Office Liturgy - My Prayer

If I really want to make the Office my prayer, there are three elements which are implicit in this effort.

The first is that I will, in practice, make the effort. I sometimes see actors on "N.Y.P.D. Blue" reading the ‘perp their rights with more gusto than I say the Office. This should be not be. The mere recitation of the Office which at times is [canonically] necessary due to time, tiredness, location etc., is not to be the norm. I have had the flu and had to say Mass in record time, but again, this is not be the norm. A thanksgiving dinner is not to be wolfed down like a fast-food meal. A relationship does not grow with a few, two minute encounters.

One the other hand, dinner each day is not to take four hours, a weekday Mass is not the time to give a 45-minute homily, and a smothering relationship will not endure. There has to be balance. Yes, there are times when I will say the Office slower than usual. A word will strike me. I'll linger over a passage in the Office of Readings. But I have to find a way of praying Vespers with proper intention and disposition when I am just walking in from the hospital, the sun is setting, and dinner is in five minutes.

Each person's life and devotional endurance is different. In the effort to say the Office well, there can be few absolute norms. Aside from saying it and saying all of it for those who by Canon Law or vow are bound to do so, the only other norm is to pray it well. The Church wisely was not more specific here. Since the point of the Office is to consecrate the day to God and sometimes God has a way of planning a day that is different from the most efficient plans of a time manager, there must be flexibility. Like a program of exercise, we have to find our pace. We have to determine how, when, and where we will pray the Office. Personally, I enjoy saying the Office standing or walking. At Lauds, I like to make my bed while I say the Benedictus. At Vespers, I like to stand looking at the sunset while saying the Magnificat. I like to turn off the lights in my room as I say the Nunc Dimittis. These personal mannerisms are mine and I can not say that some one should or should not do the same. Surprisingly, in the past, while there was an indulgence attached to saying the Office in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament, many spiritual authors suggested that it be prayed outdoors. One parishioner I know says the Office of Readings in the middle of the night when she rises to care for her infant. She has found the pace of her Office prayer. How each person comes to that point is their own spiritual program and when that pace is set, it becomes a regular part of life.

The second element to growth in Office prayer is to see it as it truly is - prayer. If prayer is the lifting up pf the "mind and heart to God" (and for that matter, the body as well), then prayer is rarely something we can jump right into. There must be a moment for the "lifting up." The Office prayer is not meant to shock the system. It is meant to be part of the ebb and flow of life. We rarely go to dinner without preparing ourselves to step out. We don't just turn on the oven and throw food into it. We plan a menu, go shopping and tell people that we have to get dinner ready. We need to transition to prayer. Many spiritualities in the Church emphasize this need. Whether it be a moment of silence, a vocal prayer or even the listening to music, we need to be in a "prayer-state" rather than a "go-go state" or a "I-have-to call-her state." I certainly do not mean that one needs to go into a catatonic state or a disposition reserved for the most advanced of souls, but some sort of "this is now the time to pray" mentality is required. The Office itself sees this need and so has an opening verse as well as a hymn in order to set the mood, if you will, for the act of praying the Psalms, reading of the Word of God, and the written and unwritten prayer. We have to acknowledge this wisdom in our own Office prayer.

Perhaps now is the time to consider the role of personal prayer in the Office. This is an issue as it is in individual (verses public) prayer in the Eucharistic liturgy. For example, many liturgists are militant on the importance of the communal aspect of receiving Holy Communion at Mass. We have been told that it is not primarily the time for private prayer and so we must cease our personal post-communion devotions and meditations to sing a sometimes insipid "song." This may make sense from a theological and rubrical point of view but practically after Communion, most people are absorbed in their own devotions. Why don't most people take the theology to heart and stop saying their won prayers? I think there is and should be time and room for both. It is clear from the evidence of practice that most people do not have a problem with personal prayer within the public Liturgy. Perhaps they say "Yes, we are here together, but I am still here with my God." There is, then, no need for a dichotomy and in the case of the Divine Office, there is - thanks to its constitution - none to be set up.

The Office Hymn
The Hymn is one of those debated rubrics. Do I need to sing or say it? Do I have to use the one in my edition of the Office? Can I omit it?

The function of the Hymn is to set the theme of the Office being prayed. Hymns are religious poems having a subject and a movement throughout the work. Most hymns (as opposed to many modern "religious songs") focus on the time and theme of the particular Office. To sing the Dies Irae on Christmas morning would not make sense. For this reason, most English editions print a hymn or song in the text of the hour. Some even have a section of religious poetry in the back as an appendix which can be chosen (assumedly in private recitation) as an option to the hymn of the hour. These (and other) collections of religious poetry can be a great aid to prayer as well as a way to explore some of the great works of Christian literature.

The Latin official texts has assigned proper hymns to each hour in the same way (and usually with the same texts ) as the pre- Vatican II office. The Church wisely left the decision of which hymn to the assigned texts, the local Bishop's Conference and the choice of the individual. To limit preferred expressions with rigid liturgical mandates would be counter-productive to the ability of all who pray the Office to enter into the mystery of each of hour. Whatever the form or text the hymn takes, it should be an opportunity of transition and personal prayer.

Psalm Prayers
In most English editions of the Divine Office, in full or abbreviated form, there are "Psalm Prayers" at the end of each Psalm or section of a Psalm. These do not appear in the official Latin text but were suggested in the General Instructions of the Divine Office as an option to offer a Christian reflection on the Psalm. Perhaps here is a moment in private recitation to offer a personal prayer for ourselves and\or others based on the sentiment of the Psalm.

Responsory
The Responsory at Lauds and Vespers is - in private recitation - optional. It is an expression of a meditative response to the short reading from Scripture. Prior to it is one of those moments of "sacred silence" where the Word of God take root within. It is an officially sanctioned opportunity for lectio divina and private meditation. This is one place in the public recitation of the Office where an extended a period of private Scriptural mediation and reflective prayer is allowed, if not encouraged. The subject can be the text provided or, in Ordinary Time, another Biblical text chosen.

Intercessions
In the Office at Morning and Evening Prayer, there is space for personal prayer in addition to the public prayer of the liturgical texts. In fact, at the end of the intercessions at Lauds and Vespers, it is specifically included in the rubrics for the Office. It is a time to offer personal prayers in either a communal or private celebration, similar to the "Prayer of the Faithful" at Mass.

As an aside, I believe that the distinction between the Intercessions at Morning and Evening Prayer is a good reflection of the unique character and spirituality of these two Offices. At Morning Prayer (Lauds) the intercessions, generally, are reflective of the intention of the Office which is to laud, to praise, God. Rather than presenting needs before God, the drift of these intercessions is to consecrate the day through praise. While allowed prior to the Our Father, personal and universal needs are offered at Vespers in the context of thanksgiving for the day past. It is interesting to note that the intercessions are couched within either praise or thanksgiving and are not generally offered on their own. Tradition spiritual norms define four primary movement of prayer as the pneumonic "A.C.T.S" - Adoration, Contrition, Thanksgiving, Supplication. The Office embodies all four of these. Adoration at Morning Prayer, Contrition in the examen at Night Prayer, Thanksgiving at Evening Prayer, and Supplication as a part of the Intercessions. Since childhood, most people have been taught that prayer begins with "God bless mommy and daddy and..." This is a far cry from prayer which begins with Praise or Thanksgiving and then, and only then, ends up with supplication. If the Office is a school of prayer, then here is a lesson for the mature Christian to learn.

Before and After the Office
The Office provides a succinct prayer to prepare for the recitation of the Office and older devotionals provided additional prayers for both before and after the reciting the Office. While these are not a part of the official required liturgical texts, they are sometimes helpful for the transition to and from prayer. I use both the official private prayer before as well as some others I have composed and edited.

The third aspect to this personalizing of the Office prayer is to make it my own. I have to put my own stamp on my manner of recitation. We are people of ritual. Whether it be our morning hygiene, our eating patterns, or our organization of a closet, we have our own way of doing things. The same is true of our religious practices. I have certain prayers I say after Communion, even if I do sing the Communion hymn. These are things which are applicable to the Office.

Lighting a candle used only for the Office is one of these. Some will play some light background music, change the lighting, etc. I will use some of these as well and since these are personal symbols of prayer, their use is depends based on my disposition at the time.

Singing the Office, even privately, is quite admirable and often brings out the meaning of texts which otherwise could be missed. There are tapes of the parts of the Office which can be used for this.

Whatever the personal ritual is, it must have as its goal to aid the individual in saying the Office as much as any public ritual needs to do the same. As people whose daily routines are, in many ways, ritualized, they have a role to play in any truly human prayer. Rituals for habit's sake are not worth much if they become the prayer. Rather, when used and understood properly, they can highlight and personalize prayer.

When all is said and done, so long as we are faithful to the intention of the Office and the Church which composed and prays it, we can only enhance our prayer. The daily and indeed hourly, prayer of the Church will then be our own.

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