Catholic Prayers for Addiction & Recovery

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Catholic Prayers for Addiction & Recovery

For those in the grip of addiction, those in recovery fighting to stay there, and the families who keep praying when nothing visible changes. The Catholic tradition has been praying this prayer for a very long time.

St. Monica · St. Maximilian Kolbe
6 prayers
English & Spanish
Print any prayer card
Updated for 2026
Catholic prayer for addiction and recovery — a rosary on a recovery journal for those struggling and the families who pray for them
I

What Catholic addiction prayer offers

Not willpower — something larger than willpower

A Catholic prayer for addiction is not, at its heart, a request for more willpower — it is a turning toward grace. The Catholic Church does not treat addiction as a moral failing alone. The Catechism acknowledges that "the use of drugs inflicts very grave damage on human health and life" and recognizes that addiction involves physical, psychological, and spiritual dimensions that simple moral condemnation does not address (CCC 2291). Addiction compromises freedom — and the Church's moral theology, which always considers freedom in assessing culpability, has always been more nuanced about addiction than its reputation suggests. These prayers are prayed for every form of it — alcohol addiction, drug dependency, opioid addiction, gambling, and other compulsive behaviors — because the spiritual dynamic underneath them is the same: a freedom that has been compromised, and a person who cannot simply will themselves free.

What Catholic faith offers addiction is not primarily willpower or moral improvement. It is surrender — the theological conviction that the self cannot fix itself by itself, that grace operates where human effort has run out. This is exactly the insight at the heart of every effective recovery program. Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson described the AA program as fundamentally spiritual, built on the recognition that a power greater than oneself was required. That insight is older than AA — it is the core of Catholic prayer, and of any honest prayer for recovery.

St. Monica prayed for her son Augustine for seventeen years while he moved further away. She is the patron of all who pray for a loved one in addiction — not because she succeeded quickly, but because she never stopped. St. Maximilian Kolbe, who voluntarily entered a starvation bunker at Auschwitz to save another man's life, is the patron of recovery — a man whose entire spirituality was built on total self-gift and complete dependence on Our Lady. Both saints know what it is to pray without visible result for an extended period. Both know what it is for that prayer, eventually, to matter.

The Serenity Prayer — a Catholic convergence
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference."
Used in Alcoholics Anonymous and recovery programs worldwide. Its theology — surrender, discernment, trust — is the same theology St. Monica lived for seventeen years. The Catholic tradition has been praying this prayer in different words since Augustine wrote about restlessness in the Confessions.
St. Monica, patron of families praying for a loved one in addiction
St. Monica prayed seventeen years for her son — the patron of every family praying for someone in addiction.

A Catholic blessing for addiction and recovery

For 2026 — those struggling, those in recovery & the families who pray

A Catholic blessing for recovery is a short prayer of invocation — asking God, through the intercession of the saints, to be present to a specific person at a specific moment. It is not a guarantee of an outcome and it is not a substitute for treatment. It is a way of placing someone — yourself, a child, a spouse, a friend — into God's keeping when you cannot keep them safe by your own effort.

You can pray this blessing over a person who is present, or for someone far away who does not know you are praying. Many families pray it in the morning, alongside the Guardian Angel Prayer, or in the evening with the Magnificat. It invokes St. Maximilian Kolbe, St. Monica, the Holy Spirit, and Our Lady — the four intercessors this whole page returns to.

The blessing
Lord of the lost and the returning,
be near to all who are held by addiction,
and to all who love them and cannot let go.
Where willpower fails, send Your grace.
St. Maximilian Kolbe, who gave everything,
pray for those fighting to be free.
St. Monica, who never stopped praying,
pray for the families who keep watch.
Holy Spirit, give courage for this day only.
Our Lady, hold them close when the night is long.
Grant sobriety, restore what was broken,
and bring them home. Amen.
II

Find the right Catholic prayer for your situation

Choose your situation — we'll find the right prayer

The prayer for someone in active addiction is different from the prayer for someone in recovery. The prayer for a parent is different from the prayer of the person struggling. Choose your situation.

Praying quietly with a rosary — faith accompanies each stage of addiction recovery
🌊
I Am Struggling with Addiction
🌱
I Am in Recovery
💔
After a Relapse
👨‍👩‍👧
A Family Member in Addiction
🙏
My Child Has an Addiction
🕯️
They Don't Want Help
It Feels Hopeless
🌿
Addiction and Depression Together
III

Catholic prayers for addiction and recovery

Full text in English & Spanish on each prayer page
For Families
St. Monica Prayer
Patron of those praying for someone in addiction · seventeen years without visible result

St. Monica prayed for her son Augustine's conversion for seventeen years while he moved further and further away — pursuing a life that broke her heart and a philosophy that rejected her faith. Her intercession extends to all who pray for a family member in addiction: a spouse, a child, a sibling, a parent. The prayer for someone in addiction that you cannot fix by love alone. Monica's intercession is specifically for the people who keep praying when nothing visible changes — because that is exactly what she did, and it eventually mattered.

The prayer
St. Monica,
teach us the patience that keeps showing up —
the love that stays when the person we love cannot always return it...
Full prayer in English & Spanish on the St. Monica Prayer page →
For Those in the Depths
Divine Mercy Chaplet
For the person in addiction · mercy specifically when worthiness has run out

The Divine Mercy Chaplet asks for mercy "for the sake of His sorrowful Passion" — not for the sake of the person's worthiness, performance, or recent choices. This is precisely the prayer for addiction: asking God to act not because the person deserves it but because Christ's suffering merits it. Many people in recovery find the Chaplet at 3pm — the Hour of Mercy — to be a daily anchor that has nothing to do with how they feel about themselves that day. It asks for mercy regardless. That is its entire point.

The prayer
Eternal Father,
I offer You the Body and Blood,
Soul and Divinity of Your dearly beloved Son...
Full chaplet with bead-by-bead guide on the Divine Mercy page →
Family Prayer for Conversion
Our Lady of Fatima Prayer & Rosary
Our Lady asked specifically for family prayer as the means of conversion

At Fatima, Our Lady asked for the daily family Rosary as the specific means for conversion and peace. Many families praying for a member in addiction make the Rosary the anchor of that prayer — prayed together or alone, for the specific person, naming them in the intentions at the beginning of each decade. The Rosary's repetitive, rhythmic structure also serves the person in recovery as a physical grounding practice: something for the hands, the breath, and the mouth during the hours when craving is strongest.

The prayer
O my Jesus,
forgive us our sins,
save us from the fires of hell...
Full prayer in English & Spanish on the Our Lady of Fatima Prayer page →
For Strength & Discernment
Come Holy Spirit
For the person in recovery · for courage when courage is what's needed

The gifts of the Holy Spirit — wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord — address the specific needs of recovery. Fortitude for the days when staying sober is harder than it should be. Counsel for the decisions that must be made differently now. Wisdom for seeing the pattern of what addiction has cost and what recovery makes possible. The "Come Holy Spirit" prayer asks for all of these in a single, ancient prayer that has been said before difficult work for centuries.

The prayer
Come, Holy Spirit,
fill the hearts of Thy faithful
and enkindle in them the fire of Thy love...
Full prayer in English & Spanish on the Holy Spirit Prayer page →
For Surrender
The Magnificat
The prayer of radical surrender — the theological heart of every recovery program

Every effective addiction recovery program is built on a single insight: the self cannot fix itself by itself. This is not self-help language — it is theology. Mary's Magnificat is the Church's great prayer of surrender: "He has pulled down princes from their thrones and exalted the lowly." It is the prayer of someone who recognizes that the power at work is not her own. For the person in addiction, the Magnificat is the Catholic version of Steps 1 through 3 in AA: admission of powerlessness, recognition of a power greater than oneself, and decision to turn one's will and life over to the care of God. It takes ninety seconds to pray. It contains everything.

The prayer
My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord,
my spirit rejoices in God my Savior;
for he has looked with favor on his humble servant...
Full prayer in English & Spanish on the Magnificat Prayer page →
Daily Anchor
Guardian Angel Prayer
A daily prayer for the person in recovery · protection for the high-risk hours

The Guardian Angel Prayer — thirty seconds — asks the personal protector assigned to the person from birth to "light and guard, to rule and guide." For someone in recovery, it is a practical morning prayer: asking for the specific protection they need that day, for the high-risk hours, for the moments when their own judgment is not fully trustworthy yet. Many recovering Catholics add after the prayer: "And keep me sober today." Simple. Direct. It does not require a specific emotional state. It only requires being said.

The prayer
Angel of God, my guardian dear,
to whom God's love commits me here,
ever this day be at my side...
Full prayer in English & Spanish on the Guardian Angel Prayer page →
Catholic Devotions in Recovery
Devotions many Catholics keep close during recovery

Many people walking through addiction — and the families who pray for them — keep a tangible sign of the prayer near at hand: a St. Maximilian Kolbe or St. Monica patron saint medal, a wooden rosary for the Divine Mercy Chaplet, an Our Lady or St. Jude medal for the hardest hours. Not as a charm, but as a reminder, held in the hand, that they are not carrying this alone.

IV

How to pray a Catholic prayer for addiction — a practical guide

For the person struggling and for the family that keeps praying
01
For the person in addiction: daily surrender, not daily willpower

Recovery's spiritual insight — borrowed from the Catholic tradition whether it knows it or not — is that willpower alone cannot sustain sobriety. The daily Catholic prayer for sobriety is not "God give me the strength to be strong enough" but "God, I cannot do this alone. I am asking you to do what I cannot." The Magnificat, the Serenity Prayer, and the Guardian Angel Prayer all pray this. Start the day with one of them. End the day with one of them. Do not wait to feel spiritually ready. Pray in the addiction, in the craving, in the failure, in the recovery.

02
For the family: turn anxiety into intercession

The prayer for a family member in addiction — the prayer for an alcoholic family member, for a child using drugs, for a spouse who will not stop — is St. Monica's prayer: seventeen years of returning to God with the same name, the same petition, the same trust that what love cannot accomplish, God can. The practical form: take the specific worry — today, this moment, this news — and turn it into a specific prayer. Not "Lord, help my son" but "Lord, my son is [specific situation] right now. I cannot fix this. I am bringing it to You." Then let it go. Monica's prayer was sustained by trust, not by control. The same practice is what keeps family members from being consumed by the addiction that consumes someone they love.

Many parishes offer programs specifically for families of addicts — Al-Anon is also fully compatible with Catholic faith.

03
Confession and the moral inventory — a Catholic convergence with recovery

Steps 4 and 5 of AA — "made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves" and "admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs" — are a recognizable description of the Sacrament of Confession. Many Catholics in recovery find that regular Confession is the sacramental dimension of the same work they do in their program, often preparing with an Act of Contrition. The Sacrament adds what the program cannot: absolution, the certain word that these sins are forgiven, the grace to begin again. Many recovery sponsors are effectively doing spiritual direction. A confessor is the Catholic form of that work.

04
Catholics can attend AA and other 12-step programs

The Catholic Church has no prohibition against Catholics attending AA, NA, or other 12-step programs. Many priests actively recommend them. The "higher power" language in the 12-step tradition is intentionally non-specific — a Catholic can name that power as the God of Catholic faith without tension. There are also specifically Catholic recovery programs: the Calix Society (for Catholics in AA) and Catholics in Recovery (catholicsinrecovery.com), and broader Christian recovery ministries such as Celebrate Recovery. Faith and 12-step recovery are not competing approaches — they address the same person from complementary directions.

05
Prayer does not replace treatment — it accompanies it

Addiction has physical, psychological, and spiritual dimensions. Medical treatment and professional addiction counseling address the physical and psychological dimensions that prayer alone cannot reach. The Church supports the use of professional treatment for addiction as fully compatible with Catholic faith. Many effective treatment programs integrate spiritual practices — and many Catholics find that faith-based recovery support, alongside medical and professional help, provides the most complete approach to what addiction takes from a person.

Bible verses for addiction and recovery

Scripture the Church returns to for the struggling & their families

Alongside the prayers above, certain passages of Scripture carry particular weight in addiction and recovery. The Catholic tradition prays them slowly — one verse at a time, often while praying the Rosary or the Divine Mercy Chaplet. Read them not to feel a certain way, but as words to return to on the hard days.

Luke 15 · The Prodigal Son
The father runs to meet the son while he is still far off — before the apology, before any proof he won't fall again. The defining image of return for anyone who has relapsed or fears they have gone too far.
Psalm 51 · The Miserere
The great psalm of repentance, praying for a clean heart and a renewed spirit. The prayer of someone beginning again — fittingly prayed before Confession or an Act of Contrition.
Philippians 4:13
Strength found through Christ rather than through one's own resolve — the Scriptural form of the recovery insight that sobriety is sustained by grace, not willpower alone.
Romans 8:38–39
Nothing — not failure, not the depths of addiction, not relapse — can separate a person from the love of God in Christ. A passage for the moments that feel beyond reach.
VI

FAQ about Catholic addiction & recovery prayers

People also ask
What is the best Catholic prayer for addiction?
There is no single "best" prayer, but the most-used are the Serenity Prayer, the Divine Mercy Chaplet (mercy independent of worthiness), and the Magnificat (the prayer of surrender). Pick one and pray it daily, in the craving as much as the calm.
What saint do you pray to for addiction?
St. Maximilian Kolbe is the saint most often invoked for those struggling with drug addiction and recovery; St. Monica for families; St. Jude when a case feels hopeless. See the full patron saint of addiction page.
What Bible verses help with addiction recovery?
Catholics often return to 1 Corinthians 10:13 (no trial beyond what you can bear), Philippians 4:13 (strength through Christ), Matthew 11:28 (rest for the weary), and Psalm 34:18 (God near the brokenhearted). Pray them slowly, one line at a time, alongside the Magnificat.
How do Catholics pray for someone struggling with alcohol?
Following St. Monica, name the person and the specific situation, bring it before God, and leave it there rather than carrying it away as worry. Many add the daily Rosary for that one person.
Who is the patron saint of addiction and recovery?
St. Maximilian Kolbe is the patron most often turned to for addiction and recovery — a Polish Franciscan priest whose spirituality was built entirely on self-surrender and total consecration to Our Lady. He died at Auschwitz in 1941, having stepped forward to take a fellow prisoner's place in a starvation bunker; after two weeks without food or water he was among the last still alive, and was killed by lethal injection. St. Monica is the patron specifically of families praying for addicted loved ones, and St. Jude is invoked when recovery feels impossible. All of them know what it is to pray without visible result for a long time.
What does the Catholic Church teach about addiction?
The Catechism (CCC 2291) recognizes that addiction causes grave damage to health and life and notes that the initial choice to use a substance may involve moral responsibility, while acknowledging that addiction itself compromises freedom. Catholic moral theology, which always considers diminished freedom when assessing culpability, is more nuanced about addiction than is sometimes understood. The Church supports professional medical and psychological treatment for addiction and does not treat it as a purely spiritual failure requiring only spiritual remedies. Because addiction so often arrives with anxiety or depression, families also find help in prayers for mental health alongside professional care.
Can Catholics attend Alcoholics Anonymous or other 12-step programs?
Yes. The Church has no prohibition against Catholics attending AA, NA, or other 12-step programs, and many priests actively recommend them. The "higher power" language is intentionally non-specific — a Catholic can name that power as the God of Catholic faith. There are also specifically Catholic recovery programs, including the Calix Society (for Catholics in AA) and Catholics in Recovery. Faith and 12-step recovery are not competing approaches; they address the same person from complementary directions. Many Catholics pair their meetings with a daily devotion such as the Divine Mercy Chaplet at the 3pm Hour of Mercy.
How do I pray for a family member who doesn't want help?
St. Monica's prayer for seventeen years for Augustine covers this exactly. The practical guidance: turn the specific worry into a specific prayer — name the person, name the situation, bring it before God, and leave it there rather than carrying it away again. Do not make the prayer a form of pressure on the person. Many families find Al-Anon helpful alongside Catholic prayer — it addresses the patterns of thought and behavior that develop in families of addicts, which prayer alone does not always reach. You may also find the broader prayers for family hub helpful. Both together are more effective than either alone.
Is relapse a failure of faith or will?
No. Relapse is a recognized medical phenomenon in addiction recovery — it occurs in most recovery journeys and is not a sign that recovery is impossible or that the person lacks sufficient faith or willpower. The Catholic response to relapse is the same as the Catholic response to sin: return. Confession if possible. Begin again, often with the Divine Mercy Chaplet, which asks for mercy regardless of recent performance. The Prodigal Son's father ran toward him while he was still a long way off — before he had completed his speech, before he had demonstrated he wouldn't relapse again. The story does not end with the return guaranteed. It ends with the welcome given anyway.
What is the connection between Confession and addiction recovery?
Steps 4 and 5 of AA — moral inventory and sharing it with another person — describe a process that parallels the Sacrament of Confession in its structure. Many Catholics in recovery find that regular Confession, prepared for with an Act of Contrition, provides the sacramental dimension of the same work: articulation of what has been done, the presence of another person, and — what the program cannot provide — absolution. The certain word that these sins are forgiven. Many also find a spiritual director who is also familiar with addiction recovery to be among the most valuable supports in sustained sobriety.
Is there a patron saint for alcoholism or drug addiction?
Yes. St. Maximilian Kolbe is the saint most commonly invoked for those battling drug addiction, and Venerable Matt Talbot — an Irishman who recovered from severe alcoholism and lived a hidden life of penance and prayer — is widely turned to by people seeking freedom from alcohol, though he has not yet been canonized. For families, St. Monica carries the long prayer; St. Jude is the patron of seemingly hopeless cases. A patron saint is not a magic remedy — the saints are companions in prayer who themselves understood struggle, perseverance, and the slow work of grace over time.
What prayer should I say for someone struggling with drug addiction?
Pray for the person by name. The Divine Mercy Chaplet asks God for mercy on their behalf regardless of their choices or worthiness — exactly the right prayer when someone is in active addiction. The St. Monica prayer is the prayer of the family member who cannot fix it by love alone. Many also pray a daily Rosary for the one person, naming them at the start of each decade. Keep the prayer between you and God rather than turning it into pressure on the person; leave them, genuinely, in God's hands at the end of each prayer.
What Bible verses help with addiction and recovery?
Several passages are returned to again and again in recovery. 1 Corinthians 10:13 promises that no trial comes that is beyond what a person can bear with God's help. Philippians 4:13 speaks of strength found through Christ rather than through one's own resolve. Matthew 11:28 offers rest to all who are weary and burdened. Psalm 34:18 describes God as close to the brokenhearted. Romans 7:15–25 names the experience of doing the very thing one does not want to do — and points beyond it to grace. Pray them slowly, one verse at a time, perhaps alongside the Magnificat or while praying the Rosary.
Many Catholics in recovery carry a patron saint medal — St. Maximilian Kolbe, Our Lady, or St. Monica — as a physical daily reminder that they are not alone in this. Handcrafted in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing.