Chaplet of the Five Wounds


The Chaplet of the Five Wounds is a Passionist chaplet devoted to the Holy Wounds of Jesus, as a means to promote devotion to the Passion of Christ.
The chaplet is due to Father Paul Aloysius, the sixth superior general of the Passionists. The devotion also honors the mystery of the risen Christ which has the marks of the Five Wounds. Pope Leo XII approved the chaplet in 1823.
This chaplet must be blessed by the Passionist superior or a delegation from him.

Format of the chaplet

This chaplet has 25 beads, grouped into five sets. The Gloria Patri is said on each bead. At the end of each section of beads, a Hail Mary in honor of the sorrows of Mary is said. At the end of the chaplet, three additional Hail Marys are said in honor of her tears.

Chaplet of the Five Wounds of Jesus

The Chaplet of the Five Wounds of Jesus or the Little Chaplet of the Five Wounds of Jesus Crucified is an earlier devotional prayer written in 1761 by St. Alphonsus Liguori, a devotional writer and founder of the Redemptorist Fathers religious community.
St. Alphonsus wrote the devotional as a meditation on the five piercing wounds that Christ suffered during his crucifixion.