Louis Weil was the James F. Hodges Professor of Liturgics at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific in Berkeley, California. His ministry has included missionary and academic work in Latin America. In his work as a teacher of liturgy he has lectured on five continents. He was a member of the Standing Liturgical Commission from 1985-1991. He died in 2022.
""While he takes English liturgical history and Anglican and Episcopal practice as his subjects, the wisdom and common sense that Louis Weil offers here are ecumenically important. His call for critical thought about what we do in worship and for cohesion and restraint in any liturgical act will matter immensely for all Christians who care about liturgical integrity and meaning in our time. Especially presiders at worship will find themselves urged to see that the major insight of the liturgical movement—that a faithful liturgical event is always corporate—makes a great difference to what they do with their own bodies as they lead an assembly. Future writers of rubrics and of liturgical manuals will need to attend to the method and the basic conclusions of this book."" —Gordon W. Lathrop Lutheran pastor and liturgical theologian, President, Societas Liturgica ""Wisdom. That is what you will find between the covers of this book. Wisdom. Born of decades of making sense of liturgical celebration in the Anglican tradition from ritual, historical, theological, and pastoral perspectives. If you do not care to have your assumptions challenged, do not read this book! Wisdom may not be for you! Louis Weil is an acute observer of ritual behavior and a reliable historian of the church's liturgical practice. His theological and pastoral insights are worthy of serious reflection by all who preside at the church's Eucharist. This is essential reading for all students in formation and an excellent review for seasoned clergy."" —J. Neil Alexander, Dean of the School of the Theology, the University of the South, Professor of Liturgy and Charles Todd Quintard Professor of Dogmatic Theology