This is also my dilemma! And I'm in Brazil. Things arrive here at least 20 years late. In the US, there is already a movement to try to renew Baptist liturgy and make it more historically informed. This is the case of the Center for Baptist Renewal (https://www.centerforbaptistrenewal.com/). I'm trying to bring together Baptist colleagues here in Brazil to try to translate texts from initiatives like this and try to influence pastors and congregations, taking advantage of the liturgical renaissance that is happening to some extent here too (but in reality, the interest in liturgy is resulting in the migration of "low-church" evangelicals to Episcopal, Lutheran, and even Catholic and Orthodox churches). I can't leave the Baptist environment because I have theological conviction, but I suffer greatly from the lack of historically informed liturgy (I attended the Lutheran church for 9 months and it was a delight to participate in the liturgy). Anyway, it's a huge challenge. In the Baptist community, we face the challenge of free church culture, congregationalism, nonconformism, and biblicalism. These are good things if interpreted correctly, but in general they are misinterpreted and clash with the liturgical movement. Let us pray for a movement in this direction. I feel that many of my generation are thirsty for it.
This is also my dilemma! And I'm in Brazil. Things arrive here at least 20 years late. In the US, there is already a movement to try to renew Baptist liturgy and make it more historically informed. This is the case of the Center for Baptist Renewal (https://www.centerforbaptistrenewal.com/). I'm trying to bring together Baptist colleagues here in Brazil to try to translate texts from initiatives like this and try to influence pastors and congregations, taking advantage of the liturgical renaissance that is happening to some extent here too (but in reality, the interest in liturgy is resulting in the migration of "low-church" evangelicals to Episcopal, Lutheran, and even Catholic and Orthodox churches). I can't leave the Baptist environment because I have theological conviction, but I suffer greatly from the lack of historically informed liturgy (I attended the Lutheran church for 9 months and it was a delight to participate in the liturgy). Anyway, it's a huge challenge. In the Baptist community, we face the challenge of free church culture, congregationalism, nonconformism, and biblicalism. These are good things if interpreted correctly, but in general they are misinterpreted and clash with the liturgical movement. Let us pray for a movement in this direction. I feel that many of my generation are thirsty for it.
It's a pity that for many in the Anglican Church this is a curious historical document rather than a living one...