You’ve lost your keys…. your checkbook…. the book you were reading. You’ve looked under the bed, in the drawer, on the kitchen counter — everywhere! What are you going to do?!!

Well, pray to Saint Anthony, of course!!

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St. Anthony of Padua, whose feast is celebrated on June 13, was a Catholic priest and Franciscan friar who lived from 1195 to 1231. Born to a wealthy Portuguese family, he became known throughout Portugal and parts of Italy as a commanding orator. (In fact, he was so successful in preaching to heretics that he was given the nickname “Hammer of Heretics.”) Pope Gregory IX, after hearing Anthony preach, called him a “jewelcase of the Bible” and directed him to gather his sermons into a book which came to be called Sermons for Feast Days.

St. Anthony was entrusted by St. Francis of Assisi with the responsibility for training the young seminarians studying for ordination in the Franciscan Order. In fact, he is often considered the greatest preacher of the Middle Ages. But even more than his effective preaching, his intercession is often invoked today when something is lost.

The Finder of Lost Things

The tradition of calling upon St. Anthony when something is lost or stolen can be traced back to an incident which occurred in Bologna. According to legend, Anthony had a psalter, a book of psalms, in which he kept notes and comments he used in teaching his seminarian students. In the days before the printing press, a printed book was expensive and difficult to replace.

Anthony’s psalter was stolen by a novice who left the order, taking the book with him. When Anthony realized the book was missing, he prayed that it might be returned or found. Anthony’s prayers were answered: The thief had a change of heart — eventually returning the book and returning to seminary. Today, that psalter is preserved in the Franciscan Friary in Bologna, Italy.

Today, people pray to St. Anthony when they’ve lost their keys or ring or other material goods. They may also pray for someone who has lost faith, or for a lost loved one. This prayer, titled the Litany of the Lost, is from the Franciscan Friars:

Litany of the Lost Lord have mercy. Lord have mercy.

Christ have mercy. Christ have mercy.

Lord have mercy. Lord have mercy. (The response for the following petitions is: St. Anthony, pray for us.) For those of us who have lost…

Our health,

Our peace of mind,

Our housing,

Our financial security,

A loved one,

Our dreams,

Our talents,

Our initial zeal,

Our sobriety,

Our faith,

Our self-respect,

Our perspective,

Our innocence,

Our independence,

Peace within our families,

Civil peace,

Our trust in others,

Our virtue,

Our home,

(Please add your own particular loss) Lamb of God,

You take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us. (3 times) Let us pray.

All loving God,

You have given us St. Anthony, the patron of the lost, as an intercessor of those who are in need of your mercy. Listen to his voice as he calls out to You on our behalf, and grant those things which will help us grow in Your love. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

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Julian of Speyer, a German Franciscan friar who was a contemporary of St. Anthony, was a composer, poet and historian in the fifteenth century. Julian composed a beautiful hymn about St. Anthony after he was named a saint. In it, he wrote:

The sea obeys and fetters break, And lifeless limbs thou dost restore While treasure lost are found again When young or old thine aid implore.

Nothing, Julian wrote, will hinder anyone’s prayers to St. Anthony for a lost object or loved one.

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