'This book is useful in providing information about the ministration of communion apart from Eucharistic celebration. It is pioneering as one of the first English monographs employing emerging methodologies for discovering participant understanding of worship, in the form of a bibliographically well-resourced case study of local practices and interpretations.' Practical Theology 'The ecumenical liturgical movement has emphasized consistently the centrality of the Eucharist in the Sunday gathering of the Christian assembly. In most churches the presider at the Eucharist is ordained for that ministry. But what happens when such leadership is no longer available to every assembly? In The Theory and Practice of Extended Communion, Phillip Tovey explores the ways in which three ecclesial traditions - Roman Catholic, British Methodist, and Anglican - have responded to the growing shortage of persons ordained for sacramental ministry and the consequences these responses are having on eucharistic practice and theology... Tovey's research in important. He addresses a timely and difficult question shared across denominational lines: if the Eucharist is to be central to the Sunday assembly, how will the Church provide for its celebration in the assembly? However we answer this question, Tovey helps us see that extended communion in its several forms creates perhaps more problems for the Church than it solves.' Worship 'There is no question that Tovey has produced a well-written, well-researched study and I hope his findings will be disseminated appropriately. This should, in my view, lead to a revision and reform of the current liturgical provision for extended communion within the Church of England (and beyond)... it is a 'must read' for anyone studying extended communion, and [...] many of its conclusions are important and should be taken very seriously.' Anaphora 'I believe [this book] will serve as a major contribution to the much-needed oversight