Divinum Officium Versions (original) (raw)

Disclaimer

This web site and these programs were developed, managed, and maintained by Laszlo Kiss, as his own work, until his death in 2011. It is now maintained by The Divinum Officium Project (email canon DOT missae AT gmail DOT com). It represents no official order, nor the view or opinion of any group. Laszlo wrote: I tried to follow my sources, but naturally the more I work on this project the more mistakes I make. Such a project can be done only by teamwork. I keep doing this in the hope that a team will pick up the idea, and will use the computers in their entirety to worship God. Since August 2011, The Divinum Officium Project continues Laszlo Kiss's work and keeps his hope alive.Words of caution:

Those who are obliged to recite the office should do so from canonically approved books (cf. 1983 CIC 276). According to the motu proprio Summorum Pontificium Cura of Pope Benedict XVI (7 July 2007), the liturgical books in use from 1 January 1961 to 7 March 1965 are accepted as the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite. The Project makes every reasonable effort to maintain the _Rubrics 1960_version of the website to be substantially harmonious with the 1962 typical edition. Previous versions of the Divine Office anterior to the 1960 rubrics are provided for historical and educational documentation purposes only, in light of the Commonitio of Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani dated 14 February 1958. The website is seeking ecclesiastical approbation as such.

Historical versions of the Divine Office

The Divinum Officium was the official prayer of the Roman Catholic Church for at least 1500 years, until 1 November 1970, when it was significantly changed to The Liturgy of the Hours by the Apostolic Constitution of Paul VI Laudis canticum. This website and program, as conceived by Laszlo Kiss, is partially a device enabling one to pray the Office easily, and partially a historical and educational document to visually show the liturgical changes in recent centuries. These purposes are maintained by The Divinum Officium Project since August 2011, with the intent that the website should be usable, didactic, and historically and theologically accurate. In sum, this Project shows how the daily Divine Office was collected from the same psalms, lections, hymns, versicles and responsories for the different versions:

Click here for recitation times of the different versions.

laszlo kiss (+2011)

The Divinum Officium Project
canon DOT missae AT gmail DOT com

T.A.D.M.N.