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The Divine Office - Considered from a Devotional Point of View (Paperback)
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The Divine Office - Considered from a Devotional Point of View (Paperback)
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The Editor, in presenting this work of the learned Abbe Bacquez to
the Catholic Public, ventures to hope that it will supply a want
long felt among the Clergy and others who have to use the Breviary
for a book treating practically of the Divine Office. He has to
express his acknowledgments and grateful thanks to Thomas Taunton,
Esq., of Hern's Nest, Rugeley, his father, who prepared with great
care the first translation. The Editor has advisedly entitled the
book " From the French," as he does not profess to give, in all
cases, a literal translation, but has adapted the Author's work to
English readers. Henry Edward Cardinal Manning says of this book:
"Saint Leonard of Port Maurice, when asked by a priest to give him
a rule of life, said: "Say your Mass and your Office well." We are
all apt to turn from the substance in our hands to the shadows that
allure us. To say the Holy Mass, even in the midst of our
infirmities, as the Holy Mass ought to be said, would lift us in
ascending towards God to a nearness which we can hardly conceive;
for the Holy Mass is a daily renewal of our union with our Divine
Master. To say the Divine Office as it ought to be said would fill
us with inexhaustible matter of mental prayer, for it is the work
of the Holy Ghost and of the Saints. The seven hours are seven
visits day by day to the heavenly court; our voice is united to the
Eternal adoration; and our daily Office ascends in the Golden
Censer with the prayers of the Saints. The translation, therefore,
of this most edifying work from the walls of S. Sulpice, the source
of so much sacerdotal perfection, comes to us most opportunely, and
we heartily commend it to the use of the Clergy and of the
Faithful." This work begins: "The first condition for performing
any work in a proper manner is to feel its importance. We generally
neglect that of which we think little; and the pains we take and
the efforts we make arc in proportion to the greatness of the end
we have in view, and to the desire we have to attain it. Let us
then begin by trying to understand the Divine Office: let us try to
appreciate its nature, its sense, and its principal
characteristics." We pray this will help all who recite the Divine
Office from the Roman Breviary to do so well.
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