%0 Journal Article %T Another Look at the ¡°Daily Office¡± in the Apostolic Tradition %A Nathan Chase %J Studia Liturgica %@ 2517-4797 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0039320718808930 %X The daily prayer practices outlined in the Apostolic Tradition, their origins, and even the number of prayer hours, have been points of dispute among scholars. However, new sources of the Apostolic Tradition, as well as work on lay ascetical movement in Egypt, call for the reevaluation of this document, its dating, provenance, and interpretation. This article argues that the Apostolic Tradition is a composite document, whose daily prayer cycle in its current form has been shaped by a third- or fourth-century lay ascetical movement in Egypt. The document appears to outline prayer at rising, followed by a communal service of catechesis and prayer, prayer at the third, sixth, and ninth hours, as well as prayer at bed and in the middle of the night. Given the difficulties in interpreting the document it is unlikely that the document, or at least the daily prayer practices outlined in it, were celebrated as written %K Apostolic Tradition %K daily prayer %K divine office %K Egypt %K monasticism %K laity %K asceticism %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0039320718808930