Read: How Devotion to Our Lady of Good Remedy Started
Prayer:
O QUEEN OF HEAVEN AND EARTH, Most Holy Virgin, we venerate thee. Thou art the beloved Daughter of the Most High God, the chosen Mother of the Incarnate Word, the Immaculate Spouse of the Holy Spirit, and the Sacred Vessel of the Most Holy Trinity.
O Mother of the Divine Redeemer, who under the title of Our Lady of Good Remedy comes to the aid of all who call upon thee, extend thy maternal protection to us. We depend on thee, Dear Mother, as helpless and needy children depend on a tender and caring mother.
Hail, Mary....
O LADY OF GOOD REMEDY, source of unfailing help, grant that we may draw from thy treasury of graces in our time of need.
Touch the hearts of sinners, that they may seek reconciliation and forgiveness. Bring comfort to the afflicted and the lonely; help the poor and the hopeless; aid the sick and the suffering. May they be healed in body and strengthened in spirit to endure their sufferings with patient resignation and Christian fortitude.
Hail, Mary....
DEAR LADY OF GOOD REMEDY, source of unfailing help, thy compassionate heart knows a remedy for every affliction and misery we encounter in life. Help me with thy prayers and intercession to find a remedy for my problems and needs, especially for... (Mention your intentions here).
O loving Mother, on my part, I pledge to adopt a more intensely Christian lifestyle, to a more careful observance of the laws of God, to be more conscientious in fulfilling the obligations of my state in life, and to strive to be a source of healing in this broken world of ours.
Dear Lady of Good Remedy, be ever present to me, and through thy intercession, may I enjoy health of body and peace of mind, and grow stronger in the faith and in the love of thy Son, Jesus.
Hail, Mary.....
V. Pray for us, O Holy Mother of Good Remedy,
R. That we may deepen our dedication to thy Son, and make the world alive with His Spirit.

St.
Jerome is a Father and Doctor of the Church who is best known for his
compiling of the Vulgate version of the Catholic Bible, now the standard
edition in use.
St.
Raphael is first mentioned in the Book of Tobit, where he appeared
disguised in human form to Tobias, son of the blind man Tobit, and
traveled with him from Nineveh to Media. While they were in Media, the
Archangel told Tobias of Sarah, daughter of Raguel. Sarah had been
married seven previous times, but each time, on the night of the
wedding, her husband was abducted and slain by a demon. St. Raphael
convinced Tobias to present himself as a husband to Sarah, who accepted
him.
Behold
thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and shalt bring forth a son; and thou
shalt call his name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the
Son of the most High; and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of
David his father; and he shall reign in the house of Jacob for ever.
And of his kingdom there shall be no end.”
St.
Michael is the model of the Christian warrior because of the fortitude
which he showed by casting into hell the legions of damned spirits. He
is the warrior of God who will not tolerate the divine Majesty to be
challenged or offended in his presence, and who is ready to wield the
sword at any time in order to crush the enemies of the Most High. He
teaches us that it is not enough for a Catholic to behave well: it is
also his duty to fight evil. And not just an abstract evil, but evil as
it exists in the ungodly and in sinners. For St. Michael did not cast
evil into hell as a principle, a mere conception of the intellect, nor
are principles and concepts susceptible to be burned by eternal fire. It
was Lucifer and his minions that the Champion of the Almighty cast into
hell, as he hated the evil that existed in them and which they loved.
He
was a man of action, but he also was a man of continual prayer. His
actions were a mere overflowing of his interior life, which was well
nourished.
Cosmas
and Damian, who had lovingly become known in the East as the “moneyless
ones” because of their kindness, were killed around the year 283. When
the persecution under Emperor Diocletian began, their reputation as
do-gooders marked them as objects of ruthless cruelty and they were both
savagely tortured and beheaded.
Albert
was born in Parma, Italy, about 1149 to a prominent family. He became a
canon of Holy Cross Abbey in Mortoba and, in 1184, was appointed as the
Bishop of Bobbio, Italy. Soon after, he was named to the see of
Vercelli.
Gerard
was a Venetian, born in the beginning of the eleventh century. At a
young age, he consecrated himself to God and dedicated his life to
fighting for Christ. He joined the Benedictine monastery of San Giorgio
Maggiore at Venice. Not long after, he began a pilgrimage to Jerusalem,
and was passing through Hungary when King Stephen – the future St.
Stephen – asked him to remain and tutor his son. Finding the people of
Hungary likewise in need of evangelization, Gerard decided to stay and
preach.
"Yes,"
answered Mary Most Holy. "I will satisfy your request; you will die at
that hour, and you will hear the songs and praises with which the
blessed accompanied my entrance into heaven; and now prepare for your
death."
Francesco
was born in the small Italian village of Pietrelcina on May 25, 1887.
His parents, Grazio Forgione and Maria Giuseppa Di Nunzio, were peasant
farmers, but they recognized their son was close to God. When he was
only five years old, he solemnly consecrated himself to Jesus. It is
said he often spoke with Our Lord, Our Lady and his guardian angel, who
defended him against attacks by the devil. He joined the Capuchin
Franciscans at the age of fifteen, and took the name Pio with his
religious vows. After seven years of study he was ordained to the
priesthood in 1910.
However,
the wounds soon faded and then disappeared. “I do want to suffer, even
to die of suffering,” Padre Pio told Our Lady, “but all in secret." Soon
after, he experienced the first of his spiritual ecstasies.
Thomas
was born in Castile, Spain in 1488. His family was not wealthy, but his
father’s work as a miller allowed the family to be charitable and
generous towards the poor. He was sent to school at the University of
Alcala at the age of sixteen, where he threw himself enthusiastically
into his studies and, ten years later, became professor of philosophy.
Jewish
tax collectors were generally hated by their fellow Jews, and were
considered sinners by the Pharisees. When they discovered Jesus’ choice
of followers, they were scandalized, and questioned Him. “I did not come
to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matt. 9:12b-13), Jesus said to
them.
During
the 17th century the Christian faith was brought to Korea through the
zeal of lay persons. From the very beginning these Christians suffered
terrible persecutions and many suffered martyrdom.
Very
little is known about these holy martyrs other than they were killed
during the Diocletian persecution. Legend has it they threw Januarius
onto a flaming furnace, but he was unscathed. Instead, they stretched
him on a bench and beat him until his bones were exposed. When the saint
still lived, they threw him and his companions to starving wild animals
in the amphitheatre, but the animals would not touch them. Finally, the
martyrs were beheaded and died around the year 304.
Joseph
was born in 1603 in the small village of Cupertino, Italy, to very poor
parents. After his father died, his mother spared him no love and
considered him a burden. She would often abuse Joseph, which caused him
to become slow and absentminded. He was forgetful, and wandered around
the village with his mouth open, causing him to become nicknamed
“Boccaperta,” or “the gaper.”

Roberto
Bellarmino was born into impoverished Tuscan nobility at Montepulciano
on October 4, 1542. He was the third of ten children born to Vincenzo
Bellarmino and Cinthia Cervini, a sister of Cardinal Marcello Cervini,
who later became Pope Marcellus II. Educated at the Jesuit College in
Montepulciano, he entered the Society of Jesus at the age of eighteen.
After studying philosophy at the Roman College, he taught first at
Florence and then at Mondovi. He began his theological studies in Padua
in 1567, but was sent to Louvain two years later in order that he might
obtain a fuller acquaintance with the heretical teachings of the time. 
Cornelius was elected to the papal dignity during a time in which both the Church and civil society were in great turmoil.

John
– later surnamed Chrysostomos, meaning “golden-mouthed” so called on
account of his eloquence – was born in Antioch in Syria around 347.
Raised by his widowed mother, he studied under Libanius, a famous orator
of the period.
Chrysostom
was banished from Constantinople in 403 after he delivered too zealous a
sermon against immodesty and vanity. The Empress Eudoxia took his words
as a direct insult against herself. His exile was of short duration
however, because a slight earthquake that shook the city was taken as a
terrifying sign by the superstitious lady. Shortly afterwards he was
again banished for preaching against the disorder, impropriety, and
superstition occasioned by the public games commemorating the raising of
a silver statue of Eudoxia in front of the great church dedicated to
the Divine Wisdom. He was exiled to a remote place called Cucusus in the
Taurus Mountains of Armenia, where he suffered greatly from the heat,
fatigue, and the cruelty and brutality of his guards. The local bishop,
however, vied with his people in showing the aging patriarch every mark
of kindness and respect.
“God the Father gathered all the waters together and called them the sea – mare. He gathered all his graces together and called them Mary – Maria,” writes the great Marian apostle St. Louis Marie de Montfort in his renowned work, Treatise on True Devotion to Mary.
In
1683, Vienna was besieged by Turkish invaders. Jan Sobieski, the devout
King of Poland, came to the assistance of Vienna with an army that was
vastly outnumbered by that of Mustapha. Early on the morning of
September 12, having himself served at Holy Mass, the King entrusted
himself and his army to the Virgin Mary, imploring her blessing upon
himself and his troops and her assistance in the upcoming conflict. Then
rising from his knees, the "Northern Lion," as he was called by the
Turks, said aloud: “Let us now march to the enemy with an entire
confidence in the protection of heaven, under the assured patronage of
the Blessed Virgin.” And charging upon the enemy camp, they defeated and
routed the Muslims completely. The Turkish forces were overwhelmed and
Vienna was saved under the banner of Mary Most Holy.
After
spending many years in the desert under the direction of St. Anthony,
Paphnutius, the holy confessor of Egypt, was made a bishop. Paphnutius
suffered persecution under the rule of Emperor Maximinus, which is said
to have been the bloodiest persecution of Christians during the Roman
Empire. After his right eye was gouged out, and his left knee hamstrung
and mutilated, the bishop was condemned to work in the mines for
refusing to comply with traditional Roman religious practices.
No
sooner had he pronounced these words, the picture came alive and
extending her hand, the heavenly Lady laid it reassuringly on the
priest’s arm, saying:
In
the small Italian town of Sant’ Angelo, a couple prayed for a child at
the shrine of St. Nicholas of Bari. They prayed for a son and promised
to dedicate him to God if their prayers were answered. In the Spring of
1245, Nicholas was born.
At
the time, Cartagena was the main slave market of the New World.
Africans by the thousands were being shipped in from the Congo and
Angola and it was estimated that one third of them died in transit due
to their harsh treatment and the foul conditions of the voyage. Other
Jesuits had been working among them prior to Peter’s arrival in 1610,
but whereas they visited the slaves where they worked, Peter met them at
the wharf. Most often he boarded the slave ships before they even
docked, going down into their filthy and disease-ridden holds to treat
the terror-stricken human cargo. Infants and the dying, he would baptize
immediately; to the others he offered food, clothing and medical
assistance; with the help of interpreters, he taught them about the
sacraments and how to pray, educating them in the Catholic faith before
baptizing them. In the course of forty years, Peter instructed and
baptized over 300,000 slaves.