Health & Healing
Prayer for a Sick Loved One
Holding another in the light when they cannot pray for themselves.
This is a prayer for a sick loved one — gathered for the moments when you need the right words. Below you'll find 3 traditions side by side, with scripture, a short note on each, and a few situational prayers for everyday use.
Compiled by the editors of A Prayer for Everything · Updated April 2026
Why pray this prayer
When you search for a prayer for a sick loved one, you're rarely looking for theology — you're looking for words to carry something heavy. Naming what you feel, out loud or in silence, is itself an act of trust: that someone is listening, that the situation is not yours alone to fix.
The prayers below have been used by people in the same place you are now — frightened, hopeful, grieving, grateful, uncertain. Pick the one that meets you today. You can pray word-for-word, paraphrase it, or let a single line become your own.
Christian Prayers for a Sick Loved One
Drawn from the Christian tradition, grounded in the Hebrew and Greek scriptures and the prayer life of the church.
A Prayer for a Sick Loved One
Lord Jesus, You wept at the grave of Your friend. Look upon (name) with the same tenderness. Lay Your healing hands on their body, and hold their soul in Your peace. Comfort all who love them. Amen.
Multi-faith Prayers for a Sick Loved One
Written in plain, universal language so it can be prayed by anyone, in any tradition or none.
A Prayer for a Sick Loved One
Hold them, O Source of life, in the palm of mercy. Where I cannot reach, reach for me. Where I cannot heal, heal for me. Let them feel, even in their pain, that they are not alone.
Secular Prayers for a Sick Loved One
Written for those who pray without a religious framework — words for reflection, intention, and care.
A Prayer for a Sick Loved One
I cannot take this from them. But I can sit beside them. I can hope for them when they cannot hope. May my steady presence be a small medicine.
How to pray this prayer
- Find a quiet moment. Even 60 seconds is enough — first thing in the morning, last thing at night, or any pause in the day.
- Read the prayer once silently. Notice which line catches you. That line is yours today.
- Pray it aloud. Speaking the words — even in a whisper — makes the prayer feel less like reading and more like asking.
- Sit quietly for a moment after. Don't rush. Let the words settle. If a name or a face comes to mind, hold it there before you go on with your day.
When this prayer feels hard
Some days the words come easily. Other days you'll open this page and the prayer will feel hollow, or unanswered, or like you're talking to the ceiling. That doesn't mean you're praying wrong. It means you're a person.
When the prayer feels hard, try shortening it — even one honest line ("help me," "I don't understand," "thank you") is a complete prayer. If you're angry, pray angrily. If you're numb, pray the words anyway and let them do the work your feelings can't right now. Faith isn't measured by how the prayer feels in your mouth.