Tis_Bearself
Patron
I think a lot of this stemmed from the fact that forms of prayer in general were shoved in the background for a few decades after Vatican II. The idea seemed to be that both religious and laity should be out on the streets doing social activist stuff or helping people in some physical way, rather than sitting indoors saying prayers.But where the LOTH is concerned it just seems like the tradition and reason, even the necessity, aren’t so well articulated. You hear “its the prayer of the Church”, but what does that really mean? And what does it look like in the day-to-day life of a layperson?
The Rosary and a couple of Marian devotions held on, barely, mostly because of a lot of older people who were in the habit of saying them and weren’t all of a sudden going to abandon the practice and go work in a soup kitchen. There wasn’t a similar habit of the laity in place for LOTH, and to the extent the laity had been in the habit of saying some other office like the Little Office of Our Lady, those were really pushed aside because as I understand it the Church felt that you should be saying the LOTH if you were saying any office at all.
I am willing to bet that many Catholic laypeople don’t even know what the LOTH is, much less how to pray it, and even with apps it’s not the easiest thing in the world to learn to pray.
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