The Nature of the Office and Worship

The Divine Office is, in fact, a liturgy. If liturgy is defined as a public work of the Church then it follows that it should be a communal work of the Church, held in public for all the world to see and for all the Church to attend. But the reality is that liturgy, while the public work of the Church can, and in the case of the Divine Office, is, indeed not a scheduled, "come-one, come-all" event.

The Liturgical life of the Church is essentially sacramental. For its entire history, the Church has understood that the matter of the Sacraments, along with the form of the Sacraments, are their essence and its reality. The "smells, bells, and yells" surrounding their celebration, while extremely important to truly tactile humans, are not their essence. Regardless of the style of celebration we do not symbolically receive the grace of God through the waters of Baptism, we actually do so. Whether or not the music that Sunday was good at Mass, it does not take away from the reality that receive the Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist. And so when the Church prays through the hours of the day, we do through prayer itself and not by the symbols of prayer.

In the publically celebrated Office, the symbols of prayer are first, and most obviously, the prayer of the Church assembled physically in one place. The second symbol is the actual recitation - in whatever form or style - of the Psalms. Lastly, the there are the tangible symbols of the signs of the Cross, bowing, procession, choir pieces, meditations, and the like. But the heart of the Office is not found in these ceremonies, the manner of recitation, or the assembled congregation. It is found in the prayer itself. It is found in the knowledge that throughout the world people of all walks of life and in all manners of celebration and affectations are praying the same prayer. The liturgy, therefore, is "done" in the act of the prayer, not in its public celebration.

I cannot repeat enough that this is in no way to diminish the beauty, effectiveness, and importance of the public and ceremonial recitation of the Office. I maintain, as do the General Instructions on the Divine Office, that this is the preferred way of celebration. Nor is this an advocacy for minimalistic celebration free of the "clutter" of the very things that help sentient beings encounter God. But it must be understood that the public participation in this form of Liturgy is in a certain sense, subjective. It is an understanding of the "Office prayer" that is` at the same time, the foundation for the fuller appreciation of the symbols added to its celebration.

With the Seven Sacraments, there are definite forms, ceremonies, and persons involved which, for their validity, must be present. While the Office is not a sacrament in this sense, it is a Liturgy whose participants are all who freely join in it and who by their own prayer (as well as that of the Church) "do" it. It is a liturgy that is free from the structures of space and physicality. It is a spiritual union with the universal Church as well as a very personal expression of prayer.

One of the criticisms of the post-Vatican II liturgy, and in particular the Eucharistic Liturgy, is that the role of the celebrant or other participants has taken away from the objective value of the action. While in some cases of extreme personalism, I agree with this, I find it impossible to apply this thinking to the Divine Office. The more personalistic the Office becomes, along with the underlying understanding of the universality of the prayer, the more it is perfectly prayed. To slavishly or compulsively say the Office is not its intended role. The more I truly pray the Office and the more I mean it , the more powerfully the spiritual blessings of this action enrich myself as well as the entire Church and world. We will consider the lack of enthusiasm for the Office later, but suffice it for now to assert that the more personally I am involved in this public act of the Church, the more the goal of the Liturgy of the Hours is realized.

When I say "pray the Office" what I am I talking about? Since I am asserting that the "extras" of the celebration do not effect its essential action, what then is this "essential action?"

The point of the Office is to worship God. Worship is something offered to God because it is "right and just" to do so. For example, I send the thank-you note to the person who gave me the gift not because it would make me feel better about myself (which it will) but because thanks is due to that person. It is justice to do this. This is not simply the idea of justice between a worker and an employer, but an action of a higher justice if freely expressed. To be forced to be grateful or awed by God is not a freely given expression. One needs to be free to pray and so our thanks and praise arises out of a deeply personal experience of the Reason for thanks and praise. It arises from a personal experience of the grace of God.

I don't believe that this is a common criteria for interviews with prospective candidates for liturgical positions. Worship, in many places and cases, has been reduced to a litmus test of a person's politically correct worship language and their driving creativity to make any and every ceremony a "meaningful experience' to even the most shallow and self-ignorant visitor. If our personal recitation of the Office has been reduced to this level, I assume that not many would say it unless our fancy inspired us to do so. After all, if we do not feel like joining in the praise of God - goes this trend of thinking - then it is not "meaningful" and thus, inauthentic and useless.

Worship is best described, in my opinion, by the Preface which states that "You [God] have no need of our praise but our desire to thank You is itself Your gift." The praise of God does not make Him feel better, but it does build us up while it renders justice to the Creator. It takes our "feeble lays" and joins them to the choir of heaven. It takes our most temporal and transitory of words and feelings and lifts them beyond this mortal boundary to eternity. It is the free offering of that which is freely given and so creates the dynamic, or rather, recognizes the dynamic, of communion.

Worship is also the offering of the best. To offer the worst or the minimum is not truly worship. This was Cain's mistake. In giving, we are given more to give. When the best is offered, even better is given to be offered again. The beautiful basilica of the 6th century is replaced by the magnificence of the 14th century structure which is torn down to make way for the glory of the 17th century cathedral. God is not worthy of the least but of the best.

Taken from this perspective all the ceremonies and magnificence of the public celebration of the Office not only makes sense and is reasonable, it calls the Church to do it and do it well. But when this is not available, it is still left to individual to have the proper understanding of offering the Prayer of the Church.

So whether a choir sings Bach's Magnificat or a worker prays Vespers during a break, it is the same. It is the worship of the God who has given so much and it is the rendering of the debt of love. It is then, and only then, liturgy.

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