Prayer to all saints at once = more powerful?

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If you pray like “Every saint in Heaven, hear me and pray for me.” Does that make it more effective?
Does that even work?

Now that I think about it, how does prayer even work? We can’t change God’s will on things. Do we only receive things in prayer that He was already planning on giving to us?
 
I think it is better to have a devotion to Mary since she is Queen of all Saints and Angels. Plus she alone is more powerful, loving, and wiser than them all together.
 
The most powerful prayer is the one that God wants for you to pray, and that is from the heart. It does not matter who you ask for intercession as long as it is your heart who reaches out for help, for then it is the Holy Spirit in union with the saint your heart asks who then intercedes for you, and nothing else can beat that.
In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God.

Romans 8:26-27
 
What’s important is not just the words you say but the sincerity and devotion you have when you pray. If you sincerely and devoutly ask all the saints to pray for you, then it is likely they wouldn’t refuse your request, as they love praying for their family on Earth! 🙂 The more saints praying for you, the better! God will always listen to your prayers and the prayers of your Heavenly Family, but that doesn’t mean your prayers will be answered the way you want. Sometimes, God doesn’t grant our prayers because He wants something better for us, though that can be hard to accept and understand from our human point of view, especially when we really wanted something in particular to go our way. Sincere prayers are always “effective,” but that doesn’t mean God will answer them the way you expected. He knows things that we don’t and wants whatever’s best for us. Remember that He is all-knowing and all-loving.

God is eternally perfect and incapable of change. The words used in Scripture to describe Him changing His mind are just metaphors. The point of prayer is not to change God but to change us. It reminds us that we are dependent on Him and that we owe Him gratitude for all the gifts He has given us. Prayer draws us closer to Him because the more we talk to someone and spend time with them, the more we get to know them better and grow in love for them. The more we listen to them, the more we can also find out what they want from us. We need Him and ought to stay focused on Him; that’s why we pray. To add to that note, prayer is not just asking God for things, as that is only one form of prayer. There are also prayers of praise, thanksgiving, and adoration, which also help increase our holiness by bringing us closer to God and assisting us to better discern God’s will for us. We are reminded that He is a good, loving, just, merciful, awesome, and powerful God through these prayers.

Whenever we pray, we realize that God’s will for us is the best for us and must accept whatever it is that He wills for us. So we pray for our intentions, knowing that we must accept that whichever way God answers our prayers is best for us, even if we can’t see how. With that being said, God doesn’t just want us to be passive recipients of His graces. He wants us to actively work with Him to sanctify ourselves and the world, so He may make certain things contingent on our requests. So the outcome of a particular event could be the result of the prayers of many of His faithful children because God wants us to play a role in building up His Kingdom on Earth by working together with Him. Our prayers can be influential in that sense, but they can’t change God’s mind itself.
 
@Frend

The idea is that the saints in Heaven only will and desire to do what is good. St Liguori explained in his treatise on prayer that when you pray to one saint in particular, you are always in a sense praying to all of them, because they share the petitions with the entire Heavenly Court, and it is only through the power of God that a saint can hear your prayer to begin with, since creatures possess no power in of themselves. We are held into existence each moment through Providence.

There is no spell or formula to follow that will give your prayer super powers, however, because we are social souls and are created for each other as well as for God, it has been revealed to the Church that there is a Communion of Saints and that we have a Queen, and that God desires for us to pray for and through each other.

I realize that isn’t a 100% clear answer because, frankly, prayer is somewhat mysterious/incomprehensible to us. But the point is that while we ought to make use of the Communion of Saints, we shouldn’t be led into a superstitious line of thought, as though the prayer won’t take if we end up missing a reference.

Peace.
 
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