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The same is true of all the psalms: All acquire a wonderful new richness in Jesus. The Psalms are the official (Grail) translation. They reveal to us the heart of Jesus and His prayer in His time of suffering. These words as prayed by Jesus on the Cross, as they rise from His heart to the heavenly Father, now have a new richness for us. So, for example, the words “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?” were the prayer of someone whose heart was in anguish and who cried out to God in a time of desperate need. Jesus, Who is the fullness of God’s revelation, also reveals the fullness of the psalms. The Divine Office App is an opportunity for you to participate in the recitation of the Liturgy of the Hours, an ancient and meditative collection of psalms. Jesus not only prayed the psalms: He fulfilled them and revealed their deepest meaning.
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Jesus Himself knew the psalms, quoted the psalms, and prayed the psalms. Throughout the Old Testament, we see the Jews praying the psalms. The psalms, the 150 prayers in the Old Testament, are the real basis of the Liturgy of the Hours. Pray the Divine Office online courtesy of Universalis: Morning Prayer (Lauds). We find the origins of the Liturgy of the Hours in the Old Testament.