Order for praying the whole Psalter in a day?

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Hello all, God bless. Does anyone know if a suggested order for praying the whole Psalter in a single day exist? I mean like “x,y,z for matins, a,b,c for vespers” etc, for getting through it in a single day.

Thank you for your time, may St. Joseph protect you
 
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At librivox.org there is a recording of the Book of Psalms that is about 5 hours.

There are 150 psalms. An approach would be to start at 7:00 am reading ten psalms, then another on the hour every hour, with the last ten starting at 9:00 pm. There would be about 20 minutes of reading psalms, then about 40 minutes of not reading them.

A way to spread the 150 psalms out more evenly over 15 hours would be to read a psalm and wait 4 minutes before starting the next one. Here are my calculations for this. 5 hours of psalm reading is 300 minutes. 15 hours is 900 minutes. So there will be 600 minutes of not reading them. 600 / 150 is 4.
 
The Orthodox Church prays the entire Psalter every week (except for Lent, when we do it 2x a week) but I don’t know about the whole Psalter in a day.

If you start at Psalm 1 and go straight thru to 150, it will take you 3.5 hours. I know this from experience; in our Church, when someone dies, we pray the entire Psalter over them the night before the funeral.

So break it up however you want, but you will still need several hour-long or half-hour long chunks of time.
 
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It was reputed to be an extreme ascetic practice of the Celtic Saints to pray the entire Psalter daily. I think is was the Venerable Bede who wrote of St Cuthbert praying the entire Psalter daily before dawn. They sometimes made the practice even more ascetic by immersing themseves in cold water.

St Neot who founded a church near me was reputed to pray the entire Psalter daily whilst standing in a well. St Petroc another local boy was said to stand in the river up to his neck!
 
The Rule of St Benedict mandates the praying of the entire psalter in a week as a concession to the laziness of the then-current generation, reminding his monks that the Desert Fathers prayed the psalter in a day.
 
Various Catholic offices also use a one week Psalter. The four week Psalter was introduced after Vatican II to make praying the Hours more practical for secular clergy and laity in the world… but the one week Psalter is still very much alive in Catholicism.
The Copts, I believe, pray the daily Psalter. I imagine it’s only monastics who get through it all - but still very impressive.
 
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