![]() ![]() ![]() I use them both and it’s just very easy I find the benefit is that with my eyes, you can make it bigger print. The two that are most commonly used are iBreviary and Universalis. The breviary I use much of the time is here (showing his smartphone) as you can get it on your cell phone or tablet. Besides the classic bound breviaries, he also shared that his smartphone was also a breviary for him: In his “show and tell,” he recommended some resources for those who would like to start praying the Liturgy of the Hours. In the first episode, Cardinal Collins gave a brief introduction to the Psalms and more specifically, the Liturgy of the Hours. In this season the Cardinal has and will continue to speak about the Psalms. I was “re-exposed” to Universalis in the 2020-2021 season of Thomas Cardinal Collins’ Lectio Divina series. ![]() Some years ago (2014), I did know of their website which I used for some time for referencing the Mass Readings, and gave up with the website upon learning that they did not use the Canadian NRSV-CE Lectionary Readings… nor do a lot of missals or websites. I honestly did not know that Universalis had an app. In the latter half of 2020, I learned of another alternative to iBreviary and Divine Office, called Universalis. Divine Office,” both Liturgy of the Hours apps I have in my phone. Last year, upon my Android phone breaking down and the time came for me to purchase an iPhone SE 2020, I saw it as a perfect opportunity to download some Catholic breviary apps to try out, hence the eighth instalment of The Liturgy Series with “ iBreviary vs. ![]()
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