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The Jewish Roots of the Liturgy of the Hours


• What is the "Liturgy of the Hours"?
• What Jewish prayers correspond to these prayers?
• What were Jews praying for when Jesus was crucified?

CP 213

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• What is the "Liturgy of the Hours"?
• What Jewish prayers correspond to these prayers?
• What were Jews praying for when Jesus was crucified?

  • 59 min. (1 CD / MP3)

    According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the “Liturgy of the Hours”—also known as the “Divine Office” or the “Breviary”—is “the public prayer of the Church” (CCC 1174). In recent years, this prayer has grown in popularity amongst Catholics of all stripes, clergy, religious, and laity. Yet what are the biblical roots of the Liturgy of the Hours? Why does the Catholic Church require its priests to pray it multiple times throughout the day? And why does it consist of so many selections from the Book of Psalms? How can we come to understand this prayer better?

    In this extraordinary new lecture, Dr. Pitre uses his knowledge of the Old Testament liturgy at the time of Jesus to shed fresh light on the Jewish roots of this most Catholic of prayers. In this new series, you will learn:


    • The Jewish custom of praying Morning, Midday, and Evening Prayers
    • Why these ancient Jewish Prayers were tied to the “Perpetual Sacrifice” in the Temple
    • The New Testament evidence that the Apostles prayed at set hours during the day
    • The Psalms that were sung daily by the Levites in the Temple
    • How the book of Psalms was Jesus’ primary ‘Prayer Book’, even in his dying breath
    • The mysterious convergence between Jewish Morning and Evening Prayer and the Passion and Death of Christ
    • What the Jews in the Temple were praying for when Jesus died on the Cross


    Once you understand the biblical roots of this prayer, you will never see the Liturgy of the Hours the same again. Far from being a repetitious duty imposed by the Church on her clergy, the Liturgy of the Hours is nothing less than a participation in and extension of the way Jesus himself prayed in his humanity and the way he wishes his Bride to pray with him now, throughout the world, “without ceasing” (1 Thess 5:17).

    If you’ve ever wanted to understand the Liturgy of the Hours better, or if you have a priest, deacon, or religious person in your life that you would like to encourage in their prayer life, then this is the Bible study for you.

     

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  • Yotpo

Customer Reviews

Based on 50 reviews
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R
Ráhel

Great, thanks a lot!!!

m
michael freeman

disappointing

p
pam bennett
The Jewish Roots of the Liturgy of the Hours

The information on this CD was very helpful in my search for how the Temple system worked in Jesus and His disciple's time and how they practiced their faith in God. I appreciated Dr Pitre using some Hebrew language in the lesson.

J
James Anderson
Jewish Roots of the Liturgy of the Hours

Adding video, even if it was just you standing at a lectern, would be an improvement. This talk was a part of another presentation and your producers didn't bother to edit out that part. The long boring beginning part about the documents on the LoH would be better if you at least showed the documents as you read from them. When you got to the meat of the presentation it was very good.

S
Subash de Menezes
Jewish roots of the Liturgy of the Hours

Great content and has enriched my understanding of the ancient roots of the prayer of the Chirch The accompanying study notes are good summary to consolidate key points.