Barry Spurr was a member of the English Department at Sydney University for forty years, and was Australia's first Professor of Poetry. He has published extensively on Renaissance and Modernist poetry, religious literature and liturgical language. His internationally-acclaimed study of T.S. Eliot's Christianity, Anglo-Catholic in Religion, is the standard account of its subject. Professor Spurr is currently Literary Editor of Quadrant.
This book encourages Anglicans and Roman Catholics alike to trust in the words of liturgies which have stood the test of time, and to invest themselves in language which has been purified in the fire of faithful praying. The linguistic richness and semantic density of religious language is an icon of faith itself; and Barry Spurr has produced a passionate apologia for the living stones of language which, by staying still instead of rolling, have gathered layers of truth and power which newer, plainer words cannot rival. Dr Carolyn Hammond, Dean, Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge As only a devoted reader of poetry can, Barry Spurr illuminates the many splendors of Cranmer's prayer book and the ""old rite"" from which it draws; and, with the mordant thoroughness of a prosecuting lawyer, uncovers the blunders, confusions, evasions, infantilizations, and serial diminishments of over a century of liturgical ""reform"" in the Catholic and Anglican worlds. If you value liturgy, you will prize this book. Kevin Hart, Jo Rae Wright University Distinguished Professor at Duke Divinity School Spurr has demonstrated past all gainsaying that the use of a ""high language"" in liturgy-which comprises not only speech but also music, vesture, regulated actions-is no mere aesthetic fancy but a constitutive element of identity, piety, catechesis, and fervor. Spurr's razor-sharp critique and his animated apologia place us doubly in his debt. Dr Peter Kwasniewski, author of The Once and Future Roman Rite Spurr's well-researched, comprehensive account. a compelling perspective on what liturgical language should aspire to. any church or denomination that takes liturgy seriously would profit from a careful perusal of this book. Dr Louis Groarke, Philosophy Department, St Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia, Canada Spurr's book is directed both to members of a Roman Catholic Church that is threatened by a polarised clash between traditionalists and so-called progressives and to an Anglican Church which may well be on the way to extinction. But any church or denomination that takes liturgy seriously would profit from a careful perusal of this book. Dr Louis Groarke in Quadrant, No. 613, Volume LXIX, number 1-2, January-February, 2025, pp. 97-100