divine office
The
official prayer of the Roman Catholic Church is known variously
as Liturgy of the Hours, Divine Office, Opus Dei (Work
of God). The roots of this prayer go all the way back
to Jewish practices before the time of our Lord. This form
of prayer was prayed by Jesus and his disciples. As such, it
was carried over into the devotion of the early Christian Church
and continues in an unbroken tradition down to our own day.
In
both the Jewish and Christian traditions, this work of God
was the prayer of all the people, clergy and laity. Due
to
various circumstances however, in the Christian Church
it soon became the particular prayer of clergy and monks for
many
centuries.
One of the blessings flowing from the liturgical reforms
of Vatican II is the resurgence of the Divine Office among
the
laity. For our purposes we will refer to this form of
prayer as the Work of God since that is the traditional
Benedictine term.
According to the Constitutions of our Order: "'Nothing
is to be preferred to the Work of God. Accordingly, the Liturgy
of the Hours is to be celebrated by the community which, in
union with the Church, fulfills Christ's priestly function
offering to God a sacrifice of praise and making intercession
for the salvation of the whole world." Constitution 19.1.
The Constitutions go on to situate the Work of God among the
other components of monastic life when they continue, "The
Liturgy of the Hours is a school of continual prayer and an
outstanding component of the monastic way of life. It is the
abbot's duty to promote zeal for the Work of God among the
brothers." Constitution 19.2
Here at Genesee we strive to maintain the traditional character
of each hour of the Work of God by celebrating it at as close
to its proper time as we are able. In this manner it consecrates
to God the cycle of night and day, the liturgical seasons and
the whole gamut of human activity. It is also the chief means
for achieving incessant prayer, mindfulness of God and transformation
in Christ. As it was once said of Little St. Placid: "The
liturgy put into his mouth words he never dared utter. His
words formed his thoughts and this thought formed his being." We
hope this little explanation of the meaning of the various
hours of prayer will enrich your own appreciation of the Work
of God.
Vigils, or watching in the night, is prayer to be celebrated
in the middle of the night during which we meditate on salvation
history as it unfolded down through the ages. The office
of Vigils consists of a hymn, psalms, readings, scriptural
and
patristic, and canticles suitable to the spirit of the midnight
hour when one awaits the arrival of the Bridegroom (Mt 25:6;
Mk 13:35). In monastic communities the concentration on vigilance
begun with this office continues until lauds. Monastics spend
this time enveloped in and supported by darkness and silence
in lectio divina prayer and meditation.
Lauds is celebrated at daybreak when the sun is dispelling
the night and the new day is born. The Church has always
considered the sun to be a symbol of Christ rising from the
dead. This
prayer is called Lauds because it is a laudatory liturgy
of praise in the early morning light. We thank God for the
first
light at the beginning of creation and for the second light
of our redemption in Christ's paschal victory. This prayer
breathes the atmosphere of bright youth, of beginning, of
innocence, of blossoming spring. It is a joyful, optimistic
hour reflected
by the hymn, psalms and canticles.
Terce, a Latin term for third hour, is prayed at mid-morning.
It is a shorter prayer referred to as one of the little hours.
Traditionally it is dedicated to the coming of the Holy Spirit
which took place at mid-morning in the account found in the
Acts of the Apostles. One prays for light and strength as
the day waxes strong and one's work begins.
Sext, another of the little hours, is Latin for the sixth
hour. It takes place at midday when the sun is at its apex
and one
has become a bit weary and mindfulness is all but impossible.
It is a time for earnest prayer to resist temptation, to
keep from being overcome by the demands and pressures of life.
We
are reminded of Christ being crucified at the sixth hour
and we unite ourselves with Him. One is aware of one's failures
and mistakes and prays for deep and abiding conversion even
to the point of sacrifice.
None, refers to the ninth hour, roughly mid-afternoon, and
is the third of the little hours. It is a time to pray for
perseverance, to pray for the strength to continue bearing
fruit as one reaches one's prime and needs to keep going.
It is a time when one becomes aware of the sun's gradual descent
and the strength one needs to cope with the demands and responsibilities
of life.
Vespers, celebrated at day's end, takes on the character
of evening. The day is almost over, our work is done. The golden
evening light is like old, mature wine, and in some late
summer
and autumn days it is like gold, transfiguring our world
and making it transparent for God. This is the hour of wise
age,
of resting in thanksgiving and humility after the struggles,
successes and failures of the day of one's productive life.
There are appropriate hymns, psalms, readings and canticles
for celebrating this vesper hour.
Compline comes from the Latin which means to complete. It
is the last common prayer before retiring for the night. It
marks
the completion of our day and heralds life's end. It leads
back into the darkness of the night, but a darkness different
from that of vigils. It is not the darkness of waiting where
all the possibilities of good and evil were still ahead. This
is the darkness of God's mysterious presence, the abyss of
his mercy into which he let us fall. Compline may be understood
as a daily exercise in the art of dying. For what is sleep
if not a little rehearsal for death? But dying a death which
will open the fullness of life and light. That is why the cantor
sings the wonderful song of old Simeon on the threshold of
death: "Now Lord, you will let your servant go in peace,
according to your word, for my eyes have seen your saving deed
which you have set before all: a light for revelation to the
Gentiles, and for the glory to your people Israel." (Luke
2:29-32).
Here at Genesee we have a unique, one-week cycle of the psalms
for our Divine Office, arranged by Fr. Justin. Those of you
who may like to join us in praying the same psalms as we
do at a particular hour of the liturgy will find our arrangement
at our Psalms Page.
Together with the daily concelebrated Mass, for which it
is preparation and extension, the Work of God takes us into
the
mystery of Our Lord's death and resurrection and holds us
there sanctifying our lives and all we do. |