A Prayer to the Holy Spirit

A Gift from the Church of the Past

O God, 
my heart is a vain heart, 
a vagabond and unstable heart; 
while it is led by its own judgment, 
and wanting divine counsel, 
it cannot subsist in itself; 
and while its diverse ways seeks not, finds none, 
but remains miserable through labor, and void of peace: 
it agrees not with itself, it dissents from itself, 
it alters resolutions, changes the judgment, 
frames new thoughts, pulls down the old, 
and builds them up again: 
it wills and wills not; 
and never remains in the same state.

Come, Holy Spirit, 
and bring from heaven a ray of your light! 
Come, O Father of the poor, 
the giver of gifts, 
the light of the world, 
the blessed Comforter, 
the dear guest of the soul, 
and its sweetest refreshment; 
you, our repose in labor, 
our coolness in heat, 
our comfort in affliction! 

O most blessed Spirit, 
fill full the hearts of your faithful people! 
Without your influence there is nothing in us 
that is not weakness and guilt. 
O cleanse that which is sordid; 
renew that which is dried up; 
heal that which is wounded; 
bend that which is stubborn, 
cherish in your bosom that which is cold; 
guide that which is wandering; 
and grant unto your servants, 
putting their trust in you, 
the merit of your righteousness; 
grant them final salvation; 
grant them everlasting joy! 
O Lord, hear our prayer, and let our cry come unto you. Amen.
—Adapted from Bernard of Clairvaux, 12th c. In Prayers of the Middle Ages: Light from a Thousand Years, ed. J. Manning Potts (The Upper Room, 1954), alt. P.D.

Reformed Worship 155 © March 2025, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship. Used by permission.