Upvote:1
Your practice seems total OK to me. There is some room for variation in the praying of the Liturgy of the Hours. In the General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours sometimes no rule is given, sometimes a variation is explicitly stated.
Jayarathina's answer is good, but I want to tell how we do it at a German seminary:
- One priest (P) presides and one student (S) has some solo parts. If we have no priest, S does both. Both sit normal among the others. Assume S sits on the left side (L).
- P "God come to my assistance", all (A) "Lord Make haste to help me."
- S "Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit", A "As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be"
- Hymn: First two verses S, rest of first stanza L; next stanzas right side (R)/L alternating; last stanza A
- Psalms and Canticum
- S Antiphon
- S first half of first verse, L second half of first verse; next verses incl. Gloria Patri R/L alternating
- A Antiphon
- S reads the reading; he says "from ..." (without "A reading"), but no "The word of the Lord"
- responsory: S first verse; A repeat; S first (variating) half of second verse, A second half (same as second half of first verse); S "Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit", A again full first verse
- Benedictus/Magnificat like the Psalms
- Intercessions:
- P invitation
- A answer
- S intercession
- A answer
- ...
- P "Kyrie eleison", A "Christe eleison, Kyrie eleison"
- P "Our Father in heaven", A "blessed ... from evil."
- P closing prayer; A "Amen"
- If a priest is present: P/A bleesing like in mass; otherwise: S "The Lord bless us ...", A "Amen", S "Sing ...", A "Thanks ..."
[I hope I used the correct English version/terms.]
I hope this may help someone. If you are unsure, just do it the way you think it is the best! It is pleasing to the Lord even if Rome would say "Not perfect".