Jan 25. Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul: Missionary Conquest of World (End of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Sunday January 25, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"O Persecutor of the Church of God,
Who when converted valiantly wrought
In Missionary labors for the Lord,
Preaching the Cross which our salvation bought:
Assist the missionaries - thou the first -
To gain the conquest of the world for Christ.
Then praise we God the Father, God the Son,
And God the Holy Spirit - Three in One,
That one in him and one together we
In unity may praise the Trinity
Till all the ransomed fall before His Throne
And give all glory to our God alone. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919
Prayer intention: Missionary Conquest of World (For the conversion of Muslims and the faithful of other religions)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection
"On
this glorious feast of the Apostle our minds think of God's grace as it
fairly flung Saul to the ground on his way to Damascus, and of its
effect upon him and upon the entire Church. Miracles are unusual; they
are not the ordinary way. But the unmistakable lesson is here: God's
grace can overcome the proud intellect and the stubborn will, but
someone must pray. In the case of St. Paul perhaps Our Lady was praying
for him; surely she was praying for the good of the Church when the
voice from the clouds spoke to the stricken man: "Saul, Saul, why
persecuteth thou Me?"
When we consider the millions of souls who
have absolutely no contact with Christianity, even in its most distorted
forms, who do not know the mercy of Christ or the Mother-love of Mary,
we are appalled by the difficulty of converting them. But in words
adapted from the votive Mass of the Propagation of the Faith, we must
pray: "O Mother of God, who willest that all men should be saved and
come to a knowledge of the truth, send, we beseech thee, laborers to the
the harvest of thy Son; grant them to speak the truth with all
confidence, that the message of God may spread and be made known and
that all people may know thee and thy Son..." Missioners in foreign lands
report the devotion of many non-Catholic people to Our Lady. It is not a
Catholic veneration, of course, but it is genuine and sincere. Perhaps
in the Providence of God this respect for Our Lady will be the bridge
whereby millions will enter the Church of Christ. At the boundaries of
Nepal in India three thousand Hindus and Moslems joined three hundred
Catholics to honor the Pilgrim Statue of Our Lady of Fatima, as four
elephants carried the statue to the church for the Rosary and
Benediction. At Rojkot, with practically no Catholics, unbelieving
ministers of the state and other officials came to venerate the statue.
The mayor of Nadiad read a speech of welcome and declared how proud he
was to be present. For twelve hours crowds passed through the church,
crowds that were mostly non- Christian. As one old Indian expressed it:
"She has shown us that your religion is sincere; it is not like ours.
Your religion is a religion of love; ours is one of fear." (Bishop
Fulton J. Sheen, The world's First Love pp193)
The passing of the
Pilgrim Statue was like a triumphant march. At Patna, the Brahman
governor visited the Catholic Church and prayer before the statue. In
the tiny village of Kesra Mec more than twenty-five thousand people came
to view the statue and the Rajah sent 250 rupees and his wife a
petition of prayers. In other parts of India, and in Africa too, Moslems
crowded the churches to render homage to the Mother of God. Moslemism
has, in fact, many references to Mary. In the Koran there are several
mention so Mary, the Annunciation, the Visitation, and the Nativity.
Angels are shown accompanying the Virgin and saying: "Oh Mary, God has
chosen you and purified you and elected you above all the women of the
earth." It is said too that the Moslems believe in the Immaculate
Conception and the Virgin Birth.
Many other instances might be cited which seem to indicate the "The Age of Mary" of which Grignion de Montfort spoke
has begun. Surely the increased societies and works in her honor, the
new theological studies, the emphasis given to her role in the economy
of salvation and sanctification lead one to believe that this era has
been initiated. St. Grignion spoke of the glorification of Mary in these
terms:
"Mary must shine forth more than ever in mercy, in might, and in grace in these latter times; in mercy, to bring back and lovingly receive the poor strayed sinners who shall be converted and shall return to the Catholic Church; in might, against the enemies of God...who shall rise in terrible revolt against God to seduce all who shall be contrary to them, and to make them fall by promises and threats; and finally she must shine forth in grace, in order to animate and sustain the valiant soldiers and faithful servants of Jesus Christ who shall battle for His interests. (True Devotion pp33)"
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 24. Conversion of the Jews (Day 7 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Saturday January 24, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"Those Sinai's thunders startled - thine Own race-
Who heard thy Prophets -saw thy miracles,
Who nailed thee to the Cross - despised thy grace:
From their veiled eyes, O Lord, remove the scales;
The Wandering Jew who owned thee not - now claim!
And Israel bend the knee to Jesus' Name.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: The Conversion of the Jews
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"This
intention must appeal to Our Lady in a special way, for she, no less
than her Divine Son, was a member of the Jewish race. She knew the hopes
and desires of her people of their longing for the Savior who would
grant them freedom. Mary's pure lips could utter words that no other
creature dared to say: "My soul doth magnify the Lord...all nations
shall call me blessed because He that is mighty hath done great things
unto me."
One of the most poignant scenes from the Gospels shows
Mary and Joseph seeking their lost Son who had wandered from them when
they began their trip home from Jerusalem. Both thought the Child was
with the other, or with relatives. Then came the tragic realization that
He was with neither. Back to Jerusalem they hurried and sought Him in
the jungle of the dark narrow streets, heedless of fatigue or hunger or
of any need whatever - except that of finding Christ.
On the
third day they found Him in the temple. In its pillared halls the
teachers sat on low stools, while round them gathered those desiring to
hear the lectures. In the center was the Child, listening to their
statements and answering questions. Surprised and relieved, Mary asked
simply: "Son, why hast thou done so to us? Behold thy father and I have
sought thee sorrowing."
"...I have sought thee sorrowing." How
aptly the words apply to the members of the Jewish race of which Mary
was the purest flower. Mary is not only the Lily of Israel in the sense
of being the fairest of the chosen people, Immaculate, but because she
bears a special relationship to the Israelites and seeks with all a
Mother's love to bring them to the Church of her Son.
There is a
story told of a Jewish woman in Vienna who used to visit the Catholic
Church, but only because of its art; she was especially attracted to a
picture of the Sorrowful Mother. During the Nazi reign of terror in
1938, she was forced to clean a house occupied but the Storm Troopers.
Locked
in a room she had to scrub the floor with lye and steel wool. Soon her
hands began to smart and then to bleed. Suddenly she heard a piercing
scream, such a shriek as she never heard before - a creature crying for
freedom. At once she understood the meaning of that image of the
Sorrowful Mother: "I have sought thee sorrowing." She saw that in all
who are united to Christ, His life and Passion are reflected and
repeated so that all suffering borne of love makes the soul Christ-like
and serves in His redemptive work. The woman's hands were bleeding, but
her heart was full of joy. Grace had struck with marvelous force. The
next day she went to the Church of the Sorrowful Mother and asked to
become a Catholic.
The same glorious Mother of God, standing by
the Cross of Christ and interceding for the unity of all men, gives hope
and courage to all the world. Mary worked a miracle with blinding light
upon Alphonse Ratisbonne in Rome in the Church of Saint Andrea Della
Fratte in 1842 and brought him to his knees and to the priesthood of
Jesus. Though Our Lady does not work a miracle to remove the walled
obstacles to her love, still her influence is most effective. Mary is
the Mother of the Jewish people and with her there is neither bond nor
free, neither Jew nor gentile - all are one."
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 23. Return of all Lapsed Catholics (Day 6 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Friday January 23, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"And then for those thy dearest and thy best
The prodigals from thine own Fold, dear Lord,
Whom thy strong arms held closely to thy breast,
Laved with thy Jordan, feasted at thy board:
Calling, go forth to meet them, Saviour dear;
Embrace them with the grace to persevere.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: Return of all Lapsed Catholics
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"This
intention has a note of urgency and tragedy about it. These souls,
fallen from God's grace and living in sin, were born into the
supernatural life. They were once members of Christ who knew the power
and love of God in the sacraments, especially in the Eucharist, and
quickened under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit in Confirmation. They
once loved their spiritual Mother Mary who directed their paths and
heeded their lisping Aves.
But all that is past. Once heirs of
paradise, they have forsaken their destiny for the "mess of pottage" of
personal ambition, of material success, or of an unlawful marriage. But
just as the Divine Shepherd seeks for the lost, so Mary, the Divine
Shepherdess, by her prayers and love seeks for those who have separated
themselves from the Church. Mary longs to bring them back, she desires
to welcome them once more in their home.
How many souls have
returned to the practice of their faith by the persistent devotion of
some old mother, of a faithful wife, of a fervent religious? How many
have returned, after years of separation, because they were faithful,
for no reason they could explain, to some little practice of devotion to
Mary? Their number is legion; every soul that comes back in repentance,
every heart that is stung by remorse, every shoulder bowed with grief,
is a constant memorial to the mother love of the Blessed Virgin.
There
is a story of the Blessed Virgin Mary's influence over one of her
"straying children." A priest was called to the slum section of an
eastern city. Dirty-faced urchins met him on the sidewalk and led him to
the dank cellar of a foul-smelling tenement. There beside the furnace,
in a welter of soiled clothing, empty bottles, and cigarette butts, on a
rusty cot lay a woman wrapped in a man's overcoat. She groaned in
intense pain. The eldest of the children, a girl of eleven, said:
"Here's a priest to see you." The woman turned and screamed: "Get out of
here!" Then someone dragged over an empty beer case and the priest sat
on it beside the cot. He spoke kindly to the woman, telling her that she
was dying and it was time for her to make her peace with God. She
continued to call him the foulest names. Finally the priest knelt and in
a low voice began the Rosary. At first it was an odd combination of
prayer and blasphemy, but as the Hail Marys continued the woman became
silent; tears filled her bloodshot eyes. As she said later, when the
priest said the Rosary, memories came back to her - memories of her
girlhood in the mid-west, of her mother and father, of her brothers and
sisters.... of herself... all kneeling around the dining room table
saying the Rosary before the May shrine of Our Lady with a little white
candle burning before it. She had been so good then; she was so evil
now. At the last decade she answered the priest: "Holy Mary, Mother of
God, pray for us sinner now and at the hour of our death." She went to
confession, received the Eucharist, and died peacefully."
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
NOVENA PRAYER FOR THE RETURN OF LAPSED CATHOLICS: O
Good Shepherd, You never cease to seek out the lost, to call home the
stray, to comfort the frightened, and to bind up the wounded. I
ask You to bring (mention names)….. back to the practice of the Faith,
and to remove all obstacles that prevent them from receiving Your
abundant mercy, which flows sacramentally through the heart of Your Holy
Church.
Through the intercession of Mary, the Mother
of God, their Guardian Angel(s), their Patron Saint(s) and the
ever-prayerful Saint Monica, may You pardon their sins and unshackle
them from whatever hinders their freedom to come Home. For You, O Good
Shepherd, loved us to the end and offered Yourself to the Father For the
salvation of all. Amen
Jan 22. Catholic Unity for all American Christians (Day 5 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Thursday January 22, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"Ten thousand times ten thousand - Who are these
Of every tongue and language gathered here
In our own land? Send forth thy quickening breeze
Which guided to these shores our Christopher
And thy strong grace in Pentecostal flame
To make all one in calling on thy Name.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: Catholic Unity for all American Christians (For the conversion of the Protestants of America)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"The object of prayer for this day should be especially dear to all
the faithful in the United States. Our own land, dedicated to the Mother
of God under the title of the Immaculate Conception, should be noted
for its love for Mary. To some extent, it is true, this love has been
shown, from the coming of Christopher Columbus in his Santa Maria to the
Rosary Rallies, the widespread Legion of Mary and Sodality
organizations of the present day. But such tribute is not complete. Mary
seeks the souls of all in America, of all the members of more than
three hundred sects cut off from the Church.
If the Catholic laity of
our nation were imbued with the dignity and glory of their vocation as
lay apostles, what tremendous strides the Church would make! If each
Catholic brought just one soul a year to the Church, in five years all
America would be Catholic. True, this is idealistic, but it is surely a
goal worthy of sacrifice and prayer.
There has been no appreciable change of attitude towards the Church in this country. The attacks today are fundamentally the same as they were a century ago, but here and there admiration bespeaks an interest in things Catholic and under the aegis of grace, admirable can lead to conversion. For example, a Methodist ministers in Brooklyn said two years ago (1952):
"I
like Roman Catholicism because it is the mother Church. The bulk of our
traditions have been preserved by this great institution. I like Roman
Catholicism because it is Catholic, it is a Church militant which always
has had a passion for souls. I like Roman Catholicism for its
discipline. In this day when we are discovering how important to health
and happiness is peace of mind, it is well to re-examine the basic
principles of confession. I like Roman Catholicism, most of all for its
realism. It is one Christian Church which takes itself most seriously.
When a Roman communicant comes to Mass, he comes to the presence of
Christ. There is no room in his faith for any doubt of this reality."
Unfortunately,
one of the chief difficulties for the Protestant mind is devotion to
the Mother of God. But even in this matter patience and charity can do
much to dispel the spiritual iron curtain with which so many have
surrounded themselves. The faithful must pray for those who are not
members of the Church and be ready apostles in explaining the faith
whenever they have the opportunity.
The forums, the trailer
chapels, the information centers, all are valuable means of bringing
souls to the faith; while the efforts, at times heroic, of priest,
Brothers, and Sisters laboring in the vast areas of the south and west
have wrought incalculable results. But these are not the only missions
to the non-Catholics. In our large cities there are thousands and
millions who do not have the true faith. How will they be converted?
When? By whom? In the providence of God it seems that the principal way
of bringing souls to Christ is the humble unheralded activity of lay
Catholics, conscious of their duty and dignity in spreading the faith.
Any sphere of activity, any walk of life, any circumstance can be
significant. There is a story told of a little Sister who won a convert
simply because she signed "God bless you" in a business letter.
Countless others awaken the first interest in the faith by a kind act, a
smile, a courteous gesture. There are so many possibilities of
apostolic action for those who love Christ and His mother."
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 21. Return of European Protestants (Day 4 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Wednesday January 21, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"O Michael, who hast strongly kept the way
Invaders sought, and hast undone their boast:
With thee may blest Saint Boniface now pray
And Mary Queen of Peace, and heav'nly host
That all misled by heresy, may search
The paths and find the Way of Holy Church.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: Return of European Protestants (For the conversion of the Lutherans and Protestants of Europe)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"There
is little to be gained in criticizing Martin Luther today. Rather men
should pray that those who follow him may come to a realization of the
gift that he, and those who follow him, flung aside: veneration for the
Mother of God. As a young priest Luther wrote and preached beautiful
tributes to Mary. Even after he nailed his ninety-fives theses to the
door of Wittenburg's Cathedral and turned his back on his Lord, he wrote
in a commentary on the Magnificat: "If I had as many tongues as there
are stars in the sky or grains of sand on the seashore, or leaves of all
the forests, and if with all these tongues I did nothing but praise
Mary day and night, I could never say anything half so glorious to her
as that which is expressed in the single phrase: "Thou art the Mother of
God."
In a short while he repudiated Our Lady too, but among his
followers devotion to the Virgin did not die so quickly. In many places
in the sixteenth century the Lutherans continued to celebrate the feast
of the Assumption with meetings and canticles because the people would
not give up the festival. (...)
During
the Holy Year of 1950 a Lutheran minister, Richard Baumann, made a
pilgrimage to Rome. In writing of his experiences he frequently alluded
to the Blessed Virgin. Of the Rosary he said: "...when the rosary is
said, truth sinks in to the subconscious like a slow and steady
downpour, the hammered sentences of the catechism receive an indelible
validity for precisely the little ones..." He made special note of the
fact that the symbolical books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church use
the following phrases: "Mary, the pure, the holy, the ever-virgin, the
God-Bearer, truly the Mother of God, worthy of the amplest praises. She
will that we follow her example. She prays for the Church."
For
the first time in four hundred years the sons of St. Francis have
returned to Norway. The land that produced its St. Olaf and St. Magnus,
its St. Hallvard and St. Eyestein is beginning to re-echo with the
liturgy of the Church and its Aves in honor of the Mother of God. St.
Canute of Denmark will live in other sons of the Church and St. Bridget
and St. Catherine of Sweden will rise once more as modern heroines of
God's family, if only a sufficient number of missioners will take the
torch of faith and carry it full-flaming among men who know it not. In
the prayer of the famous Barnabite priest, Fr. Karl Schilling, who
labored so extensively for the conversion of the Scandinavian people, we
ask divine blessings: "Good Jesus, I humbly fall at Thy feet and pray
Thee by Thy holy wounds and by Thy Precious Blood which Thou has shed
for the whole world, to look in mercy upon the Scandinavian people. Let
astray hundreds of year ago, they are now separated from Thy Church and
denied the inestimable benefit of the Sacrament of Thy Body and Blood,
and also the many other means of grace which Thou hast instituted for
the consolation of the faithful in life and in death.
Remember, O Saviour of the world, that for these souls also Thou didst shed Thy Precious Blood and endure untold sufferings.
Good
Shepherd, lead these Thy sheep back to the wholesome pastures of Thy
Church, so that they may be on flock together with us under Thy Vicar
here on earth - the Bishop of Rome, who in the person of the Holy
Apostle Peter was commissioned by Thee to care both for the lambs and
for the sheep.
Hear, O merciful Jesus, these our petitions, which we make to Thee with full trust in the love of Thy Sacred Heart towards us, and to Thy Holy Name be glory, honor, and praise through all eternity."
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 20. Submission of Anglicans to Christ's Vicar (Day 3 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Tuesday January 20, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"Then those whom Thy true servant Gregory
Named "angels," and to make them such sent forth
Augustine and his forty monks - to free
From pagan thrall - to give their souls true worth:
Thy Pontiff be today a beacon bright
To lead them into unity's true light.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to Thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: Submission of Anglicans to Christ's Vicar (For the conversion of the Anglicans)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"Prior to its separation from Rome in the sixteenth century England was so devoted to Our Lady as to merit the title, "Dowry of Mary." Its valleys and hillsides were dotted with her shrines; its people vied with each other in giving precious gifts to her altars. Every county and diocese abounded with prominent places of devotion: Canteburry, Ely, Lincoln, Worcester, York, and hundreds more. But most celebrated of all was Walsingham where even members of the nobility went in pilgrimage to honor the Mother of God.
King Edward III dedicated the kingdom to Mary as her dowry forever, and his grandson Richard II, confirmed the gift. In the English College at Rome there is an ancient painting showing Richard and his queen on their knees offering, through the hands of St. John, their country to the Blessed Virgin. Below are inscribed the words: "Do tue, Virgo pia, Haec est; quare rege Maria - This, O holy Virgin, is thy dowry; do thou, O Mary, reign over us. "
But England's devotion to Our Lady, is for the most part, a thing of the past. Sadly enough, one of the greatest devotees of Walsingham was Henry VIII; no king of England ever began his reign with greater devotion to this shrine than he who later plundered it and stripped its sanctuary of its gems and precious metals. The lone wall that starkly stands today is a mute reminder of what a man did because he cast aside the love of the Mother of God. For more than three hundred years the faith was nearly stifled and devotion to Mary lay hidden, almost buried, in the hearts of a few faithful. But during the last century the Church began its re-conversion of the English nation, and it seems that the ancient prophecy is near fulfillment: "When England returns to Walsingham, then Mary will return to England."
For England is returning. The movement is gradual, but constant and steadily growing; each year sees an increase in conversions so that the Second Spring of which Newman spoke seems to have begun. With his sentiment men can pray to Mary: "Arise, and go forth in thy strength into that north country which once was thine own, and take possession of a land which knows thee not. From thy sweet eyes, from thy pure smile, from thy majestic brow, let then thousand influences rain down, not to confound or overwhelm but to persuade, to win over thine enemies. O Mary, my hope, O Mother undefiled, fulfill to us the promise of this Spring."
But our prayer is not alone for the Anglicans of England, whether they be "high, low, or broad" but for all who belong to this communion in America, Canada, Indian and other parts of the world. It is a prayer to Our Lady which Pope Leo XIII first sent to England nearly sixty years ago:
O Blessed Mother of God and our most gently Queen and Mother look down in mercy upon England thy dowry and upon all who gently hope and trust in thee. By thee Jesus our Savior and our help was given to the world; and He has given thee to us that we might hope still more. Plead for us, thy children, whom thou didst receive and accept at the foot of the Cross. O Sorrowful Mother! intercede for our separated brethren that they may be united with us in the one fold of the supreme shepherd, the Vicar of thy Son. Pray for us, dear Mother, that by faith fruitful in good works we may all deserve to see and praise God together with thee in our heavenly home."
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 19: Return of Oriental Separatists (Day 2 of Church Unity Octave Prayer)
by VP
Posted on Monday January 19, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"Once more thy guiding star place in the sky,
And lead - lead back the Magi of the East
To thy One See on earth through which from High
Thou speakest to the world's greatest and least:
Communion with the Apostolic See
Will banish schism in true unity.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919 -
Prayer intention: Return of Oriental Separatists, for the recomposition of all schisms and the return of the Orthodox and Eastern Churches under papal authority.
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100.
Reflection:
"On this second day of the Unity octave our prayers are for a special group cut off from the Church, but united to her in may ways. These dissidents of the East who can trace their spiritual lineage to Ignatius of Antioch, John Chrystostom, the two Gregorys, John Damascene and so many other illustrious saints, have the seven sacraments and the Mass; they have bishops and priests with valid orders. They treasure a deep devotion to the Mother of God, but they lack the fullness of love because they reject the oneness of government and authority in the Holy Father.
Among the so-called Orthodox there are many manifestations of love for Mary. The icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Byzantine in style, is the most popular representation of Mary in the Near East and before the Bolsheviks and Communists defamed her image it was most widely venerated in "Holy Russia." Despite the suffering and persecution of the present hour an ardent love for Mary lives on in the hearts of the Russian people and of others enslaved by the same oppressor, with smuggled pictures and hidden icons that testify to a love that cannot be uprooted by force. The flames now concealed will burst forth again and the Bogoroditza (She-who-gave-birth-to-God) will once more reign as Queen and Mother.
Even in the Kremlin there is a church building dedicated to Mary under the title of the Assumption. Assuredly it is not used for divine services today, but in the future it will again re-echo the prayers and hymns in honor of the Mother of God and the prophecy of a holy priest and Apostles of Mary, Maximilian Kolbe, O.F.M. Conv., will be fulfilled: "One day you will see the statue of the Immaculate atop the Kremlin."
When the Catholics of Zhorimir, Russia, asked Pope Leo XIII for a copy of the most popular picture of Our Lady of Rome, the Pontiff sent a copy of the picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. He likewise made it the official seal of the Pontifical Mission for Russia. The same inscription is used as the cover of a publication, Balcan, devoted to the study of Christian Unity, it adorns the walls of the Institute of Oriental Studies in Rome, an inspiration for the Europeans and Asiatics who gather there to discuss plans for reunion.
In 1931 Pope Piux XI issued an encyclical, Lux Veritatis, on the fifteenth centenary of the Council of Ephesus. His reference to Our Lady at the end of the document is most appropriate at the present time:
Under the auspices of the Heavenly Queen, We desire all to beg for a very special favor of the greatest importance, that she who is loved and venerated with such ardent piety by the people of the East, may not permit that they should be unhappily wandering and still kept apart from the unity of the Church, and thus from her Son, whose vicar We are. (...) Would, moreover, that very soon the happiest of days might dawn when the Virgin Mother of God, looking through her image so exquisitely worked in mosaic under Our Predecessor, Sixtus III, in the Liberian Basilica, and restored by Us to its original beauty, would see the separated children returning to venerate her with Us with one mind and one faith." Lux Veritatis, Dec. 25 1931
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Jan 18. Feast of St. Peter. Return of the "other Sheep" (For the conversion of all those in error)
by VP
Posted on Sunday January 18, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
"That all be one, O Lord, bring - bring them home -
The "other sheep" to thy one fold on earth,
To him who sits in Peter's Chair at Rome,
Thy Vicar, since the age which saw thy birth;
That with one Shepherd under one command
May march thy conquering hosts in every land.
"Ut omnes unum sint," O lord, we pray
That all be drawn within thy one, true fold,
Back to thy Church - from which the wand'rers stray
And the true Faith she keeps like saints of Old.
O bring them back, Good Shepherd of the sheep;
And rouse the heathen nations from their sleep. Amen"
Source: Catholic Hymns for the People, James Martin Raker 1919
Prayer intention: The return of all the "other sheep" to the one fold of St. Peter, the one Shepherd (For the conversion of all those in error)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
Reflection:
"On this opening day of the Chair of Unity Octave, the Church celebrates the feast of St. Peter to whom was first confided the primacy and supremacy as the Vicar of Christ. This feast was reestablished by Pope Paul IV in 1558 to emphasize the authority and the primacy of the Papacy, after the Protestants tried to show that St. Peter never lived or died in Rome. This feast providentially stressed the role of St. Peter as Christ's Vicar on earth and it symbolizes the unity of the Church and the authority which St. Peter and his successors received from God.
Humanly speaking, prayer for the unity of all men in the true Church seems fantastic; it seems an unattainable goal. For there are more than two billion people on the earth; more than half of these are not Christian in any form, while seven hundred million who call themselves Christians are not members of the true Church. Moreover, the great plan of converting the world has been going on for nearly two thousand years and it is still so far from realization. How can unity come? How will Christ's prayer be answered? It is not foolish even to dream of such a gigantic venture? But this is not a human goal at stake; it does not depend on the flimsy means of human thought and action; it is founded on sacrifice and prayer and grace.
The Blessed Mother of God can conquer souls for her Son. She dispenses the grace by which men come to know and love Him and the grace by which the faithful become zealous apostles fired with the desire of winning souls. As the late Bishop Francis X. Ford, heroic missioner in China, said: "Our Blessed Mother wants us to share anxiety for the conversion of the world...she wants us to carry about with us in our daily work this deep anxiety for the conversion of souls, and a corresponding generosity in offering reparation for the sins of the world...Our hearts must be like the Heart of Mary: anxious, yearning for the conversion of all people."
Though the problem is staggering and the task seem impossible, the gentle but powerful influence of Mary will overcome the forces of evil and of disunity. Mary is not only the humble Maid of Nazareth but the woman clothed with the sun, formidable as an army ready for battle - she will vanquish the powers of hell and win souls to Christ. As Pope Pius XI declared: "May Mary, the most holy Queen of the Apostles, graciously second our common undertakings; Mary, who since as she holds in her mother's heart all men who were committed to her on Calvary, cherishes and loves, not only those who happily enjoy the fruits of the Redemption, but those likewise who still do not know that they have been redeemed by Jesus Christ.
If all the faithful took an active interest in the Octave what a powerful wave of grace would sweep over the world! Or as Bishop Ford wrote: "If the Catholics throughout the world...were to redouble their prayers for the conversion of those outside the fold, the united prayers that would storm heaven would without doubt mark the year as a Pentecostal renewal. Our participation in this octave will at least enlarge our viewpoint, broaden our charity, and make us see in every man a brother whom Christ is yearning to welcome to His sacraments. "
Source: Rev. Father Titus Cranny, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954
Church unity Octave Prayer: January 18th to 25th
by VP
Posted on Saturday January 17, 2026 at 12:00AM in Church Unity
Church unity Octave.
The
Church Unity Octave is observed every year from the feast of St.
Peter's Chair, January 18, to that of the conversion of St. Paul,
January 25.
It was approved and blessed by the late Pope Pius X in
1909. His Holiness Pope Benedict XV, by a Papal Brief, dated February
15, 1916, extended its observance of the Universal Church enriching it
with Indulgences.
(Catholic Missions Vol 13-14 January 1919).
Daily Intentions:
Jan 18. Feast of the Chair of St. Peter: For the return of all
the "other sheep" to the one fold of St. Peter, the one Shepherd. (For
the conversion of all those in error).
Jan 19. For the return of the Orthodox and Eastern Churches under papal
authority.
Jan 20. For the submission of Anglicans to the Authority of the Vicar of Christ.
Jan 21. For the return of European Protestants that they may find their way back to Holy Church.
Jan 22. That Christians in America may become one in Communion with the Chair of St. Peter.
Jan 23. For the return to the sacraments of all lapsed Catholics.
Jan 24. For the Conversion of the Jews.
Jan 25.
Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul: Missionary Conquest of World (For
the Conversion of Muslims and the faithful of other religions)
(Form of prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV: to be recited Daily during the Octave. + One decade (at least) of the Rosary for this particular intention, Holy Communion if possible.)
Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
- Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.
- Lord Jesus, most gracious savior of the world, we humbly beg of Thee by Thy most Sacred heart, that all the sheep now wandering astray may be converted to Thee, the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls: Who livest and reignest through all eternity. Amen (Pius X, 26 Oct., 1905)
Source: The Church Unity Octave, 1939 American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 100
"Peace in Unity:
(...)
We possess today a prayer movement for Church Unity, the purpose of
which is to gather into the one true Church all those who have
unfortunately withdrawn from the Catholic religion and to unite them
against the prevailing forces of Liberalism and Materialism. For, as His
Holiness Pope Benedict XV remarked in an Apostolic Brief dated Feb. 25,
1916, "in the Unity of Faith the foremost characteristic of the Truth
shines forth, and it is thus that the Apostle Paul exhorts the Ephesians
to preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, by
proclaiming that 'there is one Lord, one Faith, one Baptism." Noting the
approval extended to this Octave of Prayer by the Catholic Hierarchy,
he asserted that “with a glad heart, therefore, we have heard from
the Society which is called 'of the Atonement,' established in New York,
that prayers have been proposed to be recited from the Feast of the
Chair of Blessed Peter at Rome to the Feast of the Conversion of St.
Paul, in order that this aim of Unity might be obtained from the Lord
and at the same time we rejoice that these prayers, blessed by Pope Pius
the Tenth, of recent memory, and approved by the Bishops of America,
have been circulated far and wide through the United States."
(...)
Our
generation is reaping the woeful consequences of an incredulity which
has succeeded in excluding Christ from modern life, especially from
public life. The deep spiritual crisis that has overthrown the sound
principles of private and public morality is the result of cleavage from
the Church in the course of centuries and the divorcing of civil power
from every kind of dependence on a Supreme Being. Cut off from the
age-old teaching authority of the Catholic Church, many of the separated
brethren have gone so far as to overthrow the central dogma of
Christianity, the Divinity of the Saviour, and have hastened thereby the
advance of spiritual and moral decay.
Now, in this hour of
perhaps irrevocable decisions, the Church may well be envisioned as the
voice of one crying in the wilderness, appealing to her wandering
children to be united with her in the unity of faith and worship, so
that their return to the Christian way of life might be a bulwark
against the menace of modern pagan teaching. She alone, in the words of
St. Augustine, "is the holy Church, the one Church, the true Church, the Church which strives against all heresies."
She alone fully recognizes the widespread atheistic and anti-Christian
tendency rampant in the world, threatening to destroy all the ancient
Christian institutions, the life of which consists in a supernatural
principle, and to erect on their ruins and with their remains an
illusory millennium of universal happiness, a new order which would rest
on the quicksands of changeable and ephemeral standards contingent upon
the selfish interests of groups and individuals.
Already,
through the mysterious workings of divine Providence, this invitation
extended by the Church has received long awaited welcome from many who
now perceive the inability of all human efforts to replace the laws of
God and the unifying and elevating influence of Christ's love. But this
is not enough. For, however much this hour of disillusionment has become
an hour of grace, "a passage of the Lord” for some, sincere Catholics
must humbly recognize their grave responsibility to work and pray that
the tireless and salutary occupation of the Church in the spiritual and
religious re-education of mankind might bear fruit in the
reestablishment of the Christian heritage over the whole world. On the
minds of all those who seek refuge from the vortex of error and
anti-Christian movements they should impress the words Our Holy Father
addressed to the College of Cardinals on June 2, 1944. “How much
more potent and efficacious would be the influence of Christian thought
and Christian life on the moral sub-structure of the future plans for
peace and social reconstruction, if there were not this vast division
and dispersal of religious confessions, that in the course of time have
detached themselves from Mother Church! Who, today, can fail to
recognize what substance of faith, what a genuine power of resistance to
anti-religious influence is lost in so many groups as a result of
separation."
As never before, the collaboration of the
laity in the Apostolate of the Hierarchy must have as its central theme
Christ resplendent in His Divine Kingship, if He is to "grant the gifts
of peace and unity to all nations." For “in the recognition of the royal
prerogatives of Christ and in the return of individuals and of society
to the law of His truth and of His love lies the only way of salvation."
If Christian thought is to succeed in maintaining and supporting the
work of restoration in individual, social and international life, then
all who are working for a plan that does not conflict with the religious
and moral content of Christian civilization must acknowledge that the
Church which Christ founded on earth is the infallible spokesman on
faith and morals for the whole world. For the Catholic Church alone
possesses, in her infallible pronouncements, the fullness of the
principles of Christian morality in all its ramifications. Because of
the special assistance of the Holy Spirit promised to the Apostles and
their successors, the episcopate united to the Roman Pontiff, she alone
teaches men to observe all things whatsoever Christ has commanded.
Further, only the Church possesses, from her very institution, a visible
unity in doctrine, government and worship. Therefore, only she can
establish an organic unity of all men-a supernatural union based on an
all-embracing love deeply felt and practiced, rather than a unity which
is exclusively human, external, superficial, and by that very fact,
weak.
One of the most efficacious means for assuring a just
and lasting peace is a Catholic Unity of all those who, seeking
brotherly communion in Christ, humbly submit themselves and obey the
Vicar of Christ as teacher and ruler of the Church. That is the end of
the Prayer Octave for Church Unity founded by Father Paul James Francis,
S.A., in 1908. It seeks to restore to God the honor denied Him for so
many centuries and to acquire for men the fullness of the Christian
heritage which alone can determine the most firm foundation of true
peace, that interior peace which cannot be found except by coming close
to the spiritual light of Bethlehem's cave.
Catholics especially
must unite with Christ who prayed to His Heavenly Father "that they all
may be one, even as thou, Father, in me and I in thee; that they also
may be one in us, that the world may believe that thou has sent me." And
it is incumbent on them to make known the observance of this Octave to
all others who sincerely seek eternal salvation, the promotion of the
temporal welfare of peoples, their true prosperity, order, and
tranquillity. During this Church Unity Octave, from Jan. 18 to Jan. 25,
all should pray especially that God the Father may send His Holy Spirit
to direct and guide statesmen, that He might inspire their thoughts,
their feelings and deliberations, making them spiritually and materially
vigorous and firm against obstacles, mistrust, and peril, so that as a
result of their deliberations, a new order under the patronage of Christ
the King may be established which will lead many wanderers back to the
Unity of supernatural faith and love as found in His Mystical Body. For,
says St. Ambrose, "great is the glory of justice; for she, existing
rather for the good of others than of self, is an aid to the bond of
union and fellowship amongst us. She holds so high a place that she has
all things laid under her authority ... but the Church, as it were, is
the outward form of Justice, she is the common right of all. For all in
common she prays, for all in common she works, in the temptation of all
she is tried ... For this reason, Paul has made Christ to be foundation,
so that we may build upon Him the works of Justice."