Saint Jude The Apostle,
Patron in Cases of Despair
and or Desperation
Feast Day: October 28
1. HOW TO ASK FOR ST. JUDE'S
INTERCESSION
2. RACCOLTA PRAYER
3. PRAYERS: IN GRIEVIOUS AFFLICTION and
DURING PERIODS OF TRIAL
4. PRAYER FOR A SPECIAL FAVOR and PRAYER OF SINNERS
5. THE CHAPLET OF SAINT JUDE
6. PRAYER OF THANKSGIVING AND PRAISE and
PRAYER FOR A SICK PERSON
7. NOVENA
8. CONVERSION PRAYER
9. THE EPISTLE OF ST. JUDE, DOUAY-RHEIMS BIBLE
10. SAINT JUDE PRAYER CARD TO PRINT FOR
LAMINATION WITH TEXT:
DON'T QUIT and
PRAYER IN CASES DESPAIRED OF
[THIS PAGE HAS A LINK TO PURCHASE ANOTHER
CARD WITH MEDAL]
11.
LITANY OF SAINT JUDE
DOWNLOAD THE BANNER IMAGE PLAIN
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ABOUT SAINT JUDE THE APOSTLE
NOVENA TO ST. JUDE
With
Nihil Obstat and
Imprimatur, 1947
TAKEN FROM THE FR. DANIEL LORD, S.J., ST. JUDE NOVENA BOOKLET
FIRST DAY---
SECOND DAY---
THIRD
DAY---
FOURTH DAY---
FIFTH DAY
SIXTH DAY---
SEVENTH DAY---
EIGHTH
DAY---
NINTH DAY
FIRST DAY:
The word Apostle means a messenger. The Apostles of the Lord Jesus
Christ were the messengers He sent throughout the world to tell all
mankind the glad tidings, the good news of the Gospel.
Ordinary men from the fishing crafts of small inland seas, from the
tax-collectors' benches, from the homes of the less than middle class,
they were normally destined for obscure lives and unhonored graves.
But they met the Saviour of the world. He spoke the compelling words,
"Come, follow me." They could have ignored His invitation and returned
to their nets, to their coins, to their mediocrity. Wisely they
accepted His invitation. They lived for three years with the Master,
received from Him incredible power and authority, and went out to be
His spokesmen.
Among this historic Twelve the least known was the Apostle Jude. Today
however he is loved and honored by millions, who call him the Saint of
the impossible.
In his honor we pray:
The Prayer of Saint Jude
[To be recited at the end of each day's meditation.]
God, Who through Thy blessed Apostle Jude hast brought us into the
knowledge of Thy Name, grant that by advancing in virtue we may set
forth his everlasting glory, and by setting forth his glory we may
advance in virtue. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who livest
and reignest with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world
without end. Amen.
This prayer is from the Collect, the Traditional Mass, said on
the Feast of Saint Jude and carries a partial indulgence for that day.
SECOND DAY:
World conquerors we call the Apostles. These twelve men, chosen by
Christ, proved to be history's most important conquerors. Unarmed, save
with the power of truth, unarmored, save for the grace of God, they
moved under the leadership of Peter and of his field marshal, Paul, to
win the nations for the kingdom of Christ.
They never lost sight of the Savior and of the happiness that would
come to men and women who became His in utter devotion.
They spoke with His voice, repeating the things He had taught them.
They took bread and wine, and, by the same words and gestures that He
had used, they turned these elements into His Body and Blood. "This is
My Body. ... This is My Blood," He had said. Then He added: "Do this
for a commemoration of Me."
They drove from the souls of men the worst of enemies, Satan and sin.
For they exercised the power He gave them: "Whose sins you shall
forgive, they are forgiven them."
Everywhere they taught His way of life, the mystery of His Cross, the
glory of His Resurrection. For He had commanded: "Go ye into the whole
world, and preach the Gospel to every creature."
Among these glorious world conquerors was Jude.
In his honor we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
THIRD DAY:
Of all the Apostles, Saint Jude seems the least known.
Not once throughout the course of the Gospels is it recorded that he
spoke. There is confusion about his name; sometimes he is called Jude,
and sometimes Thaddeus.
In the Office of the priest the Church says of this little known
Apostle: "Thaddeus was also called Jude the son of James. He is the
author of one of the Catholic epistles. He preached in Mesopotamia.
Later he joined Saint Simon, a fellow Apostle in Persia, where together
they brought into the faith numberless children of Jesus Christ,
preaching the Gospel and spreading the faith in these vast regions and
among these widespread peoples, winning them to the faith with doctrine
and miracles. In the end together they made glorious the name of the
Savior with their splendid Martyrdom."
Since the two Apostles had worked together, their feast is kept
together on October 28.
Silent as long as the Savior lived, Jude, accepting the
responsibilities of his mission, travels, preaches, works miracles,
writes a brief letter filled with his love for Jesus Christ, sees the
faith catching fire in the souls of countless pagans, and then dies
gloriously for his beloved Master.
This is the great Saint to whom we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
FOURTH DAY:
Strangely enough the Savior selected two Apostles of the
same name. One of them was Jude, whose fuller name was Judas. The other
was the infamous man, the traitor, Judas Iscariot"
The name Judas has become a synonym for all that is ugly and traitorous
in friendship turned to hate, trust betrayed. A Judas is a man who
kisses his friend's cheek as a sign to that man's lurking, murderous
enemies.
So it was that Jude the Saint was never given his full name, Judas, for
fear that the name be a reminder of the traitor.
How different these two men in their ultimate destiny. How alike in
their possibilities.
Both obscure and unimportant, both are called to greatness. Each lives
for three years as the intimate friend of the God-man. To each is given
the secrets of the heavenly kingdom and the promise of leadership in
the battle to win the world for God. Each is called a friend.
One of these two turns traitor, sears the cheek of His God with a
treasonous kiss.
The other of the two, apparently of lesser talent, never as Judas
was---an official in the apostolic group, uses his opportunities, holds
fast to the powers entrusted to him, loves his Savior and does His
work, and ends a glorious Martyr.
This is Saint Jude, to whom we pray:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
FIFTH DAY:
Sometimes we are misled by the pictures and the statues of the Apostles.
We see these men as vast in physique, with flaming eyes, hands raised
compellingly, lips clearly accustomed to authority and the powerful
words of the Lord.
We forget, until we come to Jude (little known and for centuries
largely forgotten)
that these were ordinary men like ourselves. There was little in their
nature and nothing in their background to give promise of what they
became. Poor sons, grubbing tradesmen, accustomed to plain fare and
dull company, resigned to commonplace lives and obscure ends, there was
no sign of what they could become.
Only the power of Christ made them different. Before Christ called
them, the Apostles were even less than ordinary. After Christ called
them and always with Christ, the Apostles were the glorious Saints,
Martyrs, Popes, and bishops, destined to make earth ring with the
greatest news since creation.
Jude without Christ ... a nonentity; Jude with Christ ... one of the
world's truly great.
Without Christ we ourselves are nobodies. With Christ we can do all
things in Him that strengthens us.
To Saint Jude, powerful with the power of Christ, we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
SIXTH DAY:
Among these ordinary men who became the world's greatest,
Jude seems to have been marked only in that he was more ordinary than
the rest.
We do not know whether he was tall or short, handsome or plain. There
were a thousand others of his name. In a crowd he would have been lost
in the routine similarity of trade and clothes and looks and speech.
Jude had none of the qualities that make for earthly preeminence; he
had all the generous qualities that the Savior had sought.
From the multitude the finger of the Lord singled him out. Like the
rest of men he clung naturally to his small possessions and still more
to his right to fashion for himself the kind of life he cared to live.
Unlike most men he gave up all things to follow Christ, and he accepted
whatever the Savior planned for him. He could echo sincerely the
triumphant words of Saint Peter: "Behold, we have left all things and
have followed Thee." He could hear throughout his life and at the
moment of his thrilling entry into Heaven, "Well done, good and
faithful servant."
In the hope that we will follow in the footsteps of Jude,
from obscurity to eternal glory, we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
SEVENTH DAY:
There must have been a lovely humility about Saint Jude.
He left to the other Apostles the aggressive action and speech that
were worth recording.
Once he breaks the silence to write a letter that is filled with his
humble love for the Savior and his eagerness to see all men love Him
and follow Him.
After a brief journey alone he joins forces with Saint Simon, almost as
if he distrusted himself.
Clearly he wished to share with someone else the conversions he made
and the miracles he wrought and the souls he won.
After the flame and glory of Martyrdom he almost disappears from
history. Few altars were erected to his honor. Few churches were named
for him. The fact that there had been a Judas kept people from
christening their sons Jude. So few remembered to pray to this almost
forgotten Apostle. ... until close to our times, this age of the common
man, when the ordinary man and woman rediscovered this dear and humble
Apostle and gave him the compliment of their confidence. He was a
little like themselves. They felt that a humble Saint would perhaps
have fewer clients.
To the human Saint Jude, in many ways like ourselves, we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
EIGHTH DAY:
So it was that in our age Saint Jude became known as the Saint of the
impossible, as far as human power is concerned. Perhaps that appeals to
our day.
Of a sudden, Catholics began to know how great was the power of the
humble with God. At a time when men deify fame and might, God counters
with the humble Jude.
When other intercessors seemed to fail, they turned to Saint Jude and
their petitions were answered, their needs filled.
When the problem seemed insoluble, prayer to Saint Jude solved it.
When the difficulty was too great to bear, Saint Jude somehow managed
to see that it was lifted.
It was almost as if he had set the pattern for one of the branches of
our armed services: "The difficult I shall take care of immediately;
the impossible (in terms of human power) may take a little longer."
Faith found that humility means power in the eyes of God.
Men learned that, not outstanding deeds, but loving hearts count with
the Savior; that the gratitude of Christ overflows to the ordinary man
and woman who by His love and His grace attain to sanctity through the
martyrdom of everyday duty.
To Saint Jude, humble Saint of the ordinary, we say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
NINTH DAY:
We too are called to be apostles. The work of the Apostles only began
with them.
That work was to be carried on by all the men and women who had learned
the truth of Christ, who had experienced the joy of His love, and who
wanted to share their great discovery with all other men.
Twelve men began the conquest of the world. All of us are expected to
carry on that conquest.
They dreamed that every new convert would be a fellow apostle, would
speak of Christ with enthusiasm, would show forth in their Christlike
lives virtues that were more powerful than wordy arguments, would live
the constant miracle of purity and humility and unselfish service of
God's children.
The world today waits for the coming of these successors of the
Apostles. Year after year young men are ordained priests and older men
are consecrated bishops to do the apostolic work.
But the world needs these children of the Apostles, the lay man and
woman to carry Christ with them into homes and businesses, into schools
and offices, to bear Christ within them wherever they go, wherever they
are.
To Saint Jude the Apostle we who are the sons and daughters of the
Apostles say:
(
Recite the Prayer of Saint Jude)
ABOUT THE APOSTLE ST. JUDE
The Apostle Jude, also called Thaddeus (or Lebbeus), which means
loving, was known as "the brother of
James", that is, the brother of St. James the Less. It is
not known when and by what means he became a disciple of Christ,
nothing having been said of him in the Gospels before we find him
enumerated among the Apostles. His mother was Mary of Cleophas who
stood with Our Lady beneath the Cross and his father, the brother of
St. Joseph, was martyred after the death of Christ. After the Last
Supper, when Christ
promised to manifest Himself to His hearers, St. Jude asked Him why He
did not manifest Himself to the rest of the world; and Christ answered
that He and the Father would visit all those who love Him, "we will
come to him, and will make our abode with him" [John 14:22-23]. The
history of St. Jude after our Lord's Ascension and the Descent of the
Holy Ghost is as unknown as that of St. Simon. Jude's name is borne by
one of the canonical
epistles, which has much in
common with the second
epistle of St. Peter. It is not addressed to any particular church or
person, and in it he urges the faithful to contend earnestly for the
faith once delivered to the Saints. "For certain men are secretly
entered in . . . ungodly men, turning the grace of our Lord God into
riotousness, and denying the only sovereign ruler and our Lord Jesus
Christ."
According to a Western tradition St. Jude was Martyred with St. Simon
in Persia. He is also known for being a staunch defender of the
Faith against the heretics of his time. He was given the second name of
Thaddeus after the betrayal of Judas to distinguish him from Judas. It
is thought that his vocation before the calling by Christ was that of
farmer because his family was from Juda, the region of farming
primarily. His one chapter epistle is considered an exemplary one
marked with humility but elegance of language. Nowhere there does he
refer to himself as a cousin of Jesus Christ, but merely as His servant.
His body was brought to St. Peter's Basilica in Rome where it remains
today.
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