I much prefer the language of rite 1 in the 1979 BCP. I was just wondering if there is a major difference in language between the 1979 BCP rite 1 and the 1928 BCP? Any other differences in structure etc. that I should know about? I have a 1979 BCP that I use for daily office prayer, but am thinking of picking up a 1928 BCP for daily office prayers.
Here is my list of the flaws in the 1928 book's office, compared to the 1979 book:
Compared to the 1979 BCP, the 1928 BCP Morning Prayer had:
a. Reduced suffrages. (Presumably this was because, on Sunday, the Litany was expected to follow. But it almost never did.)
b. No provision for use of antiphons with psalms. (Antiphons were only allowed with the Venite.)
c. The congregation was required to kneel at the prayers. The old traditional posture for prayer, standing, was utterly forbidden.
d. No provision for a hymn or anthem, as in Evening Prayer, after the collects. (Though this was mitigated by the general rubric allowing hymns at the beginning and end of any service and before and after the sermon. On the other hand, the rubrics didn't actually provide for a sermon at Morning Prayer, though this was universally ignored.)
Compared to the 1979 BCP, the 1928 BCP Morning Prayer had:
(a) No Phos hilaron or other opening hymn as part of the rite (though the general rubric on hymns would have permitted it as the very first thing, before the Sentence of Scripture.)
(b) No "Deus in adjutorium meum intende." Opening preces was as at Morning Prayer.
Advantages of the 1928 BCP office over the 1979 BCP office:
The 1928 had the traditional American Venite, with its verses from Psalm 96. This should have been retained in the new book.
Compared to the 1979 BCP, the 1928 BCP Calendar had:
a. No black-letter days. (But the canons must have been revised at some point, for The Lesser Feasts and Fasts was available since I can remember.)
b. Marginal Easter Season. Fridays during the Fifty Days were considered fasting-days as if they were any other Fridays. An antiphon was provided for the Venite for use from Easter to Ascension Day, and, though the rubrics don't explicitly so state, the Sentence of Scripture marked "Easter" was presumably allowed during the same period. At Communion, a proper preface was provided for "Easter Day, and seven days after." The Pascha Nostrum (which was printed with the Collects, Epistles and Gospels, not within the Morning Prayer rite) was permitted "throughout the Octave" but not otherwise.
Advantages of the 1928 BCP Calendar over the 1979 BCP Calendar:
The discussion of the Easter cycle was in some respects more informative. Also, the discussion of the Easter cycle in the 1979 BCP contains a mistake which the 1928 BCP did not have.