This book is a collection of essays from the proceedings of the 11th International CIEL (International Centre for Liturgical Studies) Colloquium held at Merton College, Oxford, September of 2006. CIEL is an academic school of liturgy founded in 1994 in Paris to instruct priests, seminarians, religious, and the laity in the riches of Catholic liturgical history and development of the liturgy. This collection of essays explores various aspects of the Roman liturgical tradition. Contents: Introduction by Uwe Michael Lang * Chapter 1: Benedict XVI and the Liturgy by Eamon Duffy * Chapter 2: Rhetoric of Salvation: The Origins of Latin as the Language of the Roman Liturgy by Uwe Michael Lang * Chapter 3: Poetry in the Latin Liturgy by Gabriel Diaz Patri * Chapter 4: The Proprium Missae of the Roman Rite by Laszlo Dobszay * Chapter 5: Theological Foundations of the Liturgy by Nicola Bux * Chapter 6: Liturgies of the Military Religious Orders by Cristina Dondi * Chapter 7: The Calendar and Corpus Christi: An Historical and Theological Consideration of the Church s Sacred Year by Lauren Pristas * Chapter 8: The Mystical Meaning of the Ceremonies of the Mass: Liturgical Exegesis in the Middle Ages by Claude Barthe * Chapter 9: Sacrosanctum Concilium and the Organic Development of the Liturgy by Alcuin Reid * Chapter 10: Roman Liturgy and Popular Piety: The Devotional Revolution in Irish Catholicism by Sheridan Gilley * Chapter 11: The Liturgy and Theology by Laurence Paul Hemming This collection is an essential resource for teachers and students of liturgical history and theology. It is also an interesting book for those who want to be informed about current debates in liturgical theology. Collections Series, Paperback, 6 x 9, 268 pages Genius of the Roman Rite: Historical, Theological, and Pastoral Perspectives on Catholic Liturgy, drawing upon the research of scholars from several nations, speaks again to the sources of genuine liturgical renewal. Readers will find their understanding of the history of the Roman liturgy deepened and should therefore find strengthened their common worship of God. --Francis Cardinal George, OMI, Archbishop of Chicago The Second Vatican Council desired that the great treasures of the Church's liturgy be better known and loved by all the faithful. . . . More than ever, today we need a sound theological, spiritual and practical formation in the great tradition of the Church's divine worship. This valuable book, with its contributions from various academic disciplines, will help to promote the spirit of the liturgy, according to the intentions of Pope Benedict XVI. --Antonio Cardinal Canizares Llovera, Prefect of the Congregation of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments It is easy to forget that the earthly liturgy--the everyday Eucharist of our parish churches and communities--is nothing less than a foretaste of the liturgy in which Christ and the whole company of heaven gives perpetual glory to God the Father. As they explore the various aspects of the Roman rite, the contributors to this splendid volume remind us of the celestial dimension of our liturgical celebrations at the same time that they help us to appreciate the theological and spiritual treasures of the liturgical tradition of the Church. --Archbishop J. Augustine Di Noia, OP, Secretary of the Congregation of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments The Second Vatican Council desired that the great treasures of the Church's liturgy be better known and loved by all the faithful. . . . More than ever, today we need a sound theological, spiritual and practical formation in the great tradition of the Church's divine worship. This valuable book, with its contributions from various academic disciplines, will help to promote the spirit of the liturgy, according to the intentions of Pope Benedict XVI. --Antonio Cardinal Cañizares Llovera, Prefect of the Congregation of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments It is easy to forget that the earthly liturgy--the everyday Eucharist of our parish churches and communities--is nothing less than a foretaste of the liturgy in which Christ and the whole company of heaven gives perpetual glory to God the Father. As they explore the various aspects of the Roman rite, the contributors to this splendid volume remind us of the celestial dimension of our liturgical celebrations at the same time that they help us to appreciate the theological and spiritual treasures of the liturgical tradition of the Church. --Archbishop J. Augustine Di Noia, OP, Secretary of the Congregation of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments Uwe Michael Lang, editor, is a priest of the London Oratory and Research Fellow at Heythrop College in the University of London, where he also teaches theology. He was recently appointed by Pope Benedict to the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church, part of the Congregation of the Clergy.