I’m just looking for something more traditional that is a lot more than just the morning and evening prayers from my prayer book or my daily rosary.
When I go to divinum officium, I am totally confused as to what hours I should pray, especially if I am just wanting to do morning and evening prayer and probably compline as well.
I may try out the little office of the Blessed Virgin…but I’m just not sure.
My very strong suggestion is to pray the current Liturgy of the Hours. It is very much designed to accommodate busy secular life, while at the same time allowing for a bit more if one has the time or inclination. It is also the Universal Prayer of the entire Church.
Fr. Ruggero pointed out the newer nomenclature for the hours (you can still use the old names). Since you are not bound to the Office, you can pretty much pray any combination that suits you. However as the main offices of the day, Morning Prayer (Lauds) and Evening Prayer (Vespers) are particularly recommended; Compline too (at bed time) is a nice way to end the day.
So for those not bound to the Office, as above. For those bound to the Office:
Office of Readings (Vigils), can be said at any time but traditionally is nocturnal (I pray it very early in the morning or by anticipation the previous evening).
Morning Prayer (Lauds), early in the morning (sunrise to roughly 8 am)
Mid-day prayer (can be prayed at any one of the hours of Terce, Sext or None), roughly 9 am, noon and 3 pm
Evening Prayer (Vespers), early in the evening, from 4 pm to roughly 8 pm
Night Prayer (Compline), before retiring for the night
Note, those times are flexible and just given as examples.
For those bound to
choir (basically: religious), to the above is added Terce, Sext and None, one of which is mid-day prayer as above, and the other two hours from the complementary psalter (the Gradual Psalms, which have a deep tradition at these hours in the monastic tradition).
It’s incorrect to say that the Liturgy of the Hours isn’t traditional enough. It is in fact strongly anchored in a tradition of sanctifying the day by praying the psalms that goes back to Judaism of the time of David. Because the psalter has been spread out over 4 weeks or some minor structural changes have been made does not make it any less “traditional”. To say so is to misunderstand tradition and limits “tradition” to superficialities. The Office can and is still said in Gregorian chant and in Latin in many places; the antiquity of the psalms and canticles remain, it is firmly founded in scripture, and it keeps alive a tradition going back thousands of years. Many of the psalms are still in their traditional places (109, 140 at Vespers,62 at Lauds, for example), and the last week of the 4-week cycle is entirely from the early monastic cursus.
That its most recent reformation made it more flexible for different states (diocesan priest, cleric, religious), and made it eminently accessible to the laity in languages they can understand, IMHO reinforce “tradition” rather than detract from it, because it makes the Office more likely to be said, and taken up by a small but growing number of laity. As such it reinforces and grows the Body of Christ.