A Divine Invitation Open to All
Over 300 years ago, Our Lord appeared to Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque with extraordinary promises — gifts freely offered to every soul who draws near to His Heart.
✦ Paray-le-Monial, France · 1673–1675 ✦
✦ Who Was Saint Margaret Mary? ✦
In a small French town, a humble Visitation nun named Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque received a series of apparitions from Our Lord Jesus Christ. He revealed His Sacred Heart — a Heart burning with love for humanity — and entrusted her with 12 specific promises for all who would honour it.
These promises were not meant only for saints or scholars. They were given for you — for families, for those in difficult circumstances, for the indifferent, the struggling, the hopeful. They are as relevant today as they were in 17th-century France.
✦ The Twelve Promises ✦
These are not merely pious wishes. They are the words of Our Lord Himself, delivered through His chosen messenger.
"I will give peace to their families."
For households torn by conflict, anxiety, or disconnection — a supernatural peace that the world cannot manufacture.
"I will console them in all their troubles."
When grief, illness, or hardship press in, you will not face them alone. Divine consolation is promised.
"I will be their secure refuge during life and at the hour of death."
A guaranteed shelter in the storms of life — and the assurance of divine accompaniment at your final hour.
"I will bless every place in which an image of My Heart shall be exposed and honoured."
Your home, your workplace, your community — consecrated spaces receive a tangible divine blessing.
"I will give fervour to lukewarm souls."
Feeling spiritually dry, distant, or indifferent? This promise is specifically for you. Renewed fire is available.
"Fervent souls shall quickly mount to high perfection."
For those already seeking holiness, this devotion acts as an accelerant — a fast-track to spiritual maturity.
"I will bless the homes where the image of My Heart shall be exposed and honoured."
Spiritual blindness gives way to clarity. Hearts closed to faith are touched with illuminating grace.
"I will touch the most hardened hearts."
Have you given up hope for someone you love? This promise extends even to the most resistant souls.
"I will give sinners all the graces necessary for their conversion."
Nobody is beyond the reach of mercy. Sufficient grace for a complete turning-back to God is promised.
"I will give to priests the gift of touching the most hardened hearts."
Ministers of the Gospel receive special anointing to break through where words alone have failed.
"The names of those who propagate this devotion shall be written in My Heart and never be effaced."
Share this message and receive a permanent, personal promise — your name held forever in the Heart of Jesus.
"I promise you in the excessive mercy of My Heart that Its all-powerful love will grant to all those who communicate on the First Friday of nine consecutive months the grace of final perseverance."
The crown jewel: nine First Fridays, and the assurance that you will not die without the graces needed for salvation.
"I promise you, in the excessive mercy of My Heart, that Its all-powerful love will grant to all those who receive Holy Communion on nine consecutive First Fridays of the month, the grace of final perseverance; they shall not die under my displeasure, nor without receiving their sacraments, and my divine Heart shall be their safe refuge in this last moment."
✦ Our Lord to Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque ✦The devotion to the Sacred Heart is beautifully simple. No special status is required — only a willing heart.
Receive Holy Communion on the first Friday of nine consecutive months in a state of grace, with the intention of honouring the Sacred Heart.
Offer each day to the Sacred Heart through a morning offering — uniting your joys, sorrows, and works to His love.
Enthrone an image of the Sacred Heart in your home as a sign of Christ's kingship over your household and family life.
Spend one hour each Thursday night in prayer and adoration, in solidarity with Our Lord's agony in the Garden of Gethsemane.
Behold this Heart which has so loved mankind, which has spared nothing, even to exhausting and consuming Itself, in order to testify Its love.
✦ Our Lord Jesus Christ to Saint Margaret Mary ✦Join our newsletter for reflections, feast day reminders, the First Friday calendar, and devotional resources — delivered to your inbox with care.
The Heart of Christ as the symbol of His boundless love — its meaning, its history, and why it matters for your life today.
The devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus centres on the physical heart of Christ as the perfect symbol of His love for humanity. It is not merely sentiment — it is a theological reality. The heart of Jesus is the heart of God made flesh: the same heart that beat in the womb of Mary, that wept at the tomb of Lazarus, and that was pierced by a soldier's lance on Calvary.
When we speak of the "Sacred Heart," we are speaking of Jesus Himself — His person, His love, His mercy — expressed through the most human of symbols: a beating heart.
Traditional depictions of the Sacred Heart carry deep theological meaning in every detail:
The fire surrounding the Heart represents the burning love of Christ for every human soul — a love that never diminishes.
The thorns encircling the Heart recall suffering accepted out of love, and the ingratitude of those He came to save.
The cross atop the Heart proclaims that this love is inseparable from the sacrifice of Calvary — love proven in action.
The open wound recalls the soldier's lance, from which flowed blood and water — symbols of the Eucharist and Baptism.
Our Lord appears to Sister Margaret Mary at the Visitation monastery in Paray-le-Monial, France, showing her His Heart and declaring His love for humanity.
During the octave of Corpus Christi, Our Lord reveals the Great Promise of the Nine First Fridays and requests a Feast of the Sacred Heart.
Pope Clement XIII approves the Feast of the Sacred Heart for Poland and the Roman Archconfraternity, giving the devotion official recognition.
Pope Pius IX extends the Feast of the Sacred Heart to the entire Church, fulfilling the request made nearly two centuries earlier.
Pope Benedict XV canonises Margaret Mary Alacoque, confirming the authenticity and holiness of her mission and the revelations entrusted to her.
Hundreds of millions of Catholics around the world honour the Sacred Heart. The promises remain available to every soul willing to receive them.
We live in an age of distraction, disconnection, and spiritual fatigue. Families are fractured. Many souls feel that God is distant — or that they have wandered too far to return. The devotion to the Sacred Heart was given precisely for such a time.
Our Lord said: "Behold this Heart which has so loved men that It has spared nothing." That love has not diminished. The same Heart that made these promises in 17th-century France beats with the same intensity today — for you, for your family, for those you carry in prayer.
The 12 Promises are not historical artefacts. They are a living offer, extended to every person who chooses to respond.
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Everything you need to know about the Sacred Heart devotion, the 12 Promises, and how to begin.
The promises were given through a Catholic mystic and are expressed within the Catholic tradition of sacramental life. Receiving the full fruit of the Great Promise requires receiving Holy Communion in a state of grace. However, the love of the Sacred Heart is extended to all people, and many promises — peace, consolation, refuge, conversion — are available to any soul who sincerely turns to Christ.
Yes. The Church has given full approval to both the apparitions and the devotion. Margaret Mary was canonised in 1920, and the Feast of the Sacred Heart has been a universal feast since 1856. Multiple popes have written encyclicals affirming and promoting the devotion, including Pope Pius XII's Haurietis Aquas (1956).
No. Private devotions — even those with papal approval — are never strictly obligatory. They are freely offered gifts. The Church encourages the devotion warmly, but it remains a matter of personal piety. That said, the promises attached to it are extraordinary, and many saints and theologians regard it as one of the most fruitful devotions in the life of the Church.
The Nine First Fridays involves receiving Holy Communion on the first Friday of nine consecutive months, with the specific intention of honouring the Sacred Heart and making reparation for sins. This is connected to the Great Promise (Promise XII): that those who complete them will receive the grace of final perseverance — dying in God's friendship with access to the last sacraments.
Yes, if you miss a First Friday, you would need to begin again. The consecutive nature is part of the practice as revealed. However, the graces received during previous months are not lost — God's generosity is not undone by our limitations. Many people have started over multiple times and found the renewed commitment itself to be spiritually fruitful.
Yes. Any Mass on the first Friday of the month — morning, midday, or evening — fulfils the practice. What matters is that it falls on the first Friday of that calendar month and that you receive Communion in a state of grace with the proper intention of honouring the Sacred Heart.
The Enthronement is a formal, prayerful act by which a family places an image of the Sacred Heart in a prominent place in the home and consecrates the household to Christ. It is a recognition of His kingship over family life. Many families report remarkable changes — reconciliations, conversions, peace restored — following the Enthronement. A priest typically presides, though laypeople can also lead the ceremony.
A short prayer said at the beginning of each day in which you offer all your thoughts, prayers, works, joys, and sufferings to the Sacred Heart. It transforms the entire day into an act of love. A traditional version begins: "O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer You my prayers, works, joys, and sufferings of this day..." The Apostleship of Prayer also provides a widely-used modern version.
A wonderful starting point is your local Catholic parish — many have a First Friday Mass and devotions. The Apostleship of Prayer (apostleshipofprayer.org) is the official worldwide network promoting the Sacred Heart. For Enthronement resources, the National Enthronement Center provides guides and support. Signing up for our newsletter below will also connect you with a growing community walking this path together.
Join our newsletter for reflections, feast day reminders, the First Friday calendar, and devotional resources — delivered to your inbox with care.