PRYR
Love / Holiness / Renewal · 3rd century

For Christian Graces

An ancient prayer from Old Gallican Sacramentary for peace, love, holiness.

Original prayer

For Christian Graces

Grant Thy servants, O God, to be set on fire with Thy Spirit, strengthened by Thy power, illuminated by Thy splendour, filled with Thy grace, and to go forward by Thine aid. Give them, O Lord, a right faith, perfect love, true humility. Grant, O Lord, that there may be in us simple affection, brave patience, persevering obedience, perpetual peace, a pure mind, a right and honest heart, a good will, a holy conscience, spiritual strength, a life unspotted and unblamable; and after having manfully finished our course, may we be enabled happily to enter into Thy kingdom; through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.

Direct answer

What this prayer is for

This prayer is for peace, love, holiness. It gives the request old words: fewer tricks, more flame.

peaceloveholinessgracestrength
Use cases

Pray this when you’re asking for

  • peace, love, holiness
  • mercy that is stronger than your mood
  • faithfulness when your own words are thin
  • God’s help for someone you are carrying in prayer
Short version

A shorter way to pray it

Lord, hear this ancient prayer for peace, love, holiness. Give mercy, strength, and a heart made faithful before Thee. Amen.

Meaning

What this prayer means

This prayer comes from the ancient church’s habit of asking directly: for mercy, for holiness, for protection, for light. It does not perform spirituality. It reaches for God.

Use it as written, or let it become a frame for the person and need in front of you.

Personalize it

Pray it for yourself or someone else

For myself

Lord, hear this prayer in me: peace, love, holiness.

For a friend

Lord, remember [Name]. Give them peace, love, holiness.

For a group

Lord, grant us together peace, love, holiness, and keep us faithful before Thee.

FAQ

Questions about this prayer

What is this prayer for?

It is for peace, love, holiness.

Where does it come from?

It appears in Prayers of the Early Church, edited by J. Manning Potts, available through Project Gutenberg.

Can I pray this for someone else?

Yes. Change the pronouns or add a name, while keeping the heart of the prayer intact.