Office of Readings
The longest hour. A hymn, three psalms, and two long readings — one from Scripture, one from the Fathers, a Council, or a saint. It is the Church’s daily library, read aloud.
A plain guide to the prayer the Church has kept since the Apostles — seven stops across a single day that sanctify time itself, and teach a soul to pray with the voice of the whole Body of Christ.
“Seven times a day I praise you for your righteous ordinances.” — Psalm 119:164
Long before a Catholic keeps a prayer journal or chooses a favorite devotion, the Church herself has already been praying — quietly, continuously, psalm by psalm — on every continent, in every hour of the day. That prayer is the Liturgy of the Hours. It is older than most countries, older than most religious orders, older even than the New Testament in its Christian form.
And it is not reserved for priests or monks. The Second Vatican Council said plainly that the Hours belong to the whole Church; the laity are urged to pray them, whole or in part, as their state of life allows. This page is a straightforward guide to doing that — what the Hours are, how each is built, and the shortest honest path from curiosity to a daily practice.
“The Divine Office is the voice of the Bride addressing her Bridegroom; it is the very prayer which Christ Himself, together with His Body, addresses to the Father.”Sacrosanctum Concilium §84
It is the Church’s way of keeping watch. Seven times across the day — and once in the deep of the night — the Body of Christ opens the Psalter, lifts a hymn, listens to Scripture, and turns the ordinary hours of work and rest into liturgy. The Psalms sit at the heart of it; over the course of four weeks, nearly the whole Psalter is prayed through.
The Hours are public, official prayer — liturgy, not private devotion. When a lay person opens a breviary alone in a kitchen at dawn, they are not praying by themselves. They are joining a chorus that, somewhere in the world, has not stopped singing since the first century.
The pattern below is the shape of a full day in the Church’s prayer. Times are approximate — the Hours move with the sun, not the clock — and nothing requires the laity to pray all seven. Most faithful begin with two or three.
The longest hour. A hymn, three psalms, and two long readings — one from Scripture, one from the Fathers, a Council, or a saint. It is the Church’s daily library, read aloud.
The hinge of the day. Always the Benedictus (Zechariah’s canticle, Luke 1:68–79). Light, resurrection, and a resolve to belong to God before the world makes its first demand.
A short office. The hour the Spirit descended on the Apostles at Pentecost — prayed as work begins, to ask for the same Spirit on whatever the day will hold.
A pause at the day’s peak — the hour Christ was nailed to the Cross. A brief return of the heart to what matters before the afternoon carries it away.
The hour Christ gave up His Spirit. Prayed as the day begins to tire — an offering of what remains, and a remembering of the mercy that opened in that same hour.
The second great hinge of the day. Always the Magnificat (Mary’s canticle, Luke 1:46–55). Thanksgiving for what was done, and a handing back of the day to the One who gave it.
The sweetest of the hours. An examination of conscience, a psalm of trust, the Nunc dimittis (Simeon’s canticle, Luke 2:29–32), and a Marian antiphon to close the day in her keeping.
“He who prays much at night prays with the Church.”
St. AugustineEvery hour, whether five minutes or forty, follows the same backbone. Recognize the shape and any breviary in the world becomes usable within a day.
There is a learning curve — a breviary has ribbons, four seasons, a psalter on a four-week cycle, and feast days that override the cycle. The curve is short. Here is the straight path.
Lauds or Vespers is the usual starting point; both have a Gospel canticle and both last about fifteen minutes. Compline is the easiest — only three psalms and it repeats on a simple one-week cycle. Do not try to pray all seven at once; you will lose heart in a week.
The four-volume Liturgy of the Hours (or the single-volume Christian Prayer, which omits the Office of Readings) is the definitive book, but apps have made the learning curve shorter than it has been in a thousand years. See Resources below.
The Hours are meant to be sung or said, not read. Whispering is enough; the body joins the soul and the prayer stays in the room with you.
At the Benedictus, Magnificat, and Nunc dimittis, stand and make the Sign of the Cross. At every “Glory be to the Father…” a small bow of the head is traditional. These are the small gestures that turn a recitation into liturgy.
If you have a family, a commute, and a job, here is how to build the habit without collapsing it in a month.
Pray Compline before bed, every night. It is short, repetitive, consoling. Use an app. Don’t skip; don’t add.
Add Lauds with coffee or on the commute. Pray the Benedictus out loud if you can; make the Sign of the Cross.
Add Vespers at the end of the workday or after dinner. You now pray the two hinges of the day — the minimum considered “the Church’s prayer” for the laity.
The fourth hour to add — usually on Saturdays or Sundays first — for the long patristic readings, which are a seminary in themselves.
Terce, Sext, or None — one short hour at noon, as a single anchor through the workday. Most lay people stop here.
You do not need to buy anything to begin. Several free and paid resources maintain the propers automatically — calendar, saint of the day, season — so you are never guessing which psalm to pray.
Approved by the Vatican; covers every hour in English, Latin, and several languages. The simplest starting place on a phone.
British, careful, and deeply reliable. Web version is free; paid app removes ads and adds Mass readings and audio.
The complete breviary in English, used by clergy and religious. A serious purchase, but the long-form way to pray the whole office.
A single-volume edition with Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer, Night Prayer, and a selection from the Office of Readings. The most common book in a Catholic home.
No. The obligation binds bishops, priests, deacons, and most religious. The laity are encouraged — Vatican II called it the Church’s prayer and asked the faithful to pray it “at least in part.” It is a gift offered, not a yoke imposed.
No. The Church permits — and in fact celebrates — the Hours in the vernacular. Latin remains available for those who love it, but praying in English (or Spanish, Swahili, Tagalog) is entirely traditional and fully liturgical.
For the laity, no. An hour that is not prayed is simply past. Pick up at the next one. Saints have said that the one who prays the next hour well has already made the missed one good.
Not at all. The Hours are public prayer even when said alone — you are joined, across the earth and time, with everyone else praying them at that moment. Many lay faithful pray in communion with a monastery they love.
So that, in the course of a month, nearly the entire Psalter is prayed. A psalm is not meant to be read once but to be lived into over years; the cycle ensures no part of the Church’s original songbook is forgotten.
Yes — in fact, the Hours are called the Church’s song, not her reading. Any tone works: a simple psalm tone, a chant setting, or humming. Singing turns prayer into praise more quickly than any other method the Church has found.
The cycle is set aside for propers — special psalms, readings, and prayers for the feast. Apps and breviaries handle this automatically. In a book, you follow ribbons to the right section; it becomes second nature within a month.