1/18/2024 0 Comments Ordinariate divine office![]() ![]() These ribbons stay in these sections and move naturally through the year. Or Collects for Saints and Holy Days (eg p170 for St Charles Borromeo) Violet Readings through the Year (eg p1765 for the Thursday after Trinity XX) Pink Readings for Saints and Holy Days (eg p1963 for St Luke) Red The Collect:Įither Sunday Collects through the Year (eg p103 for the Twentieth Sunday after Trinity) If you’re already set up using the earlier scheme, or another which works for you, feel free to carry on using that. Note: this page has been updated to follow the scheme published by the Ordinariate in their series of video introductions which you can find at the bottom of this page. The suggestions on this page will allow you to use the ribbons in the right order through the book, especially for Mattins and Evensong. Where to put ribbonsĭivine Worship: Divine Office (Commonwealth Edition) has six ribbons, coloured red, green, yellow, maroon, violet and pink. And it doesn’t actually matter if you make a mistake: you’ve still prayed and read Scripture! If you do find you’ve got something wrong, just put the ribbons in the right place for next time. However, the ribbons are designed to make things easier as they guide you through the year. The descriptions below can sound complicated. ![]() Once you have become used to the simple Offices, you may feel ready for a little variety (see below). For Compline start at p421 and follow through the Office to p434, and then use the Anthem to Our Lady for the season.Īs you finish an Office, put the green ribbon ready at the start of the next one you will say. Use the green ribbon: start Prime at p397 and simply follow through the Office to the end of page 402. Use Prime in the morning (ideally before 11am) and Compline in the evening (ideally just before retiring). In that prayer, the words “our Sovereign Lady, Queen Elizabeth” need to be replaced with “our Sovereign Lord, King Charles”. ![]() In the Commonwealth, these prayers are not said but the prayer headed “In the Commonwealth” is used instead. Text of the new prayers These replace the Prayer for the Queen’s Majesty and the Prayer for the Royal Family on pp382/3 and p424. However you pray the Office, there are new prayers following the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the consequent accession of the new King, together with the creation of a new Prince of Wales. It’s for laypeople: clergy know what to do! Rather, this post is a potted précis of how to pray the Offices, either in a short form or in the Prayer Book tradition. This post doesn’t go into the history of what was included, or why that can come later or can be found elsewhere. The Commonwealth Edition is principally for use in the Ordinariates of Our Lady of Walsingham (UK) and Our Lady of the Southern Cross (Australia), although there are prayers which can be used in the Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter (USA and Canada) I'm under no obligation to pray any office, but as I said earlier, I want to pray with the Church and not merely make it my own private devotion.The Catholic Truth Society has published the eagerly-awaited Divine Worship : Daily Office (Commonwealth Edition).ĭivine Worship: Daily Office (Commonwealth Edition) contains Morning and Evening Prayer from the Anglican prayer book tradition, now approved for use in the Catholic Church through the Personal Ordinariates. the Apostles' Creed (I've always used the traditional Catholic translation using, among other things, "the living and the dead" as opposed to "the quick and the dead"). So on the one hand it would seem that the Ordinariate version would combine the best of both worlds, but on the other hand I'm not really a fan of how the Elizabethan-style (for lack of a better word) English for some parts, e.g. And then there's the different dates for certain feast days. I've tried the 1960 Divine Office, but I don't have the Latin proficiency to pray it completely in Latin. I also regret the absence of days like the Octave of Pentecost. I'd been praying the Liturgy of the Hours, but the current English translation is so dull - so much so that I pray the Glory Be in Latin (can't stand the "now and will be forever" ending on the current version) as well as the introductory hymns, Benedictus, Magnificat, Nunc Dimittis, and final Marian antiphon (all permissible in the Liturgy of the Hours). I'm not a member of the Ordinariate I attend the Extraordinary Form on Sundays and holy days of obligation, while I attend the Ordinary Form for daily Mass. Can the Ordinariate Divine Office like you see at () be prayed in Latin (at least in part) and have it still count as the prayer of the Church and not merely a private devotion? ![]()
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