November 14, 2025 // National
‘Every Hour that We Have Is a Gift’
Parishes, Faithful Are Encouraged to Pray the Liturgy of the Hours Ahead of the Upcoming Publication of a New Edition
More and more over the past several months, leaders in the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend have invited the faithful to join public liturgies centered around the Liturgy of the Hours.
The convocation of the diocesan synod, for example, took place at a celebration of vespers (evening prayer) at St. Matthew Cathedral in mid-September, as did the official proclamation of Father Tom Shoemaker being named a monsignor in early August.
Ahead of a new English edition of the Liturgy of the Hours for the Latin Church, liturgical experts within the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend and elsewhere are encouraging parishes and other Catholic communities to embrace this prayer, which is said at different points throughout the day.
The Liturgy of the Hours, or the Divine Office, is the daily prayer of the Church and sanctifies the day with prayer. This liturgical prayer also takes different set forms within the Latin and 23 Eastern Catholic churches that together make the Catholic Church, and each form has prayers that vary in accordance with each church’s calendar.
The standard Liturgy of the Hours in the Roman Rite of the Latin Church is divided into five “hours” or parts prayed at different times each day: the office of readings; morning prayer or lauds; daytime prayer; evening prayer or vespers; and night prayer or compline. These five parts, which draw from Scripture, particularly the Psalms, usually take less than 20 minutes to pray.
“It acknowledges that every hour that we have is a gift,” Carolyn Pirtle, program director of the Notre Dame Center for Liturgy in the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame, said of the Liturgy of the Hours. “It’s a gift from God, and it’s a gift that’s meant to be offered in praise and thanksgiving back to God.”
Experts emphasized that while priests and other religious are required to pray the Liturgy of the Hours, the laity are encouraged to pray it, too, particularly the two principal hours of morning and evening prayer.
“The Liturgy of the Hours is intended to become the prayer of the whole People of God,” the Catechism of the Catholic Church confirms before citing Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Second Vatican Council’s Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy. “The laity, too, are encouraged to recite the Divine Office, either with the priests, or among themselves, or even individually.”
Pope St. Paul VI also expressed the wish that the Liturgy of the Hours, after its revision following Vatican II, would become “the prayer of the whole People of God,” and also recommended that it be prayed in parishes and by individuals at home in union with the Church throughout the world.
Father Mark Gurnter, vicar general of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, told Today’s Catholic that “the Liturgy of the Hours has been a most important part of my spiritual life even before becoming a priest. I was taught to pray it by a priest while I was in college and have prayed it every day since. It would be great if more laypeople were introduced to this wonderful source of grace and communion with God.”

Scott Warden
A member of the faithful holds a worship aid during a celebration of sung evening vespers on the memorial of St. John Vianney at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church in Fort Wayne on August 4.
Alex Giltner, the secretary of the diocesan Secretariat for Evangelization and Catechesis, said that his wife taught him to pray the Liturgy of the Hours, which “has since formed the core of my prayer life,” Giltner told Today’s Catholic. “I pray the office and morning prayer as part of my daily prayer, and my family prays night prayer each evening. Learning to pray in the words of Scripture and with the rhythms of the Church has been extraordinary, especially as a convert. I can’t imagine my life of discipleship without it. It is such a powerful way to connect with the Lord and to allow our imaginations to be formed by the story of salvation history in a daily way.”
Other experts shared with OSV News how the Liturgy of the Hours has helped to shape their faith lives.
Father Matthew S. Ernest still remembers when he oversaw evening prayer celebrated by Pope Francis at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City in 2015.
“It was a beautiful event, and we were very grateful to welcome the Holy Father,” Father Ernest, director of the Office of Liturgy for the Archdiocese of New York, said of the liturgy. He added that Christ’s command to “pray always” is given to all Christians. He called the Liturgy of the Hours an opportunity for parishes to embrace that call.
Parishes interested in introducing the Liturgy of the Hours should start with small, simple steps, these experts recommended.
Churches can begin by praying parts of the Liturgy of the Hours, Father Ernest said. He referenced Vatican II’s instructions for pastors to introduce parts of the Liturgy of the Hours, such as Sunday vespers.
“I recognize that sometimes Mass schedules can make this hard, because many of our parishes have Sunday evening Masses,” he said. “But even if a parish were to organize a monthly Sunday evening prayer that was well celebrated with music and incense and light, that can be a profound beginning.”
He also suggested parishes introduce evening prayer during special occasions, such as a church’s patronal feast day. He added that he has encouraged pastors in his archdiocese to consider concluding times of Eucharistic exposition with evening prayer.
As director of music and liturgy at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Bay Shore, New York, Christopher Ferraro likewise encouraged parishes to incorporate the Liturgy of the Hours into their regular schedules. Among other things, he suggested praying the Liturgy of the Hours before or after parish meetings.
“Try to connect it to something you’re already doing,” he said. “This way the people can get used to doing it, and they may see the benefits of it … and then maybe you might expand that as you go.”
At the University of Notre Dame, Pirtle encouraged Catholic communities, including universities, to especially connect the Liturgy of the Hours with the Mass, also known as the Divine Liturgy in many Eastern Catholic churches.
“It’s meant to be viewed as a way to keep the graces of the Mass overflowing throughout the hours of the day,” she said of the Liturgy of the Hours. “So, linking the Liturgy of the Hours to the celebration of the Mass in this kind of setting is a great way to introduce people to it and to kind of build in a fidelity to this practice.”
The University of Notre Dame practices the tradition of evening prayer at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart every Sunday, she said, crediting its Office of Campus Ministry. Before the pandemic, the university’s Center for Liturgy also hosted a monthly vespers service. Today, they work to educate ecclesial leaders about the hours.
Like other experts, she recommended that Catholic communities find a rhythm that works for them.
“I think the opportunity is to look at your routine and look at the things you offer as they currently exist and determine whether there are moments within the current existing routine that could be further punctuated by the Liturgy of the Hours,” she said.
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