How
The Prayer of St. Michael Came to be Written
It is impossible to
understand why the prayer to St. Michael came to be omitted after all
Low Masses on Sunday, especially now when we need the protection of this
angelic warrior more than at an other time in history. We wish the
Church authorities would reinstate the great prayer to St. Michael, and
perhaps that would happen if we respectfully petitioned of bishops. In
the meantime, we can all say the prayer privately in our homes, chapels
and churches. We need this prince of the heavenly host in the present
struggle.
Pope Leo XIII, realizing by Divine
enlightenment the present and future struggles of the Church against the
powers of hell, felt convinced that through the intervention of St.
Michael, hell would be conquered, and the Church restored to peace and
liberty. He therefore composed a prayer in honor of the warrior
archangel, and ordered it to be recited daily after Los Mass in all the
churches throughout the Christian world.

This is how this prayer came to be
written: It is said that one day having celebrated the Holy Sacrifice,
the aged Pontiff Leo XIII was in conference with the Cardinals. Suddenly
he sank to the floor in a deep swoon. Physicians who hastened to his
side feared that he had already expired, for they could find no trace of
his pulse. However, after a short interval the Holy Father rallied, and
opening his eyes exclaimed with great emotion: "Oh what a horrible
picture I was permitted to see!" He had been shown in spirit the
tremendous activities of the evil spirits and their ravings against the
Church. But in the midst of this vision of horror he had also beheld
consoling visions of the glorious Archangel Michael, who had appeared
and cast Satan and his legions back into the abyss of hell. Soon
afterward he composed the well-known prayer.
We know that the gates of hell shall
never prevail against the Church, for Our Lord has promised to be with
her till the end of time, but we must do our part in defending her
cause. God might cast the angels down to hell by a single act of His
will, but He chose rather to send against them His armies of loyal
spirits, under the leadership of the great St. Michael. So too, in the
present critical times, He could confound the enemies of the Church by
merely willing to do so. But He wills, rather, that we should cooperate
in her defense, under the leadership of the great captain of the
heavenly hosts.

Pope John Paul II (St. Peter's Square,
Sunday, April 24 1994):
"May prayer strengthen us for the spiritual battle we are told
about in the Letter to the Ephesians: "Draw strength from the Lord
and from His mighty power" (Ephesians 6:10). The Book of Revelation
refers to this same battle, recalling before our eyes the image of St.
Michael the Archangel (Revelation 12:7). Pope Leo XIII certainly had a
very vivid recollection of this scene when, at the end of the last
century, he introduced a special prayer to St. Michael throughout the
Church. Although this prayer is no longer recited at the end of Mass, I
ask everyone not to forget it and to recite it to obtain help in the
battle against forces of darkness and against the spirit of this
world."