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History Of The Roman Breviary (1898) (Paperback)
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History Of The Roman Breviary (1898) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
HISTORY OF THE EOMAN BUEVIAEY CHAPTER I THE GENESIS OF THE
CANONICAL HOURS THEEoman canonical Office, of which the Eoman
Breviary is an adaptation, dates from the end of the seventh
century or the beginning of the eighth. But this Eoman canonical
Office is not by any means a creation, formed in all its parts at a
given date, by some Pope whose name is unknown to us. It is a
composite work: various ages have contributed to it; some of the
materials which find a place in it have come from far: it is like
the basilica of St. Peter in the days of Pope Adrian the First. In
the second chapter we shall have to analyse the materials furnished
by Eome herself to this work of her canonical Office, but we have
in the first place to deal with those which it owes to the common
tradition of all the Churches. To Eome belong its Kalendar, its
apparatus of antiphons and responds, its chant, and the actual
order of its psalmody; to Catholic usage belongs the prescription
of the various hours of prayer: that is to say, the principle of
the Office itself, a principle whose origin and primitive
developments it is important to determine, in order to be in a
better position for understanding the independent application which
was made of that principle by the Eoman Church. The principal
element i.n the Divine Office may be, at all events conjecturally,
regarded as being connected with one of the very earliest Christian
ideas. Our Saviour Jesus Christ died forsaken by His own disciples,
condemned by the Jews, crucified between two thieves. He rose again
the third day, He ascended into Heaven; hut was that the whole of
the triumph which the prophets had foretold for the Messiah, the
Son of David ? No and what had been wanting to Him in His passage
through this world, that ro...
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