Posted on 06/16/2006 11:50:40 AM PDT by NYer
I think I am going to ask our priest to offer a class in how to use a breviary. It doesn't do much good owning one and having good intentions to pray the Divine Office if you don't know how to do it!!
Sounds like a great idea. I am not well versed in the post-V2 Divine Office. If you were trying to pray the 1962 Office, I would offer to help you.
While I am no longer an SSPX adherent, I have fond memories of participating at many public Divine Office services while spending a summer week at the Retreat House in Ridgefield, CT or while in High School in St. Mary's, KS.
That being said, I think (and wish) that the SSPX and FSSP (a little Trad ecumenism here) should sponsor an organization similar to those on Breviary.net which would be committed to the 1962 Office rather than the 1954 Office. What do you think?
I came across a photo of some FSSP members chanting Terce in their parish in Rome (if you click on the picture, you will see a larger version):
The work from scratch I alluded to would be the publication of complete musical text for the Roman Office. Or, IOW, the same Breviaries that the SSPX and FSSP use, with all the Gregorian notes in addition to the text. Such a book would likely be 3-4 times the thickness of the Liber, so it would probably have to be published in 4 volumes.
As for placing the Breviary on line just like Breviary.net does, I suppose a scanning project would suffice to accomplish this. The 1961 Breviary is MUCH easier to learn and pray than the 1954, so we wouldn't have as much cumbersome work to do in order to get this online.
It really surprised me that a die-hard old rubrical sedevacantist group took such initiative to get lay people praying the Office via Breviary.net. I always expected the FSSP and perhaps the SSPX to be in lead on this issue.
If the print version is in an electronic format, then going to an online version would not require scanning. Besides, Web pages load faster when they are primarily text as opposed to images (unless you were talking about scanners with OCR capability).
If an online version of the 1961/2 Roman Breviary is ever made, I agree with comments you have made on previous threads that it would be nice to have the prayers fully laid out so one wouldn't have to navigate all around the site (as is necessary on breviary.net).
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