Image of the Crucifixion highlighting the Precious Blood of Jesus

Weekly Prayers to the Precious Blood for Priests

Painting of Jesus Crucified with saints catching the Precious Blood in chalices
Click to open a PDF of a double-sided pamphlet of the prayers below.

We need worthy priests in the Church now more than ever, holy priests willing to be poured out for souls in union with Jesus.  Join us in praying for priests during this month of July dedicated to the Precious Blood of Jesus.

Weekly Prayers to the Precious Blood for Priests

Sunday

My beloved Jesus, by the Precious Blood which You shed on the day of the cir­cumcision, watch over the infancy and the early education of the children whom You have destined to minister at the altar, that they may be preserved spotless till consecrated to You by the Holy Unction.  Bless the families that honor Your Precious Blood, and spread this devotion, by choosing from among them a large number of vocations to the priesthood, and by maintaining their fervor till the close of their lives.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Monday

Lord Jesus, by the Precious Blood which You shed in the Garden of Olives, take pity on all aspirants to the priesthood who, through the temptations of the evil one, or dread of the responsibilities of the sacred ministry, are in danger of losing their voca­tion.  Impart to these young men sufficient courage to make the sacrifices by which the Eucharistic Chalice must be purchased; and in return for their generosity, let them find strength and courage through the Blood Which in heaven shall be their eternal source of delight.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Tuesday

Lord Jesus, by the Precious Blood shed in Your painful scourging, shield with Your own special protection, and that of Your Immaculate Mother, all ministers of the sanctuary, so that, belonging entirely to You, they may every day offer and receive Your Body and Blood and enable You to find in their hearts “a paradise of delight.”

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Wednesday

Lord Jesus Christ, by the Precious Blood which You shed in Your Crowning with Thorns, we beseech You to maintain our clergy in such filial submission to the Holy See and its representatives, as will for ever secure them the veneration, confidence, and docility of the faithful children of Holy Church.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Thursday

Lord Jesus! by Your Precious Blood, shed on the way to Calvary, take pity on priests who are the victims of injustice, and who, like their Adorable Model, receive, in return for their devotedness, nothing but crosses, trials and persecutions.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Friday

Lord Jesus, by the Blood of Your Cruci­fixion, inflame with ever-unceasing zeal the dispensers of Your Blood.  Grant that thirsting like You for souls they may con­tinue the work of Your Passion, increasing its efficacy by applying its merits.  Assist most of all the poor missionaries who, after watering with their sweat and tears the soil in which they have sown the divine seed, may still be called upon to dye with their blood the land upon which they planted the cross.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

Saturday

Lord Jesus, through the Blood and water shed by You after death, take special pity on those among Your ministers whom You will soon call by death.  If, through human frailty, they have become the debtors of Your justice, grant that, this very day, the infinitely Precious Blood may discharge their obligations.

Our Lady of the Precious Blood, watch over the living chalices of the Blood of Jesus.  Amen.

From Our Treasure “The Blood of Jesus” prayer book, published by the Sister Adorers of the Precious Blood, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, 1969.

Vocation letters cartoon of a Dominican novice nun praying after receiving Holy Communion, surrounded by images of the nuns' life of Eucharistic Devotion: receiving Holy Communion, the Elevation at Holy Mass, Eucharistic Benediction

Vocation Letters: Eucharistic Devotion

Our fictional novice Sr. Mary Rosaria continues our Vocation Letter series with this note to her little sister.

Ave + Maria

“The Blessed Sacrament is in the little tabernacle; that is important.  The Master of the House is there; nothing will be lacking to them if they remain faithful to Him.” –Fr. Saintourens, writing of the small house where he established the first Dominican Sisters of the Perpetual Rosary in 1880

Dear Tessa,

Praised be Jesus Christ in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar!  I hope you have enjoyed celebrating our very many Solemnities recently!  Among them all, we looked forward to the feast of Corpus Christi with special zeal this year, since our Novice Mistress, Sister Mary Magistra, chose “Devotion to the Blessed Sacrament” as our theme for June.  In order to help us enter more fully into the spirit of our vocation, in the novitiate we are focusing each month on a different aspect of our devotional life.  Sister shares inspiring reflections, and provides us with readings from Scripture, our Constitutions and Custom Book, and various doctrinal and devotional writings especially from our Dominican saints.  So far this has been very helpful for entering into our devotional life with greater understanding and purpose (very Dominican!).

I should add, Tessa, that “devotion” is not just a warm feeling, but an actual virtue that St. Thomas talks about in the Summa Theologiae: “the will to give oneself readily to things concerning the service of God.”  St. Thomas says that the principle effect of devotion is JOY, because it is keeping in mind God’s goodness that motivates us to give ourselves completely and willingly to Him.  So, although our Dominican life forms us even when we aren’t aware of it, taking a step back to look at the foundation and goal of our particular devotional practices inspires our virtue of devotion all over again.

Our Eucharistic devotion is woven into every moment of our life.  Every day, Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament reigns in our chapel, warming our hearts like the Sun with the rays of His grace.  We sing the Hours of the Office before Him, we  pray the Rosary during our Hours of Guard before Him at Our Lady’s feet, we step through the chapel, bend our knees, and make Him many visits of love.  The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is the most important act of each day, when we join with the priest in offering ourselves with Our Lord to the Father, and in receiving our Spouse in Holy Communion with great devotion.  Acts of spiritual communion throughout the day keep our love for our Eucharistic Jesus bright, and help us keep a spirit of thanksgiving for our morning’s Communion, and of anticipation of receiving Him again on the marrow.  Whenever we have a visiting priest, we look forward to Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament at the end of the day.

It has also been inspiring to see how these specific ways that our devotion is lived out in our community in the Perpetual Rosary tradition deeply fulfills our vocation as Dominican nuns.  Great love for Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament has been a mark of our Order from its beginning, bequeathed to us by our Holy Father St. Dominic and continued in our long line of Dominican Saints.  The Constitutions of the Nuns of the Order of Preachers explicitly states: “The nuns should worship Christ in the mystery of the Eucharist so that from this wonderful exchange they may draw an increase of faith, hope, and charity.”

Of course, this is why Jesus gave Himself to us in the Blessed Sacrament: to unite us to Himself and draw us every more deeply into the life of the Blessed Trinity.

With my prayers that Jesus will draw you also to a deeper love for Himself,

In Our Lady,

Sister Mary Rosaria, O.P.

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Prayers for the Month of the Sacred Heart

Image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

This Novena may be used as a preparation for the First Friday of the Month.  It also may be prayed very profoundly during one’s thanksgiving after receiving Our Lord in Holy Communion.

Profound Adoration of the Heart of Jesus, – I unite myself to Thee
Ardent love of the Heart of Jesus, – (repeat response)
Fervent zeal of the Heart of Jesus,
Reparation of the Heart of Jesus,
Thanksgiving of the Heart of Jesus,
Assured confidence of the Heart of Jesus,
Fervent prayers of the Heart of Jesus,
Eloquent silence of the Heart of Jesus,
Humility of the Heart of Jesus,
Obedience of the Heart of Jesus,
Meekness and peace of the Heart of Jesus,
Ineffable goodness of the Heart of Jesus,
Universal charity of the Heart of Jesus,
Profound recollection of the Heart of Jesus,
Tender solicitude of the Heart of Jesus for the conversion of sinners,
Intimate union of the Heart of Jesus with the Heavenly Father,
Intentions, desires and will of the Heart of Jesus, – I unite myself to Thee

Saint Jude

Prayer to St. Jude, Friend of the Sacred Heart

O glorious apostle, St. Jude Thaddeus, I salute thee through the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus! Through this Heart I praise and thank God for all the graces He has bestowed upon thee. Humbly prostrate before thee, I implore thee through this Heart to look down upon me with compassion. Oh, despise not my poor prayer; let not my trust be confounded! To thee God has granted the privilege of aiding mankind in the most desperate cases. Oh, come to my aid that I may praise the mercies of God! All my life I will be grateful to thee and will be thy faithful client until I can thank thee in heaven. Amen.

Easter Greetings

Christ is Risen!  Indeed He is Risen!  Alleluia!  Resurrexit sicut dixit, Alleluia!

In these days of the Easter Octave, which the Church celebrates as a prolongation of the great day of Resurrection itself, we to celebrate Our Lord’s Resurrection with rejoicing.  “I came that you might have Life, and have it to the full,” Jesus said.  In His Passion, Death, and Resurrection, He gains for us a share in His Divine Life which He pours out on us in the living water of the Holy Spirit, given at Pentecost.  He continues to pour out the grace of His Risen Life to us today especially in the sacraments of the Church and in the Holy Eucharist in which we celebrate His Paschal Mystery and receive Our Lord Himself in Holy Communion.

As we wish you Happy Easter, we pray that Our Lord will pour out on you the abundance of His grace and draw you closer to Himself during this holy and joyful season.

In Our Lady, joyful Queen of Heaven,

Mother Mary of the Precious Blood, O.P. and Sisters

Jesus crowned with thorns by Fra Angelico

The Price of Our Everyday Graces

Jesus crowned with thorns by Fra AngelicoAs we begin Lent, we try to comprehend more deeply Jesus’ love and suffering for us, so we can grow in our own love and conformity to Him on our Lenten journey to the Paschal mysteries.  The following meditation is from Archbishop Luis M. Martinez’ book, Only Jesus:

If we could only understand what we have cost Jesus!  If we could dispose ourselves at least to think about what He suffered for each one of us!  Our souls are enveloped in His tenderness and in His pain.  We are the fruit of His love and His martyrdom.  We unceasingly receive His gifts of all kinds.  We receive them tranquilly, at times joyfully.  But those gifts are marked with the blood of Jesus, the blood from His veins and from His heart.  In order that we might taste the least of His heavenly consolations, Jesus had to taste the gall and vinegar of interior desolation.  In order that our souls might remain spotless, Jesus had to shed His blood to purify them.  Each degree of grace, which for us is a degree of glory, was for Jesus a degree of incomprehensible suffering, and each Communion we receive cost Jesus the sacrifice of Calvary and the interior sacrifice of His heart. . . .

We do not understand what one Communion is, nor the gift given to us in it, nor the tremendous sufferings which that sublime gift cost Jesus.

We could discourse in a similar way upon all God’s graces; all are dyed in His blood and saturated with bitterness.  The light shining in our spirit, the love burning in our heart, the strength sustaining our soul, the virtues adorning it, the gifts of the Holy Spirit that deify it, the fruits of the Sanctifier, the grace that makes us sharers in the nature of God, the charisms, our present graces of preservation, graces of sanctification, all that form the world known as the spiritual life—all is the fruit of love and sorrow, all came forth from the Sacred Heart, and all conserve the heat of its flames and the bitterness of its martyrdom, although this bitterness is usually changed for us into sweetness.

If all the graces we receive were the fruit of love alone, there would be sufficient motive for us to die of gratititude and to make every sacrifice in order to correspond with that ineffable love.  But if these graces are also the fruit of Christ’s suffering, which lacerated the Divine Heart, causing it to bleed, how can there ever be gratitude sufficient to acknowledge them and love adequate to correspond with them?  The contemplation of the interior of Jesus’ heart would of itself suffice to sanctify us without measure.  Why do we turn away our eyes and our heart from that Heart, the only object worthy of our life?

— from Only Jesus by Archbishop Luis M. Martinez (archbishop of Mexico City from 1923-1956)

Cartoon of a Dominican nun novice at her studies

Vocation Letters: Novitiate Studies

Our fictional novice Sister Mary Rosaria writes to her little sister Tessa, squeezing in a letter before Lent begins in order to share about an important aspect of life in formation to become a Dominican nun: novitiate studies!  Read more of our Vocation Letters series here.

Cartoon of a Dominican nun novice at her studies

Ave + Maria

Dear Tessa,

Prayerful greetings from Marbury as we begin this month dedicated to St. Joseph!  This is also my last letter before Lent begins.  We are finishing up the Parce Days of reparation for the abuses of Mardi Gras . . . and we know how many offenses there are to make reparation for right now in the Church and the world!

How are your classes coming this spring?  Do you have any favorites–maybe history or literature?  I remember how you exclaimed, when I mentioned I was working on a paper on the Rule of St. Augustine, “Wait–novices GET to write papers!?!?”  Maybe you are a budding Dominican, just champing to “share with others the fruits of your contemplation!”

We do write papers here in the novitiate, when our Novice Mistress assigns them to us.  But our classes are not like college classes.  I heard a friar Novice Master once describe the novitiate at “homeschooling for adults” and (depending on what your homeschooling was like!) I think that description might work.  We have classes with our Novice Mistress, time to spend studying, and the opportunity to share what we are learning with the other Sisters at recreation.  One main point is that  our studies here in the novitiate are integrated into our life: whether we are studying the spiritual life, the Rule and Constitutions, monastic or Dominican history, or theological topics such as the liturgy or sacraments, everything we study bears directly on living out this vocation in our daily life.  Daily life too, with its round of liturgical and private prayer, community and solitude, helps us understand what we are studying by our own experience.

The goal of our studies is to form us into Dominican nuns whose thirst for Truth leads us to God, and whose love of God increases our thirst for Him.  “Sweet First Truth!” as St. Catherine of Siena loved to call Our Lord.   So you see how the study of sacred truth is one of the central elements of our Dominican monastic life.  Our Constitutions places Study after with Lectio Divina in the chapter entitled “Hearing, Studying and Keeping the Word of God.”   Study in our life is not about getting degrees, but about nourishing contemplation and being an aid to human maturity.  We certainly find this true in the novitiate!

I should close now, but know of my prayers for you during this holy season ahead.  Please pray for us too, that we may really be open to all the graces Our Lord wants to give us to conform us to Himself in His Passion.

With love and prayers in Our Lady,

Sister Mary Rosaria


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Blessed John of Fiesole (Fra Angelico)

Today we celebrate the feast of our brother Blessed John of Fiesole, more commonly known as Fra Angelico (1386/7 – 1455).  We often use his beautiful works of art used to illustrate our posts here on our website, in our Rosary Meditation booklet [PDF], and other places as well, as they reflect how Fra Angelico lived his Dominican vocation to contemplate and share with others those very mysteries upon which he meditated in prayer.  The fruit of a pure heart, they elevate our hearts also to the contemplation of God.

In the liturgy today, we read the following excerpt, which we share with you now.

From an apostolic letter motu proprio of Pope Saint John Paul II on October 3, 1982

“Whoever does the work of Christ, ought always to stay close to Christ.”  This was a motto constantly repeated by Brother John of Fiesole, who was called Beato Angelico because of the highest integrity of his life and the almost divine beauty of his paintings, particularly those of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

While he was still a youth, he was attracted to the religious life, and asked to be received into a stricter discipline in the Order of Friars Preachers (called the Observance), which had been established in the convent at Fiesole.  He diligently took up all of the duties imposed by the brethren or superiors.  It was the fame of his outstanding art work, particularly his painting, that spread far and wide.  Therefore, commissions for his work became more frequent and urgent.

Pope Eugenius IV called him to Rome.  While brother John was painting the Basilica of Saint Peter’s and the Vatican palace, Eugenius IV took the most opportunity not only to admire the virtue of this outstanding artist, but even more than that, the piety of this religious, his observance of the Rule, his humility, and his memorable spirit that made many people his own.

Nicholas V had an exceptional opinion about brother John.  For “he honored and reverenced this man alone, because of the integrity of his life and the excellence of his morals.”  Therefore, he commissioned him to decorate his private chapel.  When brother John had finished it, it almost seemed a prayer expressed with painted color.

At Rome, in the convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, he closed his eyes in death after a life that produced famous art, but even more exemplified religious and benevolent virtues.  For the opinion of all was that he was a “man of complete modesty and religious life.” Furthermore, “he also blossomed with many virtues.  He was meek, and honorable for his religious genius.”  Beyond these things, “he was a man distinguished for his sanctity.”  Even more, Vasarius, who collected many stories about his unblemished life in the city of Florence, was persuaded of that graceful and heavenly character which one can see even in his sacred paintings.  He did not paint on any other subjects and were the products of that greatest harmony between his holy life and his creative virtue.

Brother John, therefore, by placing his rare natural gifts at the service of art, stands both to acquire and to confer on the people of God an immense spiritual and pastoral benefit, by which they might travel more easily to God.  According to the Second Vatican Council, this is particularly fitting for sacred art, as we read in the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy: “Very rightly the fine arts are considered to rank among the noblest expressions of human genius.  This judgment applies especially to religious art and to its highest achievement, which is sacred art.  By their very nature both of the latter are related to God’s boundless beauty, for this is the reality that these human efforts are trying to express in some way.  To the extent that these works aim exclusively at turning our thoughts to God persuasively and devoutly, they are dedicated to God and to the cause of His greater honor and glory.”

Truly, Brother John, a man altogether exceptional for his spiritual life and art, has always attracted our attention.  We, therefore, believe that the time has come when he should be given the particular attention of the Church of God, although his heavenly art has not ceased speaking to us even now.

Cartoon of a Dominican novice writing

Vocation Letters: Zeal for Souls

This post continues our series of Vocation Letters from our fictional novice, Sister Mary Rosaria. Though there have been some temporal gaps, we pick up the thread of her story midway through her second year in the novitiate.

Cartoon of a Dominican novice writing

Ave + Maria

January 25, Conversion of St. Paul

Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul

Dear Mom and Dad,

Greetings in Jesus and Mary on this feast of St. Paul! What an apostle he was, filled to overflowing with zeal for the salvation of souls! No wonder our Holy Father St. Dominic loved St. Paul so much and carried his epistles around with him everywhere (along with the Gospel of St. Matthew, and the writings of Cassian on the monastic life). Our great Dominican St. Catherine of Siena, too, who was on fire for souls herself, speaks of St. Paul in ardent words as a vessel of love filled with fire for the salvation of souls. This is such a shining part of our Dominican vocation!

The section of our Custom Book “On Our Interior Life,” written in the 1890’s by the original Dominican Sisters of the Perpetual Rosary, speaks so beautifully of that “zeal for souls which we consider as the marrow of our interior life.” This is one of the elements that drew me powerfully to the Dominican Order. I know I have been here in the monastery more than two years, but I am really coming to appreciate it now all over again.

When Mother shares with us the many prayer requests people send, for health, for jobs, for loved ones who have left the Church, for situations of such anguish, or when I hear of the various grave needs of the Church and the world, how could my heart not be moved like the heart of St. Dominic! He not only sold his own books to buy food for the poor during a famine, but also spend innumerable nights in prayer crying out before the Lord, “What will become of sinners!” Hearing all these intentions inspires me to give myself more fully to God with greater generosity and fidelity in our life, and to beg Him for mercy for all people to bring them to salvation.

St. Paul said he would even wish to be damned himself if by this his brethren could be saved. How many of our own Dominican saints have experienced equal ardor in their zeal for souls! St. Catherine wanted to be a rock stuck in the mouth of hell to prevent souls from falling in! In our own cloistered way here we are sharing in this great longing of Jesus, Mary, and the saints, for the salvation of all.

Of course I keep you all in my prayers too, every day. Please pray for me, that I may continue to grow as a daughter of St. Dominic with his great zeal for souls.

With prayers in Our Lady,

Sister Mary Rosaria


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The Baptism of the Lord

During the Christmas season, the Church brings forth for us many treasures from the storehouse of the Fathers of the Church, especially in the Office of Readings.  The feast of the Epiphany celebrates Jesus’ manifestation to the world, including His adoration by the Magi, the revelation of the Blessed Trinity at Jesus’ Baptism, and the beginning of His public ministry at the Wedding at Cana.  During this past week from Epiphany to the feast of the Baptism of the Lord, the readings focus on the meaning of these events.  Today, the Second Lesson contained the following reading from a sermon by Saint Gregory Nazianzen.

Christ’s Baptism and Its Meaning for Us: Saint Gregory Nazianzen

Christ is bathed in light; let us also be bathed in light. Christ is baptized; let us also go down with him, and rise with him.

John is baptizing when Jesus draws near. Perhaps he comes to sanctify his baptizer; certainly he comes to bury sinful humanity in the waters. He comes to sanctify the Jordan for our sake and in readiness for us; he who is spirit and flesh comes to begin a new creation through the Spirit and water.

The Baptist protests; Jesus insists. Then John says: I ought to be baptized by you. He is the lamp in the presence of the sun, the voice in the presence of the Word, the friend in the presence of the Bridegroom, the greatest of all born of woman in the presence of the firstborn of all creation, the one who leapt in his mother’s womb in the presence of him who was adored in the womb, the forerunner and future forerunner in the presence of him who has already come and is to come again. I ought to be baptized by you: we should also add, “and for you,” for John is to be baptized in blood, washed clean like Peter, not only by the washing of his feet.

Jesus rises from the waters; the world rises with him. The heavens, like Paradise with its flaming sword, closed by Adam for himself and his descendants, are rent open. The Spirit comes to him as to an equal, bearing witness to his Godhead. A voice bears witness to him from heaven, his place of origin. The Spirit descends in bodily form like the dove that so long ago announced the ending of the flood and so gives honor to the body that is one with God.

Today let us do honor to Christ’s baptism and celebrate this feast in holiness. Be cleansed entirely and continue to be cleansed. Nothing gives such pleasure to God as the conversion and salvation of men, for whom his every word and every revelation exist. He wants you to become a living force for all mankind, lights shining in the world. You are to be radiant lights as you stand beside Christ, the great light, bathed in the glory of him who is the light of heaven. You are to enjoy more and more the pure and dazzling light of the Trinity, as now you have received – though not in its fullness – a ray of its splendor, proceeding from the one God, in Christ Jesus our Lord, to whom be glory and power for ever and ever. Amen.

To the right, in the detail from Fra Angelico’s fresco, we see St. Dominic and Blessed Villana looking on in adoration at this mystery, which they are called to live out as lights in the world because of their baptismal union with Christ.  Especially as we prepared for a Solemn Profession and First Profession this time last year, we realized how beautifully baptism also evokes the imagery of the Bride of the Lamb being washed a spotless white in preparation for the Wedding, as our baptismal consecration is deepened and perfected in the consecration of our religious vows.

Christmas Novena

Come, O Lord and do not delay!

Today, the 16th of December, is the beginning of the Solemn Novena for Christmas! Only a few days left to prepare for the coming of our great King and the desires of our hearts grow more and more! Yet, we have to admit that so far we have fallen short. Our efforts to prepare our hearts are not as perfect as we would like them to be, so we turn to each Person of the Holy Trinity and to Mary and Joseph for help. First we ask the Eternal Father of Mercies, in Whose bosom the Word was begotten from all eternity, and Who willed that His Son should take on our human nature, to effect in us a new birth of His Son. We ask the Son to come, take birth in our hearts and to make them entirely His. We ask the Holy Spirit who prepared Mary for the birth of the Word to prepare us too, for without His help, it cannot happen in us. We ask Our Lady to place in our hearts those same sentiments of complete oneness with the will of God which is necessary for Jesus to take birth in us, in memory of the sorrow she experienced in giving birth to her Son in a stable. And then St. Joseph, appointed by the Father as guardian of the Word, to take us in his care and provide for all our insufficiences. We include part of the Novena so you too can beseech Jesus to Come! tarry now no more!

Dominican Nuns’ Christmas Novena (Short Version) – see video below

V. And the Word was made flesh.

R. and dwelt among us.

V. Come, O Lord, and do not delay!

R. and renew the face of Israel Thy people.

V. O Jesus, have mercy on us.

R. O Mary, intercede for us.

V. O Joseph, pray for us.

R. Now and at the hour of our death. Amen.

Descend, O celestial Dew! Come, O Son of God, that justice may abound in all our works and that we many enjoy an abundance of peace. Come, creatures of the earth, before our great King, and give Him the homage of your adoration. What is man, O infinite Majesty, that Thou art mindful of him, or the son of man, that Thou shouldst visit him? What may we do to thank Thee for all Thy benefits? Thou dost ask but our hearts; it is these Thou has come to seek. Ah! Lord, we consecrate them to Thee, but with confusion, seeing them so full of miseries. Purify them, we beseech Thee, and render them worthy to serve Thee at Thy cradle, when Thou comest forth from the chaste womb of Thy most Holy Mother. This is the most ardent of our desires; and may we enjoy Thee for all eternity. Amen.

See also Solemn Novena for Christmas.