Divine office app for iphone12/18/2023 Still mainly I used Universalis for my daily reading and switching off to the Divine Office app for a change of pace or during octaves when Universalis got repetitive. I mainly used this feature at times when driving and it was nice to hear a community of people singing the psalms along with professional recordings of the hymns. It has a very unique feature in that in addition it has audio versions for all the hours. The daily experience was rather seamless where you are not concerned about downloading the texts for the day. It was much like iBreviary as it used scrolling text and also used the official text. At $13.99 now it is still a solid choice and is available on iOS and Android.ĭuring my year using an Android phone I start looking at apps again and at the time the Divine Office app was semi-affordable and so I bought it. Very well designed with some attention to detail. On the plus side the app has been continually updated with changes made on phone software updates to match the user interface. My only annoyance with the app is that the text used is not the same text as in the official 4-Volume set and the selection of hymns is repetitive. It also had options such as what translation of the Psalms to use. It was also superior since instead of just scrolling the text you turned pages which was much more convenient. So for some years I have been fairly happy with Universalis as no daily text update is required. This changed when I got the first iPad and Universalis was the only Liturgy of the Hours iPad app at the time. I had been interested in the Universalis app, but at almost $30 dollars at the time I stuck with iBreviary.
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