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Pray Without Ceasing The Loss of Daily

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56 views10 pages

Pray Without Ceasing The Loss of Daily

Pray_without_ceasing

Uploaded by

Matija Gubec
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Aldean B.

Hendrickson

“Pray without ceasing”


The Loss of Daily Prayer in the Western Church

Aldean B. Hendrickson1

From its inception, the Christian community fostered and developed a strong tradition of
fervent prayer.2 As the Church grew in membership and prominence, the shape of that prayer was
bound to grow and change as well. In the more public Church that emerged under the protection
of Constantine, this “constant” prayer developed into a set form of communal prayer, the daily
liturgical action of the Christian community.3
This formal public prayer, clearly a popular and established part of the life of Christians
(laity and clergy alike) in the fourth century, later became intertwined with a superficially analo-
gous style of prayer from the monastic tradition. Eventually this hybridization was so total that
the character of such prayer as the daily praise of the community was obscured and extinguished,
and the very fact that such prayer had been a popular communal celebration was forgotten.
In this paper I will briefly sketch out the idea of daily prayer in the first three centuries of
the Church as a foundation for the developments of the fourth century. We will discuss how the
public celebration of morning and evening prayer looked in the fourth century, and how very dif-
ferent it was from the monastic praying of the Psalter of the same era. This will lead us to how
the latter came to infect and ultimately devour the former, and conclude with some reflections on
how this affected — and continues to affect — the life of the Church.

1 Student in Theology at Université Saint-Paul/Saint Paul University in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Mr. Hendrickson
holds a B.A. (2000) in English from the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota, where he was a Don
Leyden scholar.
2 Robert Taft, The Liturgy of the Hours in East and West: The Origins of the Divine Office and Its Meaning for To-

day. (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1986), 11.


3 Taft, 31.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

Daily Prayer in the First Three Christian Centuries

In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus tells his disciples “a parable about the necessity for them to
pray always without becoming weary.” 4 A few chapters later in the same Gospel, Jesus exhorts
his followers: “Be vigilant at all times and pray that you have the strength to escape the tribula-
tions… and stand before the Son of Man.” 5 Paul echoes this advocacy in his epistles.6
There is every evidence that the followers of Christ through the first centuries of the
Church conceived of themselves, from the very first, as a community of prayer.7 The New Tes-
tament, especially the Gospels and the Pauline epistles, are teeming with references to prayer —
and exhortations for Christians to follow suit. The Pauline admonition to “Rejoice always. Pray
without ceasing. In all circumstances give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Je-
sus,” 8 was taken deeply to heart by the Christian communities.
Though the evidence from the first three centuries after Christ is fragmentary at best, it has
been intensely studied and there are many indications that daily prayer, multiple times per day,
was an important part of the Christian life in those years. What the exact nature of these prayer
times was, or what shape they might have taken, remains a matter of scholarly debate.9 Also un-
certain is to what extent, if any, these daily prayers were related to daily prayer times in the con-
temporary Jewish tradition.10
Liturgical historians struggle to discern the fine line between what individual Christians did
by way of prayer and what they did as a community. For Taft, this distinction is a vain pursuit.
“Was this ‘liturgical prayer’ or ‘private prayer’ or something in between? The very question is
anachronistic in this early period. Christians prayed. Whether they did it alone or in company
depended not on the nature of the prayer, but on who happened to be around when the hour of

4 Luke 18:1 (all scripture quoted is NAB).


5 Luke 21:36
6 E.g. Eph 6:18; Col 4:2.

7 See the description at Acts 2:46-47; also Acts 12:5, 12. Taft gives a seemingly-exhaustive catalogue of NT verses

pointing to the prayer of the early Church (4-5).


8 1 Thes 5:16-18

9 Paul Bradshaw has a nice summary of the divergent interpretations of the evidence from this era in “The First

Three Centuries,” in The Study of Liturgy, Revised Edition, ed. Cheslyn Jones et al, (London: SPCK, 1992), 399-
403.
10 Robert Taft opens his book with a pithy bracketing out of this perennially-contentious question. “Jews pray at set

times. So do Christians. The first Jewish-Christian converts may even have recited the same prayers at the same
times as their Jewish contemporaries. Morning and evening prayer seem to have been the most constant and impor-
tant hours of Jewish prayer. This will become true for Christians as well. And of course, Old Testament themes and
types, and even texts, have formed part of the stuff of Christian prayer from the beginning. Beyond such generalities
lie obscurity and speculation” (Taft, 3).

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

prayer arrived.” 11 But Bradshaw points out that the paucity of evidence of liturgical formality
does not rule out continuity between the prayer-life of pre-Constantinian Christians and that of
the fourth-century Church.12
From the scraps that we can glean from the writings of these years, it emerges as a common
theme for Christians to pray three times per day, possibly with another time for prayer during the
night. Again, scholarly opinions differ as to what this translated to in praxis: was their prayer per-
formed at rising in the morning, midday, and at sundown? Or were moments for prayer taken at
the third, sixth, and ninth hours, where at least one patristic writer observes there were already
natural breaks in the rhythm of the day.13 In some cases there may have been as many as five set
prayer times (morning, the three hours during the day, and at sunset), plus time for prayer during
the night. “There is, of course, no way of knowing how many early Christians actually did man-
age to maintain this extensive daily schedule, but it should be remembered that the initiatory
practices of the Church at this period demanded a high level of commitment from those seeking
admission to the faith....” 14 The call to prayer was an evangelical precept for all believers, one
that was, from the evidence we have, taken very seriously.15
But the early Church Fathers seem to agree on one thing: if prayer is to be ceaseless, then
there must be set times for prayer.16 By the time the Christian community was able to emerge
into the full light of public life following the Edict of Milan in 313, these patterns of prayer were
an established aspect of Christian life.

Daily, Public, Liturgical Prayer in the Fourth Century and Beyond

By the middle of the 4th century, the documentary evidence shows the daily horarium is
everywhere, “an established cycle of daily, common, public services.” 17 It is difficult to trace the
developments that must have led to this universal liturgical form, but scholars agree that there
was at least some continuity with what had been already going on in a more restrained fashion
throughout the first three Christian centuries. What occurs following the Peace of Constantine in

11 Taft, 29 (emphasis mine).


12 Bradshaw, in Jones, 400.
13 Tertullian, On Fasting, X: “...these three hours, as being more marked in things human — (hours) which divide

the day, which distinguish businesses, which reecho in the public ear — have likewise ever been of special solem-
nity in divine prayers[.]” Translated by S. Thelwell in Vol. IV of The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Roberts and Donaldson,
eds. (Buffalo: Christian Literature Publishing Company, 1885), 108.
14 Bradshaw, in Jones, 401.

15 See Taft, 35.

16 See Aimé Georges Martimort, in The Liturgy and Time. Volume IV of The Church at Prayer: An Introduction to

the Liturgy, New Edition (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1986), 165.


17 Taft, 32.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

312, according to Taft, “is evolution, not revolution: it does not overturn what went before but
builds on it.” 18 From the fervent life of daily prayer that had sustained the Christian faith for
three centuries of endemic persecution, the newly accepted Church was able to craft a public li-
turgical structure that suited the needs of the people even as the scale of the Christian community
grew dramatically.
Our earliest textual witness to what we have come to know as the ‘cathedral’ office is
Eusebius (c. 263-339), bishop of Caesarea in Palestine. (The distinction, first advanced by the
pioneering German liturgiologist Anton Baumstark19, between the popular public celebration of
Psalm-based praise (the ‘cathedral’ tradition) and the the formal ‘monastic’ recitation of the Psal-
ter by ordered religious communities has, with certain later refinements, decisively shaped all
subsequent research of this topic.)20 Eusebius writes:
For it is surely no small sign of God’s power that throughout the whole world in the churches of
God at the morning rising of the sun and at the evening hours, hymns, praises, and truly divine
delights are offered to God. God’s delights are indeed the hymns sent up everywhere on earth in
his Church at the times of morning and evening. 21

Eusebius goes on to make specific mention of Ps 140:2: “Let my prayer be like incense be-
fore you.” Taft draws attention to this reference: it is this psalm that emerges as the standard core
of cathedral evening prayer throughout the Church at that time.22 Epiphanius, who became
bishop of Salamis (in Cyprus) in the year 367, speaks of morning and evening hymns & psalms
in a treatise he composed c. 374-377.23
That these daily gatherings for prayer were of deep importance to Christians can be
glimpsed from some of the patristic references to them. Taft notes the recurring allusion to the
cathedral office in the hagiographical deathbed scenes of saints in both East and West.24
Augustine attests to his mother Monica’s devotion to the communal celebration of morning and
evening prayer in his Confessions, describing her as “twice a day at morning and at evening
coming to your Church with unfailing regularity … wanting to hear you in your words and to

18 Taft, 31-2.
19 Anton Baumstark, Comparative Liturgy (Westminster, MD: Newman Press, 1958), 111-2.
20 See Taft, xii. Mateos (1967) adds a third category, the ‘urban-monastic’ office, and Bradshaw (1990) breaks it

down even further, disputing the identification of the Christian prayer of the first three centuries with the developed
fourth century cathedral office. Grisbrooke (1992) offers a yet different four-part division of the historical office,
based on the cathedral-monastical dichotomy and the varying degrees of hybridization between the two.
21 Eusebius of Caesarea, Commentary on Ps 64 (PG 23, 630), as quoted in Taft, 33. The text upon which Eusebius is

commenting here is Ps 65:9b: “east and west [i.e. morning and evening] you make resound with joy.”
22 Taft, 33.

23 Taft, 41.

24 Taft 146; see also 36-38.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

speak to you in her prayers.” 25


There is not space here to attempt even a brief summary of the varieties of nuanced local
expression that this daily cycle of prayer took throughout the East and West in the fourth-century
Church.26 The days of liturgical standardization were far in the future yet, and diversity flour-
ished from church to church. The fifth-century church historian Socrates writes this of ritual life
in the first century following the council at Nicea: “It would be difficult, if not impossible, to
give a complete catalogue of all the various customs and ceremonial observances in use through-
out every city and country…” 27 But let us look in haste, first at the daily prayer of the cathedral
or parochial communities, and then at the prayer of the monastic communities.

The Character of the Cathedral Office

The Office of the secular churches was a popular service characterized by symbol and cere-
mony (light, incense, processions, etc.), by chant (responsories, antiphons, hymns), by diversity
of ministries (bishop, presbyter, deacon, reader, psalmist, etc.), and by psalmody that was lim-
ited and select rather than current and complete. … the cathedral services were offices of praise
and intercession, not a Liturgy of the Word. 28

The cathedral office — the daily morning and evening prayer celebrated in the local, or ca-
thedral, church — was a communal prayer of praise and intercession, a gathering of earnest wor-
ship. The psalms, canticles and hymns reflected this character, and were also chosen to reflect the
time of day. Most churches used Ps 63 as the main psalm of the morning synaxis: “I will bless
you as long as I live; I will lift up my hands, calling on your name. I will bless you as long as I
live; I will lift up my hands, calling on your name.” 29 In the evening Ps 141 was widely used:
“Let my prayer be incense before you; my uplifted hands my evening sacrifice.” 30
Both gatherings shared a theme of light. In the morning references to the rising sun and ref-
erences to Christ rising from the darkness of death to the light of new life. In the evening gather-
ing, the lighting of lamps — surely a practical measure following sunset, but invested with relig-
ious significance in this context of worship — was accompanied by a congregational hymn to the
light; a common hymn attested to in this context is the Phôs hilarion, a hymn that Basil the Great

25 Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, Book V, (17), trans. Henry Chadwick (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991),
83.
26 Taft gives an impressively compact overview of the galaxy of references and allusions, 31-56 (for the East) and

141-64 (for the West).


27 Socrates. The Ecclesiastical History of Socrates, Book V, Chapter XXII, (London: Henry G. Bohm, 1853 ), 292.

28 Taft, 32.

29 Ps 63:5-6 (Ps 62 in the Septuagint/Vulgate numbering).

30 Ps 141:2.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

(d. 379) already described as “ancient.” 31


Rising as this liturgy did from what was seen as the primary duty of every Christian to pray
constantly, these gatherings were the spine of each local church’s corporate worship. John Chry-
sostom calls attention to these prayer gatherings as an essential exercise of the shared priesthood
of all baptized Christians, where daily “supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving thanks
be made for all men; for kings, and for all that are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and
peaceable life in all godliness and honesty.” 32 In other words, for the social order of the world in
which they lived.

The Character of the Monastic Office

From the very beginning of the monastic movement, the men and women drawn to that life
were doing something very different from what the Christians in the towns, cities, and country-
side were doing. To the monastic mind, prayer was not just something, or even the main thing —
it was everything, and the various rules they lived by had as their core purpose to allow these
professional pray-ers to do just that: pray. “If in the first early Christian view every undertaking
could become a prayer, a ministry, a creating of and bearing witness to the Kingdom, in monasti-
cism prayer itself now became the sole undertaking, replacing all other tasks.” 33
This is a fundamentally different raison d’être than the prayer synaxes that were going on
in cathedral churches all across the Christian world. There is perhaps no clearer demonstration of
this than the radically different use of the Psalter that emerged in the monastic setting. As W.J.
Grisbrooke puts it, the monastic methods of psalm-based prayer “were not, strictly speaking,
forms of worship — that is, forms for the expression of praise and prayer — at all. They were
envisaged primarily as instruments to inculcate in the monk the discipline of continuous medita-
tive prayer: in other words, they were not forms of corporate worship, but aids to private medita-
tive prayer to be practised in common.” 34
The daily schedule of prayer in monastic communities was also more extensive and com-
prehensive than was expected of Christians living ‘in the world’. The number of psalms recited
at each prayer hour varied widely: if some is good, more is always better. At least that seems to

31 O Joyous light of the holy glory of the immortal Father, heavenly, holy, blessed Jesus Christ!
As we come to the setting of the sun and behold the evening light,
We praise you Father, Son and Holy Spirit, God!
It is fitting at all times that you be praised with auspicious voices, O Son of God, giver of life.
That is why the whole world glorifies you! (As translated in Taft, 38.)
32 John Chrysostom, Homily 6 on 1 Tim, 1, in Vol. 12 of Pusey et al., A Library of Fathers of the Holy Catholic

Church (Oxford: J.H. Parker, 1843), 47.


33 Alexander Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology (London: Faith Press, 1966), 107.

34 W. Jardine Grisbrooke, "The Formative Period—Cathedral and Monastic Office," in Jones (see note 8), 405.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

be a perennial human impulse; twelve became a common pensum (‘burden’) of psalms for each
hour. As the centuries passed, the monastic orders also added additional hours to their daily cur-
sus (the cycle of daily prayer times). In the twelfth century monks in Spain celebrated as many as
twenty-four hours of the office daily. 35

The Monasticization of the Cathedral Office

With the popularity of the monastic life, it was a natural development that such communi-
ties would be formed, not only in the desert, but in the cities as well. We will focus our view on
the West, where the model that emerged in the Roman situation had considerable normative in-
fluence on later developments in the Church’s worship.
From the fifth century the daily liturgical prayer in the great basilicas of Rome was led by
communities of monks attached to them for that purpose. Here, though public and ostensibly
communal, the monastic hours were celebrated; the full Psalter was probably recited every
week.36 Though the worshipping community of the basilica would have gathered for the tradi-
tional morning and evening synaxes as elsewhere, the level of popular participation would have
had to have grown very low; without access to printed texts it is unlikely whole congregations
could have recited or chanted the entire Psalter from memory along with the monks. Outside of
Rome the morning and evening hours continued to exist as a popular communal daily worship.37
The Benedictine order played a very important rôle in the shaping of liturgical practice
throughout northwestern Europe. Benedict himself had grown up in Rome, and the liturgical
practices there played a large part in shaping his ideas of ritual and worship when he crafted his
Rule.38 His order became emblematic of the spread of the Roman liturgical practice: Augustine
of Canterbury brought it to Britain, Boniface to Northern Gaul and Germany. In the Benedic-
tines’ extensive missionary efforts they brought with them a fairly standard liturgical form of
both the Mass and the daily office, a standard form that was taken from the current practice of
the churches in Rome. This process was aided by the civil patronage — and active urging — of
reform-minded rulers like Pepin and Charlemagne, who saw uniformity of worship as a key part
in the ordered governance of their growing empire.39
The Roman practice that spread with the help of the Benedictines was very much a monas-
tic pattern, which came to be normative for all clergy not only in monasteries but also in parish

35 Martimort, 176.
36 J.D. Crichton, "The Office in the West: The Early Middle Ages," in Jones (see note 8), 421.
37 Ibid., 422.

38 Ibid.

39 Ibid., 424-5.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

life. The growing struggle of secular clerics to perform (for it increasingly became so) the exten-
sive daily cursus or cycle of psalm-filled hours pushed them toward a more monastic style of
recitation, which ultimately had no place in it for the lay congregation.
What we have in the development of the public celebration of the Office in this period,
then, “is the problem of the supersession of an office that was predominately laudatory and inter-
cessory and ‘popular’ by one that was predominately meditative and ‘monastic’ (and ultimately
‘clerical’)....” 40
Even Pierre Salmon, writing as he does with a clear conviction that the history of the Lit-
urgy of the Hours is little more than the history of the breviary as a book, admits (rather grudg-
ingly, it seems to this writer) that the formal celebration of lauds and vespers “had been con-
ceived in terms of a ‘parish’ attendance.” 41 Yet the total monasticization of the daily office has an
air of inevitability about it. “In the disturbed conditions of the early Middle Ages it was only
monasteries and similar communities that could sustain the daily prayer of the Church. This task
they performed nobly, and through the ages they kept alive the notion that common prayer is an
essential function of the Church.” 42 Unfortunately that prayerful function of the Church, as
Church, became fused to a notion that such prayer was the work of professionals.

The Church’s Need for Communal Prayer

Even though the people still came to the celebration of the morning and evening offices, the
celebrations became increasingly inaccessible to them. Like the Mass, the offices continued to be
celebrated in Latin even as the populace no longer spoke the language. As the psalmody became
vastly more extensive, it was no longer feasible for the laity to know the words or the melodies
to sing along. And with the development of more and more solemn chanting, the office became
the sole province of professionals: monks, canons, clerics and holders of benefices.43 Church ar-
chitecture kept pace, gradually isolating the chanting clergy in choir behind an ornate rood-
screen, far up an ever-lengthening nave.44
Yet, all these alienating accretions notwithstanding, the people to a large extent persisted in

40 Grisbrooke, in Jones, 407-8.


41 Pierre Salmon, The Breviary Through the Centuries, trans. Sr. David Mary (S.N.J.M. Collegeville: Liturgical
Press, 1962), 38.
42 Crichton, "The Office in the West: The Roman Rite from the Sixteenth Century," in Jones (see note 8), 439.

43 Martimort, 181.

44 See Martimort, 180.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

attending the parish or cathedral chanting of the offices;45 they retained, as Martimort puts it, “a
more or less confused desire for the prayer of the hours and tried to share in it.” 46 In attempts to
fill the void between desire and availability, a vast sweep of pious devotions grew up all across
Europe, very many of them retaining widespread currency well into the twentieth century.
From at least the sixteenth century there were numerous efforts to reform and reshape the
prayer cycle we now know as the Liturgy of the Hours. As regards the daily cycle of prayer
which ordained priests and professed religious are canonically obliged to perform, considerable
progress was made in the twentieth century in this undertaking. Unfortunately, “in all this reform
the notion that the office was the prayer of the Church, and that the laity were part of the Church,
was completely overlooked” 47 Even those responsible for the reforms following the Second Vati-
can Council, well-intentioned as they were in restoring greater clarity and simplicity to the brevi-
ary, still suffered from the institutional amnesia that had made the whole Church forget that, bur-
ied and hidden under the monastic style of prayer that all clergy knew, lay the gasping soul of the
popular prayer of the early Church.

Works Cited

Augustine of Hippo. Confessions. Translated by Henry Chadwick. Oxford: Oxford University


Press, 1991.
Baumstark, Anton. Comparative Liturgy. Revised by Bernard Botte, O.S.B. Translated by F.L.
Cross. Westminster, MD: Newman Press, 1958.
Bradshaw, Paul F. “Cathedral vs. Monastery: The Only Alternatives for the Liturgy of the
Hours?” In Time and Community, ed. J.N. Alexander. Washington, D.C.: Pastoral Press,
1990.
———. “The First Three Centuries.” In Jones, The Study of Liturgy, 399-403.
Crichton, J.D. “The Office in the West: The Early Middle Ages.” In Jones, The Study of Liturgy,
420-429.
———. “The Office in the West—The Roman Rite from the Sixteenth Century.” In Jones, The
Study of Liturgy, 433-440.

45 Even though relegated to the rôle of silent observers. William Storey observes of this that “Christian people have
always been able to learn to pray with their bodies and hearts even when conditions were not ideal.” (“The Liturgy
of the Hours: Cathedral versus Monastery,” in Christians at Prayer, ed. John Gallen, S.J. (Notre Dame: University
of Notre Dame Press, 1977), 74.
46 Martimort, 181.

47 Crichton, in Jones, 435.

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Aldean B. Hendrickson

Grisbrooke, W. Jardine. “The Formative Period—Cathedral and Monastic Offices.” In Jones, The
Study of Liturgy, 403-420.
Jones, Cheslyn, Geoffrey Wainwright, Edward Yarnold SJ, and Paul Bradshaw, editors. The
Study of Liturgy, Revised Edition. London: SPCK, 1992.
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Henri Dalmais, O.P., Pierre Journel and Aimé Georges Martimort. Translated by M.J.
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The Writing of the Fathers down to A.D. 325. Buffalo: Christian Literature Publishing
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Salmon, Dom Pierre. The Breviary Through the Centuries. Translated by Sr. David Mary,
S.N.J.M. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1962.
Schmemann, Alexander. Introduction to Liturgical Theology. Translated by Ashleigh E. Moor-
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Socrates. The Ecclesiastical History of Socrates, Surnamed Scholasticus, or The Advocate.
Translated from the Greek. London: Henry G. Bohm, 1853.
Storey, William. “The Liturgy of the Hours: Cathedral versus Monastery.” In Christians at
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and Its Meaning for Today. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1986.

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