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The Chaplet of the Divine Mercy

How to Recite The Chaplet Of Mercy
The Chaplet of Mercy is recited using the ordinary rosary beads of five decades. At the National Shrine of the Divine Mercy in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, the Chaplet is preceded by two optional prayers from the diary of St. Faustina and followed by a closing prayer.

Our Lord's words to St. Faustina are very strong and leave no room for misinterpretation:

"Yes, the first Sunday after Easter is the Feast of Mercy, but there must also be acts of mercy ... I demand from you deeds of mercy, which re to arise out of love for me. You are to show mercy to your neighbors always and everywhere. You must not shrink from this or try to excuse or absolve yourself from it (724).

  Opening Prayer

You expired, Jesus,
But the source of life gushed forth for souls,
And the ocean of mercy
Opened up for the whole world.

O Fount of Life, unfathomable Divine Mercy,
Envelop the whole world
And empty Yourself out upon us.

O Blood and Water, which gushed forth
From the Heart of Jesus as a fountain of mercy for us,
I trust in you!


Begin the chaplet with the

Our Father…, the Hail Mary…, and the Apostles Creed.

Then on the large bead before each decade:

Eternal Father,
I offer You the Body and Blood,
Soul and Divinity of Your Dearly Beloved Son,
Our Lord Jesus Christ,
I atonement for our sins
And those of the whole world.

On the ten small beads of each decade, say:

For the sake of His sorrowful Passion,
Have mercy on us and on the whole world.

Conclude with:

Holy God,
Holy Mighty One,
Holy Immortal One
Have mercy on us
And on the whole world. (three times)

Closing Prayer

Eternal Father, in whom mercy is endless,
And the treasury of compassion – inexhaustible,
Look kindly upon us and increase Your mercy on us,
That in difficult moments we might not despair
Nor become despondent,
But with great confidence
Submit ourselves to your Holy Will,
Which is Love and Mercy itself.

   
 

St. Maria Faustina

History:
Divine Mercy Sunday, also known as Mercy of God Sunday, is celebrated on the first Sunday after Easter Sunday. Jesus Christ visited St. Faustina Kowalska and promised to be especially merciful to those who ask for forgiveness and take part in the Sacrament of Reconciliation and Holy Communion.

Born Faustina Kowalska, was called to religious life through a vision of the suffering of Christ. In 1925, she joined the Congregation of the Sisters Our lady of Divine Mercy and took the name of Sr. Maria Faustina of the Most Blessed Sacrament.

The years she spent in the convent were filled with extraordinary gifts, such as revelations, visions, hidden stigmata, participation in the passion of the Lord, bilocation, the reading of human souls and prophecy.

In her visions, she was given three main tasks: Reminding the world and the Church of the truth in God’s mercy; interpreting Divine Mercy for the whole world; and initiating the apostolic movement of Divine Mercy.

Sr. Faustina kept a diary of the Lord’s wishes as given to her through her visions. She died in Krakow in 1938 but the devotion to the Divine Mercy based on her diary had already started. Due to the political situations at that time the Catholic Church was unable to verify the inaccurate and confusing translations of her diary entries. For this reason, the devotion to the Divine Mercy was banned. The Church forbade the spreading of the Divine Mercy message and devotion. The Marians, however, continued to spread the devotion to God’s mercy, but in obedience to Rome, the devotion was based on Sacred Scripture, the Liturgy, the teachings of the Church, and Our Lady’s revelations at Fatima.


In 1958 Sr. Faustina’s prophecies started to be fulfilled and the messages and devotion as recorded in the original diary were reexamined. In 1978, with the intervention of the Archbishop of Krakow, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, the ban was lifted completely. Through his efforts, and informative process relating to the life and virtues of Sr. Faustina was began, which led to Beatification in 1993 and canonization in 2000.

  

Prayer for the Intercession of
St. Faustina

 

St. Faustina,
You told us that your mission
Would continue after your death
And that you would not forget us.

Our Lord also granted you a great privilege,
Telling you to “distribute graces as you will,
To whom you will, and when you will.”

Relying on this,
I ask your intercession for the graces I need,
Especially

(Here mention your special intentions)

Help me, above all,
To trust in Jesus as you did
And to glorify His mercy every moment of my life. Amen.

   
 
 
For more, please read

Seeking God: The Way of St. Benedict (Second Edition) (Paperback)
by Esther de Waal, Kathleen Norris

Saint of the Day: Lives, Lessons, and Feasts (Paperback)
by Leonard Foley (Editor), Pat McCloskey (Editor)

Lives of the Saints You Should Know by Margaret R. Bunson, Matthew E. Bunson
   

New Illustrated Book of Saints
Author: Catholic Book Publishing Company
   

One Hundred Saints: Their Lives and Likenesses Drawn from Butler's
This is a coffee-table collection of 100 popular saints illustrated with art works taken from international galleries. The saints are listed alphabetically in a valuable table of contents, with a larger list of patron saints following the text. Inclusion is based on popularity within the Christian world and the
availability of atypical art works. Entries are generally based on the 1926-38 edition of Butler's Lives of the Saints, with the length of each entry varying from one-half page to several pages. Short entries giving written insight into the lives of pious individuals are combined with depictions rendered by artists such as Raphael and El Greco. An inexpensive tribute to art and faith more appropriate for gift-giving than for libraries.
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The reader contributions include announcements, interesting articles, pictures and greetings. We also solicit news regarding activities and events your parishes that you might useful for others.

The newsletter has over 1000 subscribers.

 

Apologetics

Mary and the Saints

Mass and the Eucharist

A collection of articles based on published books explaining the reasons behind certain Catholic practices and traditions.
 
The blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, figures very strongly in Catholic life.
 
The Catholic Mass is a true sacrifice and the Eucharist a representation in an unbloody manner of the sacrifice of Christ.

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