The Scottish Liturgy fo?- the Celebration of the Holy 

 Ruchai'ist aiid Administration of Holy Communion, 

 commonly called the Scottish Cotnvmnioji Office. 



Pica Svo edn. pp. 34. Buckram, 1^. 6(1 net. 

 Bourgeois 321110 edn. pp. 32. Paper covers, id. net; cloth cut flush, .\d. net. 



The Scottish Liturgy for the Celebration of the Holy 

 Eucharist and Adininistralion of Holy Communion, 

 commonly called the Scottish Communion Office, together 

 with the Collects, Epistles and Gospels from the Book of 

 Common Prayer and the additional Collects, Epistles and 

 Gospels sanctioned in the Scottish Church. 



Altar-book edn, Great Primer, Super Royal Svo. pp. 198. Buckram, ^s. net. 

 Altar-book edn, with English Communion Office added, pp. 198-1-32. Persian 



Morocco, zis. net. 

 Bourgeois 321110 edn. pp. 234. French Morocco, 3^'. net ; Persian Morocco, 4^. net. 



Permissible Additions to and Deviations ft-om the Service 

 Books of the Scottish Church as Canonically Sanctioned. 



Pica Svo edn. pp. 64. Buckram, is. 6d. net. 

 Bourgeois 32mo edn. pp. 56. Paper covers, id. net; cloth cut flush, 4(/. net. 



The Scottish Liturgy for the Celebration of the Holy 

 Eucharist and Administration of Holy Communion, 

 commonly called the Scottish Communion Office, together 

 ivith Permissible Additions to and Deviations from the 

 Service Books of the Scottish Church as Canonically 

 Sanctioned. 



Pica Svo edn. pp. 34-1-64. Buckram, 2s. 6d. net ; Persian Morocco, 7.5-. 6d. net. 

 Bourgeois 32mo edn. pp. 32-1-56. Paper covers, 2d. net ; cloth cut flush, bd. net; 

 French Morocco, 2s. net ; Persian Morocco, 3j\ net 



The Syndics of the Press have recently published, for the 

 Publication Committee of the Episcopal Church in Scotland, 

 the Scottish Communion Office and the Permissible Additions 

 to and Deviations from the Service Books of the Church as 

 approved by the College of Bishops. 



The history of the Scottish Communion Office is briefly 

 this. After the failure of. the attempt to introduce the use of 

 the 1637 Prayer-book in Scotland, for many years no form of 

 liturgy was in any general use in that kingdom. After the 

 Revolution of 1688 the desire for a liturtrv grew and in Oueen 

 Anne's time considerable numbers of English Prayer-books 



28 



