Catholic Confirmation Prayers for Candidates, Sponsors & Families
The Come Holy Spirit, Act of Contrition, and St. Michael Prayer — for candidates, sponsors, and parents. For the weeks of preparation, the day of the sacrament, and the life the Holy Spirit begins at the anointing.
What the Sacrament of Confirmation is and why catholic confirmation prayer matters
The sacrament that completes baptismCatholic Confirmation prayers help confirmation candidates, sponsors, and families prepare spiritually for the Sacrament of Confirmation — one of the three sacraments of initiation through which the Catholic Church brings a person into full membership. Through the Come Holy Spirit, Act of Contrition, and St. Michael Prayer, candidates invoke the Holy Spirit whose outpouring the sacrament is. At baptism, the Holy Spirit takes up dwelling in the soul. At Confirmation, the same Spirit is given more fully: the seven gifts are deepened, the person is sealed as a soldier of Christ, and the grace received as an infant is now ratified by the person's own free choice. The Catechism calls Confirmation "the special outpouring of the Holy Spirit as once granted to the apostles on the day of Pentecost" (CCC 1302). Something of the same order as Pentecost is taking place — not in the same public and dramatic way, but with the same theological reality: the Spirit coming in fullness on a person who has chosen to receive him.
This is why the preparation for Confirmation matters. The sacrament is not automatic. It requires — more than baptism, which is received as an infant — the disposition of the person receiving it. The Church asks candidates to prepare through prayer, instruction, examination of conscience, and Confession. The weeks before Confirmation are a novena of preparation: a sustained petition for the Spirit who is about to be given. The holy spirit confirmation prayer known as the Come Holy Spirit is not merely devotional — it is the specific prayer of the rite itself, invoking the one whose action the anointing signifies. The Act of Contrition is the prayer of the examination and Confession that should precede the sacrament of Confirmation. The St. Michael Prayer is the prayer for the soldier's protection: at Confirmation the person is configured more fully to Christ the warrior-king, and St. Michael is the warrior who guards that configuration. Understanding what each confirmation prayer catholic tradition has preserved helps the candidate and sponsor pray with the full meaning of the sacrament in view.
For sponsors, the prayer for confirmation sponsor is a specific and lifelong responsibility. The sponsor stands beside the candidate, places a hand on their shoulder at the moment of anointing, and presents them to the bishop. What they promise is what godparents promise at baptism: continued prayer and support for the faith of the person they have accompanied. A sponsor who does not pray daily for their candidate before, during, and after Confirmation has not fully understood the role. The prayer commitment taken on at Confirmation is lifelong — the same as the one taken at baptism, made visible again at this sacrament.
A catholic confirmation blessing for candidates and sponsors
For 2026 Confirmation candidates · sponsors · parentsA catholic confirmation blessing is a prayer of invocation and entrusting — distinct from the sacramental rite itself, which is administered by the bishop through anointing with Sacred Chrism. A blessing for a confirmation candidate is a personal prayer spoken by a parent, sponsor, or godparent in the days surrounding the ceremony. It asks the Holy Spirit to come to a specific person in a specific moment, names the seven gifts being sought, and entrusts the one being confirmed to the intercession of Our Lady and the candidate's chosen patron saint.
The Church has always encouraged the prayer of family and sponsors around the sacraments precisely because the sacraments take place within a community of faith, and the community's prayer surrounds what the bishop's anointing accomplishes. A confirmation blessing from a parent is among the most lasting spiritual gifts a parent can give — the act of naming a child before God and asking the Holy Spirit to come to them is the priestly dimension of parenthood that the Church recognizes as real. A patron saint medal of the candidate's chosen saint given alongside this blessing on Confirmation day is the physical anchor of the intercessory relationship it begins.
The blessing below may be prayed by a sponsor, parent, or the candidate themselves — on the morning of Confirmation, during the nine days of preparation, or at any point when the person being confirmed needs to be named before God and entrusted to the Spirit's care.
to [name] who stands at this threshold.
Seal them with wisdom and understanding,
counsel and fortitude,
knowledge, piety, and holy fear.
Let the seven gifts given at their baptism
be deepened today into a life
that is recognizably Yours.
St. Michael, guard what the Spirit gives.
Our Lady of Pentecost,
intercede for them now and always.
Amen.
Find the right catholic confirmation prayer for your situation
Choose your role — we'll find the right prayerFinding the right prayer for confirmation candidate, sponsor, or parent depends on where you stand in relation to the sacrament. The prayer of a teenager preparing is different from the prayer of a parent watching their child receive. The prayer of a sponsor is different from the prayer of an adult being confirmed at Easter Vigil. Choose your situation.
Catholic confirmation prayers — for candidates, sponsors & the day of the sacrament
Full text in English & Spanish on each prayer pageThe Come Holy Spirit is the holy spirit confirmation prayer in the most direct sense: it names and invokes the person of the Trinity whose outpouring the sacrament of Confirmation is. "Fill the hearts of Thy faithful and enkindle in them the fire of Thy love" — this is the prayer of the candidate in the weeks before Confirmation, the prayer of the sponsor for the candidate they are presenting, and the prayer of the bishop during the rite itself. The seven gifts listed in the prayer — wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, fear of the Lord — are precisely the gifts Confirmation deepens. Prayed daily for nine days before Confirmation, it constitutes a Confirmation novena: the ancient practice of nine days of prayer before a major spiritual event, modeled on the nine days the disciples spent in prayer between the Ascension and Pentecost.
The Church strongly encourages — and most Confirmation programs require — that candidates receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation before Confirmation. This is not bureaucratic. The logic is theological: the Holy Spirit is given in fullness to a soul that has prepared itself to receive him, and Confession is the preparation that removes the obstacle of unconfessed sin. The Act of Contrition is the prayer of that preparation: prayed in the examination of conscience before Confession, and again aloud in the confessional during the sacrament. A confirmation prayer for teenager candidates who have been away from Confession for years naturally includes this act of contrition — the Confirmation preparation Confession is often the most significant one of their life, the first one felt as a person who has chosen the faith rather than a child who was brought to it.
Confirmation was long described as making the recipient a "soldier of Christ" — language that has fallen somewhat out of fashion but has not lost its theological accuracy. The sacrament of Confirmation configures the person more fully to Christ as priest, prophet, and king — the royal-warrior dimension of Christ's identity is part of what Confirmation imparts. St. Michael is the warrior archangel, the commander of heaven's armies, the one whose name means "Who is like God?" — the battle cry against the pride that is the root of every opposition to the faith. The St. Michael Prayer, added to the daily prayer of the newly confirmed, is the practical expression of what the sacrament has just made them: a person now more fully equipped for the spiritual combat that a deliberate Catholic life inevitably involves. A St. Michael medal, given on the day of Confirmation, is the physical sign of this warrior patronage.
The guardian angel assigned at birth — or in many traditions at baptism — accompanies the person through Confirmation as the sacrament deepens the life of grace the angel was assigned to protect. Many spiritual directors recommend that the newly confirmed add the Guardian Angel Prayer to their daily practice immediately after Confirmation, alongside the Come Holy Spirit and the St. Michael Prayer. The three together — the Spirit who has just been given, the warrior archangel who guards the kingdom, and the personal angel assigned from birth — constitute a complete morning prayer for a newly confirmed Catholic. The Guardian Angel Prayer takes thirty seconds. It requires nothing of the emotional state. It only requires being said.
Our Lady was present at Pentecost — the event that Confirmation sacramentally re-enacts. Acts 1:14 places her explicitly in the upper room, praying with the disciples in the nine days between the Ascension and the descent of the Spirit. She was the first to receive the Holy Spirit in fullness at the Annunciation. She understands from the inside what is being given at the Confirmation ceremony. The Hail Mary prayed on the day of Confirmation — by the candidate, by the parents, by the sponsor — is the act of placing the newly confirmed under the intercession of the one who is most familiar with what has just been given and what it asks. Many families pray a decade of the Rosary together on the evening of Confirmation, offering the joyful or glorious mysteries for the candidate.
After Confirmation — when the three sacraments of initiation are complete — the Our Father is prayed from a new position. The person is now fully initiated: baptized, confirmed, and (assuming First Communion has been received) Eucharistic. "Our Father" is now prayed from within the full family of God, with the Holy Spirit's gifts deepened by the sacrament of Confirmation and the Eucharistic relationship established by First Communion. The petition "Thy kingdom come" takes on the weight of the confirmed person's new responsibility: they are now a fully equipped member of the Body of Christ, called to help build what they are asking to come. Many spiritual directors recommend the Our Father as the anchor of a post-Confirmation daily prayer practice, prayed slowly — one petition held and examined before moving to the next.
The most lasting Catholic confirmation gift is a patron saint medal of the candidate's chosen Confirmation saint — worn daily as the physical anchor of the intercessory relationship begun at the anointing. St. Michael, St. Francis, St. Thérèse, St. Joan of Arc, and hundreds more are available handcrafted in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing with a limited lifetime guarantee.
What happens at the Catholic confirmation ceremony — the five moments explained
The moments of the rite and their meaningHow to prepare for Confirmation with prayer — a guide for candidates & sponsors
For 2026 candidates · sponsors · parents in the weeks before the sacramentThe nine days between the Ascension and Pentecost — during which the disciples, with Mary, prayed in the upper room waiting for the Spirit — is the model for all novenas. A Confirmation novena is the same: nine days of the Come Holy Spirit, prayed daily, asking for the Spirit who is about to be given more fully. This catholic confirmation prayer can be prayed by the candidate alone, by the candidate and sponsor together, or by the whole family. The nine days before Confirmation is not a deadline for rushing through preparation — it is the sustained petition that disposes the soul for what is coming. Begin nine days before and pray it every day until the morning of the sacrament.
Sponsors: if your candidate is not praying the novena, you can pray it for them — asking the Spirit to come to the person you are accompanying whether or not they are asking themselves.
The Church asks candidates to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation before Confirmation. The Act of Contrition is the prayer of that preparation — the examination of conscience that precedes Confession, and the prayer spoken aloud in the confessional. For many teenagers, this Confession is the most honest one they have made, precisely because the sacrament of Confirmation is the moment they are choosing the faith themselves rather than having it chosen for them. Go honestly. Name what needs naming. The sacrament does the rest. The Holy Spirit given at Confirmation enters a soul that has been cleared by absolution.
The Confirmation saint is a lifelong patron — a specific person in heaven whose intercession the confirmed Catholic can claim with particular familiarity because they share a name. The choice deserves prayer, not a quick search for the most familiar name. Ask: whose life looks like what you want your life to look like? Whose patronage addresses what you actually need? Whose example challenges you rather than merely comforting you? Pray to several candidates. Ask them to make themselves known. The Catholic novenas for specific saints are a practical way to pray toward a Confirmation saint decision — nine days of asking a saint to intercede, and seeing whether the relationship feels right.
A patron saint medal of the Confirmation saint, given on the day of the sacrament, is among the most meaningful and lasting Confirmation gifts.
The sponsor's role at Confirmation is the same as the godparent's role at baptism — a lifelong spiritual responsibility, not a one-day ceremony. Before the sacrament: pray the Come Holy Spirit daily for your candidate. On the day: pray it again as you stand beside them during the anointing. After the sacrament: pray one Hail Mary or Our Father for them every day, as you would for a godchild. Many sponsors lose contact with their candidates after the ceremony. The prayer does not require proximity. One prayer, daily, for this specific person: that the gifts given at Confirmation bear fruit in their life. That commitment, sustained for years, is the most significant thing a sponsor can offer.
The grace of Confirmation is given once — at the anointing. Whether it bears fruit depends on what the confirmed person does with it. The three daily prayers that complete the sacrament of Confirmation in practice: the Come Holy Spirit in the morning (asking for the gifts that were given), the Guardian Angel Prayer for protection (deepened by the sacrament), and the St. Michael Prayer for the spiritual combat that a deliberate Catholic life involves. Three prayers. Under three minutes. The sacrament already given; the daily practice that makes its fruit visible.