In the Upper Room in Jerusalem, between the Ascension of the Lord and the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the Apostles gathered together with the women disciples and with the Blessed Virgin Mary — and prayed for nine consecutive days.
They did not know exactly what was coming. They knew only the promise: "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth." (Acts 1:8) And so they prayed. Together. Perseveringly. For nine days.
On the tenth day, the Holy Spirit came.
That gathering in the Upper Room is the origin of every novena ever prayed. The Apostles and Our Lady did not invent a devotional technique. They simply did what love and trust and holy expectation require: they prayed without ceasing, they waited without fear, they surrendered to the will of God while asking with all their hearts for His promised gift.
The word novena comes from the Latin novem — nine. But the meaning of the nine days is not found in numerology. It is found in those ten days in Jerusalem, in that upper room, in the prayer of the first Church gathered around the Mother of God.
Our Lady of the Upper Room is the first person in history to have prayed a novena. Every Catholic who prays a novena today joins that original gathering — nine days of prayer, one heart raised to God, waiting in faith for the gift He has promised.
✝ THE THEOLOGY OF THE NOVENA ✝
What a Novena Is
A novena is nine consecutive days of dedicated prayer, offered for a specific intention, in preparation for a feast, or in thanksgiving for a grace received. It is one of the most ancient and universal forms of Catholic devotion — attested in every century of the Church's life, in every continent where the Gospel has been planted, in every language in which Catholics have prayed.
A novena is not magic. It is not a formula that compels God to act. It is an act of faith — a deliberate, structured, sustained reaching toward God that says: I trust You enough to ask. I trust You enough to persist. I trust Your will enough to surrender the outcome to You while pouring out my heart to You for nine days.
St. Augustine of Hippo, whose own conversion was the fruit of his mother Monica's decades of persevering prayer, understood this at the deepest level:
"Our heart is restless until it rests in Thee." — St. Augustine, Confessions I.1
The novena is a school of restlessness redeemed — the soul learning to channel its deepest longing into sustained, trustful, loving prayer.
The Biblical Foundation
The nine-day prayer of the Upper Room is the primary biblical foundation of the novena. But it stands within a much broader pattern of persevering prayer throughout Scripture.
The Book of Psalms is itself a novena tradition — prayers of petition, lament, praise, and trust sustained over time, offered to a God who is always faithful. "Evening and morning and at noon I utter my complaint and moan, and he hears my voice." (Psalm 55:17)
Our Lord Himself commanded perseverance in prayer. In the parable of the persistent widow (Luke 18:1–8), He explicitly taught that His disciples "ought always to pray and not lose heart." The widow's persistence before the unjust judge is offered as an image of how the children of God are to bring their needs before their heavenly Father — not once, not politely, but persistently, urgently, repeatedly, trusting that the God who loves them will answer.
St. Paul commands the same: "Pray without ceasing." (1 Thessalonians 5:17) The novena is one of the Church's ancient means of obeying this command — not vague unfocused religiosity but structured, daily, intentional prayer sustained over a defined period.
Our Lady: Model of Novena Prayer
The Blessed Virgin Mary was present in the Upper Room for those nine days of prayer (Acts 1:14). This is not incidental. She who had said "Let it be done to me according to your word" (Luke 1:38) at the Annunciation — the perfect act of surrendered, trusting prayer — was present as mother and model for the praying Church at its first novena.
She had already lived a life of novena-prayer without knowing the word. Her nine months of carrying the Word of God in her womb were nine months of the most intimate prayer imaginable — presence, waiting, surrender, love. Her vigil beside the Cross on Good Friday, her waiting through Holy Saturday, her joy at the Resurrection — all were sustained in the posture of prayer that the Upper Room made explicit.
When Catholics pray a novena to Our Lady — or when they pray any novena under her maternal intercession — they are asking the woman who modelled perfect prayer to pray with them and for them. She who prayed first in the Upper Room continues to pray. "Do whatever he tells you." (John 2:5) This is still her word to every soul that approaches her Son through her intercession.
The Structure of a Novena
A novena consists of daily prayers recited for nine consecutive days. The structure varies according to the devotion, but the constant elements are:
The intention — clearly held in heart and mind throughout the nine days. This may be a petition (healing, conversion, guidance, a specific need), an intercession for another person, thanksgiving for a grace received, or spiritual preparation for a feast day.
The daily prayer — specific to the novena being prayed. Some novenas repeat the same prayer each day; others provide a different prayer or reflection for each day, offering a progressive spiritual journey through the nine days.
The traditional prayers — most novenas include the foundational prayers of Catholic devotion: the Our Father (the prayer Christ Himself taught, Matthew 6:9–13), the Hail Mary (grounded in the Angel Gabriel's greeting at the Annunciation, Luke 1:28, and Elizabeth's greeting at the Visitation, Luke 1:42), and the Glory Be (the doxology of praise to the Holy Trinity).
Perseverance — the nine days are prayed consecutively. If a day is missed, the novena may be resumed, though the traditional practice emphasises continuity. The persistence is itself the prayer — the daily return to God, the daily recommitment to the intention, the daily act of faith that says: I believe You hear me.
Types of Novenas
Preparation Novenas are prayed in the nine days immediately before a feast, to arrive at the celebration having already entered into its mystery through prayer. The Christmas Novena beginning 16 December, the Pentecost Novena from Ascension to Pentecost Sunday, the Novena to Our Lady of the Assumption beginning 6 August — these are preparation novenas in the deepest sense, following the pattern of the original Upper Room novena.
Petition Novenas are prayed to seek a specific grace through the intercession of a saint or through direct approach to God. The Novena to St. Jude for desperate cases, the Novena to St. Anthony for lost things, the Novena to St. Joseph for families and the dying — these direct the soul's need to a specific intercessor who stands in God's presence and presents that need with the full weight of friendship with Him.
Thanksgiving Novenas are prayed in gratitude for a grace received — nine days of praise and thanksgiving, acknowledging that every good gift comes from the Father of lights (James 1:17).
Mourning Novenas are prayed in the nine days following a death, surrounding the soul of the departed with prayer and commending them to God's mercy. The Church has observed this tradition since her earliest centuries — nine days of prayer for the faithful departed, entrusting them to the God who is the resurrection and the life (John 11:25).
Novenas and Indulgences
The Church has attached indulgences to many forms of prayer, including certain novenas. An indulgence is the remission, before God, of the temporal punishment due to sins already forgiven — applied either to oneself or to the souls in Purgatory.
The Enchiridion Indulgentiarum — the Church's official handbook of indulgences — grants a partial indulgence for any prayer piously recited to God. Since a novena involves nine days of daily prayer, it carries nine days of partial indulgence for the soul that prays it devoutly.
Certain specific novenas have historically carried plenary indulgences — full remission of all temporal punishment — under the usual conditions: Sacramental Confession within a reasonable period, reception of Holy Communion on the day of the feast, prayer for the Holy Father's intentions, and a sincere detachment from all sin, even venial.
A Catholic who prays the novenas on this calendar is not merely reciting words. They are participating in the Church's treasury of grace — the merits of Christ and the saints, applied through the Church's ministry to souls here and in Purgatory. Every novena prayed devoutly is an act of love toward God and, potentially, toward the Holy Souls who await the completion of their purification.
Novena Prayer and the Will of God
It must be stated clearly, because confusion on this point can damage the faith of those who pray novenas: a novena is not a guarantee of the specific outcome requested.
God answers every prayer. He does not always answer in the way we hope or on the timeline we desire. He answers as a Father — with infinite wisdom, infinite love, and perfect knowledge of what His child truly needs. Sometimes the answer is yes, immediately and unmistakably. Sometimes it is yes, but not yet. Sometimes it is no — because the thing asked for would not serve the soul's true good or God's larger purposes.
St. Teresa of Ávila, Doctor of the Church and one of the greatest teachers of prayer in the Church's history, put this with her characteristic directness:
"Let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you. All things pass away. God never changes. Patience obtains all things. Whoever has God lacks nothing. God alone suffices."
The novena is not a formula that compels. It is a relationship that trusts. Nine days of prayer do not change God's mind — God's mind does not need changing. They change the soul that prays — opening it, purifying it, aligning it more closely with the will of God so that it can receive whatever God chooses to give.
Any novena instructions that promise guaranteed specific results should be set aside. The promise of the novena is not "you will receive exactly what you ask." The promise is Christ's own: "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you." (Matthew 7:7) The giving, the finding, and the opening are always in God's hands — and in those hands, all things are ordered to the good of those who love Him (Romans 8:28).
✝ HOW TO PRAY A NOVENA ✝
Step by Step
1. Choose Your Novena. Select the novena that corresponds to your intention or to the feast you are preparing for. The calendar below gives you the novena start date for every major feast and saint throughout the year. Begin on the date indicated so that your ninth day of prayer falls on the eve of the feast.
2. Set Your Intention. Hold your intention clearly before God. Be specific and sincere. Place the intention in Our Lady's hands at the beginning and ask her to present it to her Son.
3. Begin with the Sign of the Cross. The Sign of the Cross is the Catholic's daily renewal of baptism — the claim of the Cross over one's life, the invocation of the Holy Trinity. Every prayer worth praying begins here.
4. Recite the Daily Prayer. Follow the novena text for that day. Give it your full attention. Pray the words, do not merely say them.
5. Add the Traditional Prayers. Most novenas include the Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be. These are not additions to fill time — they are the Church's essential vocabulary of prayer, grounding every devotion in the foundational acts of faith, hope, and love.
6. Reflect and Be Still. After the formal prayers, spend a few moments in silence. Listen. The God you have addressed is present. He hears. He may respond — not always in words, but in peace, in light, in the quiet deepening of faith.
7. Close with the Sign of the Cross.
8. Repeat for Nine Days.
9. Trust. This is the hardest and most important step. Place your intention in God's hands and leave it there. Do not take it back with anxiety. "Cast all your anxieties on him, because he cares for you." (1 Peter 5:7)
For Families and Groups
Novenas prayed together in families or communities carry a particular grace. Our Lord promised: "Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them." (Matthew 18:20) The prayers may be adapted from first person singular to first person plural — "I" becomes "we," "me" becomes "us" — so that the whole family or group prays with one voice and one intention.
Families that establish the practice of praying novenas together — particularly the great preparation novenas before Christmas, Easter, and the major Marian feasts — are building into their home life the rhythm of the Church's own prayer. They are turning their domestic church into an Upper Room.
[The complete month-by-month Novena Calendar follows below — updated annually for the current liturgical year.]
✝ Omnia ad Majorem Dei Gloriam ✝ All for the Greater Glory of God
January (Christmas/Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 24 | Jan 1 | † St. Basil & St. Gregory Nazianzen | January 2 |
| Dec 25 | Jan 2 | † St. Genevieve | January 3 |
| Dec 26 | Jan 3 | † St. Elizabeth Ann Seton | January 4 |
| Dec 27 | Jan 4 | † St. John Neumann | January 5 |
| Dec 28 | Jan 5 | † The Epiphany of the Lord | January 6 |
| Jan 5 | Jan 13 | † Infant Jesus of Prague | January 14 |
| Jan 11 | Jan 19 | † St. Sebastian | January 20 |
| Jan 13 | Jan 21 | † St. Vincent, Deacon & Martyr | January 22 |
| Jan 15 | Jan 23 | † St. Francis de Sales | January 24 |
| Jan 16 | Jan 24 | † Conversion of St. Paul | January 25 |
| Jan 17 | Jan 25 | † Sts. Timothy & Titus | January 26 |
| Jan 18 | Jan 26 | † St. Angela Merici | January 27 |
| Jan 19 | Jan 27 | † St. Thomas Aquinas | January 28 |
February (Ordinary Time/Lent)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 24 | Feb 1 | Presentation of the Lord | February 2 |
| Jan 25 | Feb 2 | † St. Blaise | February 3 |
| Jan 27 | Feb 4 | † St. Agatha | February 5 |
| Jan 28 | Feb 5 | † St. Paul Miki & Companions | February 6 |
| Jan 30 | Feb 7 | † St. Josephine Bakhita | February 8 |
| Feb 1 | Feb 9 | † St. Scholastica | February 10 |
| Feb 2 | Feb 10 | Our Lady of Lourdes | February 11 |
| Feb 5 | Feb 13 | † St. Valentine | February 14 |
| Feb 13 | Feb 21 | Chair of † St. Peter | February 22 |
| Feb 14 | Feb 22 | † St. Polycarp | February 23 |
March (Lent)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 20 | Feb 28 | † St. David of Wales | March 1 |
| Feb 22 | Mar 2 | † St. Katharine Drexel | March 3 |
| Feb 23 | Mar 3 | † St. Casimir | March 4 |
| Feb 27 | Mar 7 | † Sts. Perpetua & Felicity | March 7 |
| Feb 28 | Mar 7 | † St. John of God | March 8 |
| Mar 1 | Mar 8 | † St. Frances of Rome | March 9 |
| Mar 8 | Mar 16 | † St. Patrick | March 17 |
| Mar 9 | Mar 17 | † St. Cyril of Jerusalem | March 18 |
| Mar 10 | Mar 18 | † St. Joseph, Husband of Mary | March 19 |
| Mar 16 | Mar 24 | Annunciation of the Lord | March 25 |
| Mar 17 | Mar 25 | † St. Margaret Clitherow | March 26 |
| Mar 27 | Apr 4 | † St. Vincent Ferrer | April 5 |
April (Lent/Eastertide)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 2 | Apr 10 | † St. Gemma Galgani | April 11 |
| Apr 4 | Apr 12 | † St. Martin I, Pope & Martyr | April 13 |
| Apr 7 | Apr 15 | † St. Bernadette of Lourdes | April 16 |
| Apr 17 | Apr 25 | Our Lady of Good Counsel | April 26 |
| Apr 19 | Apr 28 | † St. Louis de Montfort | April 28 |
| Apr 20 | Apr 29 | † St. Catherine of Siena | April 29 |
| Apr 22 | Apr 30 | † St. Peregrine | May 1 |
| Apr 27 | May 5 | † St. Dominic Savio | May 6 |
May (Eastertide)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 27 | May 5 | † St. Dominic Savio | May 6 |
| May 4 | May 12 | Our Lady of Fatima | May 13 |
| May 6 | May 14 | † St. Dymphna | May 15 |
| May 9 | May 17 | † St. John I, Pope & Martyr | May 18 |
| May 12 | May 20 | Ascension of the Lord | May 21* |
| May 13 | May 21 | † St. Rita of Cascia | May 22 |
| May 15 | May 23 | Our Lady Help of Christians | May 24 |
| May 16 | May 24 | † St. Bede the Venerable | May 25 |
| May 17 | May 25 | † St. Philip Neri | May 26 |
| May 18 | May 26 | † St. Augustine of Canterbury | May 27 |
| May 24 | June 1 | Corpus Christi | June 2* |
June (Eastertide/Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| May 29 | June 6 | Sacred Heart of Jesus | June 7* |
| May 30 | June 7 | Immaculate Heart of Mary | June 8* |
| May 31 | June 12 | † St. Anthony of Padua (13-day) | June 13 |
| June 12 | June 20 | † St. Aloysius Gonzaga | June 21 |
| June 13 | June 21 | † St. Thomas More | June 22 |
| June 15 | June 23 | Nativity of † St. John the Baptist | June 24 |
| June 17 | June 25 | † St. Josemaría Escrivá | June 26 |
| June 18 | June 26 | Our Lady of Perpetual Succour | June 27 |
| June 19 | June 27 | † St. Irenaeus | June 28 |
| June 20 | June 28 | † Sts. Peter & Paul, Apostles | June 29 |
| June 24 | July 2 | † St. Thomas the Apostle | July 3 |
| June 27 | July 5 | † St. Maria Goretti | July 6 |
July (Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| July 2 | July 10 | † St. Benedict of Nursia | July 11 |
| July 5 | July 13 | † St. Camillus de Lellis | July 14 |
| July 7 | July 15 | Our Lady of Mount Carmel | July 16 |
| July 15 | July 23 | † St. Charbel Makhlouf | July 24 |
| July 17 | July 25 | † St. Anne | July 26 |
| July 19 | July 27 | † St. Alphonsa | July 28 |
| July 22 | July 30 | † St. Ignatius of Loyola | July 31 |
| July 23 | July 31 | † St. Alphonsus Liguori | August 1 |
| July 26 | Aug 3 | † St. John Marie Vianney | August 4 |
| July 30 | Aug 7 | † St. Dominic Guzman | August 8 |
August (Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 1 | Aug 9 | † St. Lawrence, Deacon & Martyr | August 10 |
| Aug 2 | Aug 10 | † St. Clare of Assisi | August 11 |
| Aug 2 | Aug 10 | † St. Philomena | August 11 |
| Aug 6 | Aug 14 | Our Lady of the Assumption | August 15 |
| Aug 8 | Aug 16 | † St. Roque | August 17 |
| Aug 17 | Aug 25 | Our Lady of Czestochowa | August 26 |
| Aug 18 | Aug 26 | † St. Monica | August 27 |
| Aug 19 | Aug 27 | † St. Augustine of Hippo | August 28 |
| Aug 20 | Aug 28 | Passion of † St. John the Baptist | August 29 |
September (Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 30 | Sep 7 | Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary | September 8 |
| Aug 31 | Sep 8 | † St. Peter Claver | September 9 |
| Sep 3 | Sep 11 | Most Holy Name of Mary | September 12 |
| Sep 4 | Sep 12 | † St. John Chrysostom | September 13 |
| Sep 5 | Sep 13 | Exaltation of the Holy Cross | September 14 |
| Sep 6 | Sep 14 | Our Lady of Sorrows | September 15 |
| Sep 7 | Sep 15 | † Sts. Cornelius & Cyprian | September 16 |
| Sep 8 | Sep 16 | † St. Robert Bellarmine | September 17 |
| Sep 12 | Sep 20 | † St. Matthew, Apostle & Evangelist | September 21 |
| Sep 14 | Sep 22 | † St. Pius of Pietrelcina (Padre Pio) | September 23 |
| Sep 18 | Sep 26 | † St. Vincent de Paul | September 27 |
| Sep 20 | Sep 28 | † Sts. Michael, Gabriel, & Raphael | September 29 |
| Sep 21 | Sep 29 | † St. Jerome | September 30 |
October (Ordinary Time)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 22 | Sep 30 | † St. Thérèse of Lisieux | October 1 |
| Sep 23 | Oct 1 | Guardian Angels | October 2 |
| Sep 25 | Oct 3 | † St. Francis of Assisi | October 4 |
| Sep 26 | Oct 4 | † St. Faustina Kowalska | October 5 |
| Sep 27 | Oct 5 | † St. Bruno | October 6 |
| Sep 28 | Oct 6 | Our Lady of the Rosary | October 7 |
| Oct 6 | Oct 14 | † St. Teresa of Avila | October 15 |
| Oct 7 | Oct 15 | † St. Margaret Mary Alacoque | October 16 |
| Oct 8 | Oct 16 | † St. Ignatius of Antioch | October 17 |
| Oct 9 | Oct 17 | † St. Luke, Evangelist | October 18 |
| Oct 10 | Oct 18 | † Sts. John de Brébeuf & Isaac Jogues | October 19 |
| Oct 13 | Oct 21 | † St. John Paul II | October 22 |
| Oct 15 | Oct 23 | † St. Anthony Mary Claret | October 24 |
| Oct 19 | Oct 27 | † Sts. Simon & Jude, Apostles | October 28 |
November (Ordinary Time/Advent)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 23 | Oct 31 | All Saints’ Day | November 1 |
| Oct 24 | Nov 1 | All Souls’ Day | November 2 |
| Oct 25 | Nov 2 | † St. Martin de Porres | November 3 |
| Oct 26 | Nov 3 | † St. Charles Borromeo | November 4 |
| Nov 2 | Nov 10 | † St. Martin of Tours | November 11 |
| Nov 3 | Nov 11 | † St. Josaphat | November 12 |
| Nov 4 | Nov 12 | † St. Frances Xavier Cabrini | November 13 |
| Nov 6 | Nov 14 | † St. Albert the Great | November 15 |
| Nov 7 | Nov 15 | † St. Margaret of Scotland | November 16 |
| Nov 8 | Nov 16 | † St. Elizabeth of Hungary | November 17 |
| Nov 9 | Nov 17 | Dedication of Basilicas of † Sts. Peter & Paul | November 18 |
| Nov 13 | Nov 21 | † St. Cecilia | November 22 |
| Nov 14 | Nov 22 | † St. Clement I, Pope | November 23 |
| Nov 15 | Nov 23 | † St. Andrew Dung-Lac & Companions | November 24 |
| Nov 16 | Nov 24 | † St. Catherine of Alexandria | November 25 |
| Nov 21 | Nov 29 | † St. Andrew, Apostle | November 30 |
December (Advent)
| Novena Start | Novena End | Saint/Feast | Feast Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 24 | Dec 2 | † St. Francis Xavier | December 3 |
| Nov 25 | Dec 3 | † St. John Damascene | December 4 |
| Nov 27 | Dec 5 | † St. Nicholas | December 6 |
| Nov 28 | Dec 6 | † St. Ambrose | December 7 |
| Nov 29 | Dec 7 | Our Lady of Immaculate Conception | December 8 |
| Nov 30 | Dec 8 | † St. Juan Diego | December 9 |
| Dec 3 | Dec 11 | Our Lady of Guadalupe | December 12 |
| Dec 4 | Dec 12 | † St. Lucy | December 13 |
| Dec 5 | Dec 13 | † St. John of the Cross | December 14 |
| Dec 16 | Dec 24 | Nativity of the Lord (Christmas) | December 25 |
| Dec 17 | Dec 25 | † St. Stephen, First Martyr | December 26 |
| Dec 18 | Dec 26 | † St. John, Apostle & Evangelist | December 27 |
| Dec 19 | Dec 27 | Holy Innocents | December 28 |
| Dec 20 | Dec 28 | † St. Thomas Becket | December 29 |
| Dec 22 | Dec 30 | † St. Sylvester I, Pope | December 31 |
*Note: Dates for movable feasts (e.g., Ascension, Corpus Christi, Sacred Heart) are approximate for 2025, based on Easter Sunday, April 20. Adjust as per local liturgical calendar.
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