2951 CIN Breviary app
austraLasia #2951
Chinese Breviary app is making a difference
HONG KONG: 25 November 2011 -- It is becoming more
common these days in Hong Kong to see people in public
places reading, watching videos, playing games or texting
friends, while being completely oblivious to the world
around them.
This phenomenon coupled with a change in
people’s reading habits has inspired Fr Paul Leung Kai-kwong
sdb to develop a new app to promote daily prayer among
Catholics. The “iBreviarium,” a Chinese language app he has
developed, provides daily Mass readings, breviary, prayers,
liturgical information and stories of Church saints for
people to pray and meditate.
Since it was launched for the iPhone for
free in August, about 2,000 people have been using it. Users
no longer have to download the app from iTunes, as Fr Leung
has added a QR code that makes it more convenient for
downloading.
The Android version, for the non-Mac
users, which became available on November 16, is also free
of charge. He hopes more lay people will make use of
this app to pray the breviary, which is not a “monopoly” of
priests and Religious, he said.
Fr Leung, who served in Rome for around
20 years, decided to create a digital breviary in Chinese
after noticing an online Italian one in 2005. He began by
creating a Chinese breviary website and then thought of
putting the breviary into a smartphone in early 2011.
During a workshop on November 19, the
Salesian priest introduced the app to about 200 people and
demonstrated how to download and use it.
“A priest wrote to tell me he failed to
say the breviary every day because he was too busy, now he
says he is happy because the new app allows him to pray
whenever he can find a quiet corner,” Fr Leung said.
Another priest in Taiwan bought an iPhone as soon as he
found out about the app, he said.
Though Fr Leung believes young people
spend too much time on their smartphones, he thinks the
Church should look after their spiritual needs by putting
more Catholic content onto the Internet.
Anna Chan Kai-yung and Salesian Fr
Domingos Leong, both experts in sacred liturgy, also
explained to the workshop participants the structure of the
breviary and why the faithful should say it.
“The pope is encouraging people to
evangelize with new technology. So it is good if we are
willing to say the breviary, no matter what tool we use,”
said Chan. “Only don’t forget that our phone batteries will
run down sometimes,” she said!