpg|thumb|The Anglican Missal sitting on an altar desk in an Anglican parish church]] Prior to the [[Reformation]], liturgical practice had featured usage of local cathedral missal variations. The most noted of these was the Sarum Use missal, but others including the [[Durham Rite|Durham Use]] missal influenced English liturgical practice. During the [[English Reformation]], the [[Church of England]] separated from the Catholic Church. Characteristic of [[Protestant liturgy]] trends, the Church of England opted to utilize a [[vernacular]] liturgy. [[Thomas Cranmer]] is traditionally credited with leading the production of new liturgical texts, including the [[Book of Common Prayer|1549 ''Book of Common Prayer'']]. The 1549 prayer book and successive versions of the ''[[Book of Common Prayer]]'' would replace both missals and [[breviary|breviaries]] in regular Anglican liturgical practice.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/10/22/god-talk|magazine=[[The New Yorker]]|location=[[New York City]]|author=[[James Wood (critic)|James Wood]]|title=God Talk: The Book of Common Prayer at three hundred and fifty.|date=15 October 2012|access-date=1 June 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211110003921/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/10/22/god-talk|archive-date=10 November 2021}}</ref> As the [[Anglican]] tradition broadened to include modern [[anglo-catholicism]], some Anglicans sought a return to a missal pattern for their liturgical books. In 1921, the [[Society of SS. Peter and Paul|Society of Saints Peter and Paul]] published the [[Anglican Missal]] in Great Britain.{{sfnp|Cavanaugh|2011|p=105}} The Frank Gavin Liturgical Foundation of Mount Sinai published a revised edition in 1961 and the Anglican Parishes Association continues to print it: {{quote|The first edition of the Anglican Missal was published in London by the Society of Saints Peter and Paul in 1921; the first American edition appeared in 1943, published by the Frank Gavin Liturgical Foundation of Mount Sinai, Long Island, N.Y., and in 1947 a revised edition was published (reprinted in 1961); the publication rights were given (or sold) to the Anglican Parishes Association in the 1970s, which reprinted the 1947 edition.{{sfnp|Cavanaugh|2011|p=105}} }}
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