Don’t Mess With Saint Michael the Archangel

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In 1947 Father Domenico Pechenino related what he had witnessed over six decades before.

“I do not remember the exact year. One morning the great Pope Leo XIII had celebrated a Mass and, as usual, was attending a Mass of thanksgiving. Suddenly, we saw him raise his head and stare at something above the celebrant’s head. He was staring motionlessly, without batting an eye. His expression was one of horror and awe; the colour and look on his face changing rapidly. Something unusual and grave was happening in him.

“Finally, as though coming to his senses, he lightly but firmly tapped his hand and rose to his feet. He headed for his private office. His retinue followed anxiously and solicitously, whispering: ‘Holy Father, are you not feeling well? Do you need anything?’ He answered: ‘Nothing, nothing.’ About half an hour later, he called for the Secretary of the Congregation of Rites and, handing him a sheet of paper, requested that it be printed and sent to all the ordinaries around the world. What was that paper? It was the prayer that we recite with the people at the end of every Mass. It is the plea to Mary and the passionate request to the Prince of the heavenly host, (St. Michael: Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle) beseeching God to send Satan back to hell.”

Cardinal Giovanni Batista Nassalli Rocca di Corneiliano wrote in his Pastoral Letters on Lent:  “the sentence ‘The evil spirits who wander through the world for the ruin of souls’ has a historical explanation that was many times repeated by his private secretary, Monsignor Rinaldo Angeli. Leo XIII truly saw, in a vision, demonic spirits who were congregating on the Eternal City (Rome). The prayer that he asked all the Church to recite was the fruit of that experience. He would recite that prayer with strong, powerful voice: we heard it many a time in the Vatican Basilica. Leo XIII also personally wrote an exorcism that is included in the Roman Ritual. He recommended that bishops and priests read these exorcisms often in their dioceses and parishes. He himself would recite them often throughout the day.”

The Prayer written by the Pope is of course the famous prayer to Saint Michael:

Sancte Michael Archangele,
defende nos in proelio;
contra nequitiam et insidias diaboli esto praesidium.
Imperet illi Deus, supplices deprecamur:
tuque, Princeps militiae Caelestis,
satanam aliosque spiritus malignos,
qui ad perditionem animarum pervagantur in mundo,
divina virtute in infernum detrude.
Amen.

This is the version I learned as a boy:

Saint Michael, the Archangel, defend us in the battle.  Be our protection against the malice and snares of the Devil.  We humbly beseech God to command him.  And do thou, O Prince of the Heavenly Host, by the powers of God, cast into Hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls.

In 1886 this prayer was added to the prayers that in 1884 Pope Leo had ordered to be said after every low Mass.  In 1964, by Inter oecumenici, the Payer to Saint Michael, along with the other Leonine Prayers after low Masses, were suppressed.  I have always thought that a great pity.  Rest assured that Satan did not cease his activity in 1964, and Pope Leo sought to remind us of that activity and through the prayer to Saint Michael to help guard us against it.   It is still a common prayer in my house, and we say it at Mass during the intercessory prayers at my local parish.

 

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Ezabelle
Ezabelle
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 4:11am

The statue of St. Michael the Archangel was unharmed.

Ofcourse it was 💪

Ezabelle
Ezabelle
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 4:17am

Also to add – the St Michael Prayer is a powerful prayer to recite when you feel you are under spiritual attack.

Don L
Don L
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 6:35am

We were saying it after Mass here in Ct. but, it was replaced recently by a rather ho-h um prayer for more priests. Perhaps if we first restored the faith –and trusted our God-given guardians like St Michael, they’d once again be clamoring to be priests. (Sorta like a spiritual version of “if you build it–they will come)

Faithful
Faithful
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 7:16am

It is indeed a powerful prayer. Happy to say that in our parish it is prayed after every mass, including weekday masses. If we are elsewhere, and it is not prayed, my wife and I make a point of praying it after mass, before we leave.

AJ44
AJ44
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 9:19am

My parish says it nearly every Sunday mass. On the off chance that the priest doesn’t initiate it, one of us usually starts it right up.

SouthCoast
SouthCoast
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 11:52am

Just a reminder, the “long form” St. Michael prayer, which some laity apparently choose to pray, is actually Pope Leo’s formal exorcism, and should NOT be said by anyone other than a priest. Don’t mess with it.

CAM
CAM
Monday, March 27, AD 2023 12:57pm

Thanks, SOUTHCOAST, for the warning. Online the long version does not always have that caveat. I was once told by a Capuchin priest that demons have names and one shouldn’t even say the names of the demons out loud. It’s like calling them.

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