Nearly a year ago, I finally made a move to the dark side (or the light depending on your perspective) and bought an Apple Macintosh computer.
After years and years and years of being a Windows user, I basically got fed up with the viruses, the clunky way Windows operated. I needed a new machine and I knew that if I bought a PC that meant Vista (at the time) and I had heard so much negative stuff about that.
So I bought a Mac. I also signed up for an iPhone and I have been loving my conversion ever since.
Now this post is not about my Mac conversion. This post is about the new iPad which is shortly to make its way into shops.
As a relatively new Mac convert, I was interested to see what they would launch and what it might do given my very good experiences with their computers and phones. My initial reaction was that I couldn’t see the point of a tablet, even a very nicely designed one, like the iPad. Tablets have been around for a good while and I’ve never felt the need for one.
However, having seen it on video (not yet handled one myself), I can see how I might make use of it. All sorts of scenarios where the phone is too small an interface to deal with and finding the PC and going through all the rigmarole is fine but could be easier and quicker and lazier for yours truly. So I’m saving up – I think I’m going to get an iPad despite my initial misgivings.
However, this post is not about whether I buy the new iPad as such. This post is really about one of my side questions that I am really interested in right now. The question is this: is the iPad a liturgical game-changer?
It’s size and weight and the ability to control the screen with my finger and the multi-touch controls that I’m now well used to from the iPhone could come together in a perfect storm. I think I could see myself presiding at Communion with the iPad in front of me instead of the book (or folder of printed pages) that I currently use.
For some time, Church of England clergy have been using the Internet to download Common Worship texts to produce customized service sheets that use all the rich liturgical resources that our church has been producing. Some have been projecting those words onto screens. All of them have been using either the official Common Worship website or a software programme like Visual Liturgy to do all their planning and prep. But, of course, when it comes down to the delivery in the service itself, you needed paper with all your words printed on it.
That could now be about to change and I am intrigued. Apart from the potential ease of operation for the President at Communion (and the increased amount of clean surface area on the holy table), I could see various other potential ramifications:
- Need something off-the-cuff and want to pull something down from the Internet? Easy with an iPad.
- Could the iPad be wirelessly plugged into the projection system (for those churches doing so) so that the President is once again no longer reliant on a separate computer operator? Anyone who has worshipped in such circumstances will know the damage a liturgically unaware operator can do to the flow of worship.
- Visual Liturgy could find itself cut seriously adrift – the whole mode of preparation and operation would have to change… and it would have to get Mac compatible.
Anyway. If and when I get an iPad, I’ll give it a go and let you know how it shakes out.
Remember, you heard it here first. I guess the crucial thing will be – just don’t spill the wine on it!

7 Comments
David, I think I will be just behind you in the queue to get one! I have used an iPhone for the text of a collect and post communion whilst presiding somewhere that didn’t seem to have a Common Worship Book in the house, so the screen is certainly up to the job…
interesting – I have played around with sermon notes on my ereader, but there’s a lighting issue with that sometimes, and of course for all the uses you outline the wireless internet is necessary!
ipad is going to be rubbish as an ereader as it is back lit but for notes/liturgy…hmmm could yet be persuaded
Perhaps I’ll ask for one as an ordination present LOLOLOL!
I have been tempted to use our OLPC for preaching (it can work a bit like a tablet), but battery life would mean turning it on near to the sermon, and it makes an annoying beep when you turn it on! It would save soooo much paper. Like Bishop Alan I too use my phone for the collects, but I am sure some people reckon I am texting.
Not sure that you have to be dependent on a seperate computer operator -you can use a key pad on the lecturn
If the recent experience of online readers of Scripture Union’s products is anything to go by, I’d have to answer “yes” to your question David. Quiet time for many people has moved away from a printed book and bible, and into an on-screen or iPod experience. It is a very different experience, but one that I’ve taken to enthusiastically – though of course it won’t be to everyone’s taste.
There’s a lot about the iPad that makes it much more able to replace our traditional book experiences than either laptops or smart phones have been able to achieve, so I have high hopes.
Now, WordLive as an iPad app, with the text, videos, MP3′s and all, that really would be something … watch this space …
Ok teasing over. It’s out
http://itunes.apple.com/app/id371687662
Whatbdo you think David, the future of Christian publishing? A liturgical game changer?
Thanks for commenting Martin – good to hear from you.
Well, at the moment, I’m not able to comment on either the iPad as liturgical game-changer or WordLive within that overall framework since I have neither an iPad or WordLive!!
If anyone wants to give me one, I’ll happily comment!
I do hope to get an iPad but, to be honest, I was wrong-footed by the price. I was expecting something in the £300 mark – not £500 plus.
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