81.5 F
Denver
Saturday, October 5, 2024
HomeMagazinePraying for our priests: 12 ways to spiritually support our clergy

Praying for our priests: 12 ways to spiritually support our clergy

By Opus Angelorum

Our priests need our support! While they need equipped leaders to be on mission with them, they first and foremost need our prayers. The answer to this need is not a particular prayer or form of prayer but rather frequent prayer and sacrifices for our priests and their holiness.

Here are 12 ideas to spiritually support our spiritual fathers from Opus Angelorum, an international Catholic movement seeking to promote “a more conscious collaboration with the holy angels in daily life for [the faithful’s] own personal salvation, the salvation of souls and the sanctification of priests,” as the organization states on their website.

 

  1. “Adopt” or pray for a particular priest or bishop that you find particularly challenging rather than one you like. This requires a greater sacrifice and, therefore, will school us in the selfless love of Christ and be more meritorious and efficacious. Our charity is like a chain, as strong as its weakest link. By working on our “weak links” of charity, we ourselves will grow and contribute more to the building up of Christ’s Body, the Church.
  2. Pray especially for newly ordained priests. They are like young plants in the garden: tender and in need of special care. Their immersion into the apostolate, their lack of experience, isolation and, at times, disillusionment are especially painful at the beginning of their ministry. One study reported that an estimated 10-15 percent of American priests leave the priesthood within five years of their ordination.
  3. Offer up a portion of your sufferings for priests – be they sickness, hardship, sleepless nights, an upcoming operation or other discomforts.
  4. Pray for the souls of priests in purgatory, asking them to intercede for their fellow priests on earth. It would be good to gain at least one plenary indulgence a week for them. In general, prayers for the poor souls who cannot help themselves are a great work of mercy, to which is attached a great work of mercy: when they get to Heaven through our prayers, they never forget to pray for us poor sinners. To their gratitude, we can recommend and direct their prayers for priests.
  5. Offer up at least one rosary a day for priests. When possible, pray the rosary in a Church before the Blessed Sacrament and with others.
  6. Fast with prudence and the approval of a priest or spiritual director for the sanctification and conversion of priests, especially for those in the state of mortal sin and in the grip of the devil. For as Christ Himself has told us, there are some kinds of demons that can only be driven out by prayer and fasting (see Mk 9:29). And Pope St. John Paul II has stated that the “first and most effective weapons against the forces of evil are prayer and fasting.” (Evangelium Vitae, 100).
  7. If you say the Liturgy of the Hours, offer it up in reparation for all the priests who have stopped praying their Office. If you do not know how to pray the Liturgy of the Hours, consider learning how to do so; it is the official prayer of Christ, our High Priest, in and with the Church.
  8. Pray the Divine Mercy Chaplet daily — or at least every Friday — at 3:00 p.m., the Hour of Mercy, asking our Lord to be merciful to his priests. The Lord revealed to St. Faustina that great graces are attached to praying at this time. He told her, “At three o’clock, implore my mercy, especially for sinners, and, if only for a brief moment, immerse yourself in my Passion, particularly in my abandonment at the moment of agony. This is the hour of great mercy for the whole world. In this hour, I will refuse nothing to the soul that makes a request of me in virtue of my Passion.” (Diary, 1320). It is therefore helpful and efficacious to pray also at this time the short but powerful prayer, “O blood and water which poured forth from the Heart of the Savior as a fount of love and mercy, I trust in thee.”
  9. Pray the Stations of the Cross at least once a week for priests. Try to do this during the three o’clock hour, if at all possible. For Christ told St. Faustina, “My daughter, try your best to make the Stations of the Cross in this hour, provided that your duties permit it; and if you are not able to make the Stations of the Cross, then at least step into the chapel for a moment and adore, in the Blessed Sacrament, my Heart, which is full of mercy; and should you be unable to step into the chapel, immerse yourself in prayer where you happen to be, if only for a very brief instant.” (Diary, 1572).
  10. Visit a sick person in a hospital or in a nursing home in reparation for priests who have failed to console the sick and offer them the consolation of the sacraments.
  11. Make a holy hour before the Blessed Sacrament at least once a week for priests. If you are already doing this, try to make another one, spend another half-hour before the Blessed Sacrament, or at least try to make an extra visit to a church or chapel.
  12. Make at least one Communion of reparation each week to the Sacred Heart of Jesus to repair the irreverence of priests and in expiation for the sacrilegious Masses offered by priests in the state of mortal sin.

These are just a few of the prayers and sacrifices that can be offered up for priests. There are many others. But what needs to be stressed at the present moment is the critical necessity for all of us to do something extra not only for the sanctification of priests but also something extra in reparation for the sins of those priests who have failed the Lord. Pope St. John Paul wrote a letter to all the bishops of the United States when a priest scandal rocked the Church in America. At the end of his letter, the pope warned bishops in words that now seem prophetic, “Yes, dear brothers, America needs much prayer — lest it lose its soul.”

Let us, then, redouble our prayers and sacrifices for priests so that America may grow in holiness and so come to fulfill its mission to be a witness to the gospel of Christ in the modern world.

Our Lord promises: “He who receives you receives me … and whoever gives to one ofthese little ones even a cup of cold water because he is a disciple, truly, I say to you, he shall not lose his reward” (Mt 10:40-42).

- Advertisement -

May the Lord reward you with the grace to always have a priest who gives you Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament daily and eternal happiness at the end of this life.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular