D
datritle
Guest
To fulfil his obligation to pray the breviary, must a priest pray all the 1962 hours…or just matins, lauds, one daytime hour, vespers and compline?
Why? If a diocesan priest is bound to only Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer, the Office of Readings and only one Daytime Prayer, then there is no reason in the law that the 1961 Office in itself should bind more than the Liturgy of the Hours. Another key example is Prime, which was suppressed by Vatican II and binds no diocesan priest. Why then should he have to pray Prime out of obligation just because he uses the 1961 Breviary?Technically, it’s the 1961 breviary.
Yes, if a priest chooses to use the 1961 breviary, he must pray all hours.
Incorrect. It does fulfil the obligation. And I am positive you are incorrect about lauds and vespers. he must also pray office of readings, or matins, one daytime hour, and compline.In the US, diocesan priest is only obligated to pray Lauds & Vespers.
My question is does the older missal fulfill the obligation? It would seem to me that it would not, because it is “extra-ordinary”, and as Br. JR has said many times, that which is extra-ordinary cannot be made ordinary. The Divine Office is a liturgy of the Church, so I would think that the obligation could be filled only by reciting the current edition.
At least that makes sense to me. And that’s not to say a priest could not pray the older version as a personal devotion in addition to, if he so chooses.
I got my answer to the obligation question from my boss, who is a priest and Canon lawyer, and it’s the same thing Br. Jay says here.Incorrect. It does fulfil the obligation. And I am positive you are incorrect about lauds and vespers. he must also pray office of readings, or matins, one daytime hour, and compline.
I am a seminarian. I learned it at seminary. Check Fr. Z’s blog. he has had MANY blog posts about this.I got my answer to the obligation question from my boss, who is a priest and Canon lawyer, and it’s the same thing Br. Jay says here.
As to the other part I am ASKING question. I have talked about this with a couple of different people, and have received many conflicting answers. I would be interested in seeing some documentation to support your claim.
My question is does the older breviary fulfill the obligation? It would seem to me that it would not, because it is “extra-ordinary”, and as Br. JR has said many times, that which is extra-ordinary cannot be made ordinary. The Divine Office is a liturgy of the Church, so I would think that the obligation could be filled only by reciting the current edition.
At least that makes sense to me. And that’s not to say a priest could not pray the older version as a personal devotion in addition to, if he so chooses.
UE said:32 – Omnibus clericis conceditur facultas recitandi Breviarium Romanum anni 1962, de quo art. 9, § 3 Litterarum Apostolicarum Summorum Pontificum, et quidem integre et Latino sermone.
translation said:32. Art. 9 § 3 of the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum gives clerics the faculty to use the Breviarium Romanum in effect in 1962, which is to be prayed entirely and in the Latin language.
Since Summorum Pontificum, diocesan clergy are able to fulfill their obligation with the 1961 Breviary. Religious and those in institutes/societies are bound by their constitutions. However, what hours diocesan clergy are bound to are determined by their local Ordinaries and/or the bishops’ conference. They are not determined by the edition of breviary they use.In the US, a diocesan priest is only obligated to pray Lauds & Vespers.
My question is does the older breviary fulfill the obligation? It would seem to me that it would not, because it is “extra-ordinary”, and as Br. JR has said many times, that which is extra-ordinary cannot be made ordinary. The Divine Office is a liturgy of the Church, so I would think that the obligation could be filled only by reciting the current edition.
At least that makes sense to me. And that’s not to say a priest could not pray the older version as a personal devotion in addition to, if he so chooses.