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 humble 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: Father Titius Crannis, S.A. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 130, Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1954