Praying the Hours
Most Christians know the rhythm of Sunday Mass. Fewer know that the Church also keeps time in another way—quietly, steadily, every day—through the Liturgy of the Hours , the ancient prayer that sanctifies the whole sweep of the day and night. It is the Church breathing. If you’ve ever opened a breviary and felt overwhelmed by ribbons, antiphons, invitatories, and psalms that seem to leap around like startled birds, you’re not alone. But beneath the complexity lies something beautifully simple: a way of letting Scripture shape the hours we live. What the Liturgy of the Hours Is At its heart, the Liturgy of the Hours—also called the Divine Office—is a pattern of prayer built around the Psalms, prayed at set times throughout the day. Monks and nuns pray all the hours; clergy pray most; laypeople pray what they can. The Church never insists on perfection. She simply invites us into the rhythm. The Hours are: Office of Readings – a long, quiet immersion in Scripture and the writings ...