By Veronica A. Arntz
The Great Cloud of Witnesses:
Praying to the Saints in the Confiteor
In the older form of the Confiteor, which is prayed three times
in the 1962 liturgy, specific saints are invoked: the Blessed Mother, St.
Michael the Archangel, St. John the Baptist, St. Peter, St. Paul, and then all
the Saints. While the listing of these saints in the Confiteor was not retained in the liturgical changes after the
Second Vatican Council, this ancient tradition is vital for the spiritual
growth of the members of the Body of Christ, for a number of reasons. Indeed,
praying for the intercession of the saints while we are on our journey toward
the heavenly patria is essential for
our sanctification, for these individuals have come before us and are now
worshipping before the heavenly throne of God.
The Confiteor is the prayer that asks the Lord to pardon of us of our
sins. We admit that we have sinned against our Lord, and we recognize that we
are in need of His mercy, of which we are certainly not deserving. How fitting,
then, for us to pray to the saints when asking for the Lord’s mercy. Indeed,
the Psalms of David reveal a saint who prayed to the Lord for mercy, because he
was aware of his deep and profound sinfulness: “Have mercy on me, O God,
according to your merciful love; according to your abundant mercy blot out my
transgressions” (Psalm 51:1).