On the fourth Saturday of each month immediately following the 8:15 a.m. Mass, we gather to pray for the sick. If you or someone dear to you is afflicted with cancer, a chronic illness, or other medical conditions, join our community in prayer by the St. Peregrine statue (to the left of the altar). During the devotion, those that are ill are invited to receive a blessing with the relic of St. Peregrine. All parishioners are welcome to write the name of loved ones in the Book of the Sick located near the St. Peregrine statue.
This month on March 25.
“For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” – Matthew 18:20
St. Peregrine is our intercessor because he knows what we are going through. He was faced with incurable cancer and was miraculously healed through prayer and he helped to cure others. Now through St. Peregrine’s powerful intercession, we will ask that God bless our sick friends and loved ones and help cure them of all physical and emotional ailments.
Please call our parish office- 913-402-3920 if you would like to be added to our Prayer Chain.
Glorious wonder-worker, St. Peregrine, you
answered the divine call with a ready spirit, and
forsook all the comforts of a life of ease and all the
empty honors of the world to dedicate yourself to
God in the Order of His Holy Mother.
You labored manfully for the salvation of souls.
In union with Jesus crucified, you endured painful
sufferings with such patience as to deserve to be
healed miraculously of an incurable cancer in your
leg by a touch of His divine hand.
Obtain for me the grace to answer every call of
God and to fulfill His will in all the events of life.
Enkindle in my heart a consuming zeal for the
salvation of all men.
Deliver me from the infirmities that afflict my body
(especially…).
Obtain for me also a perfect resignation to the
sufferings it may please God to send me, so that,
imitating our crucified Savior and His sorrowful
Mother, I may merit eternal glory in heaven.
Amen.
National Shrine of St. Peregrine in Chicago. Click here for information on the importance the devotion, its history, etc.