A Filipino-American priest of the Marians of the Immaculate Conception (MIC) is inviting Catholics around the world, beginning May 13, the feast of Our Lady of Fátima, to enter into a 153-day spiritual crusade: to pray the full rosary every day until Oct. 13 "for the salvation of souls."
Father James Cervantes, MIC, known for his initiative calling for Eucharistic revival in the Philippines and co-launching the Philippine Rosary Crusade during the EDSA Revolution's 40th anniversary, is calling the faithful to respond to what he described as heaven's urgent appeal for our time.
"The premise is simple," he said. "We are living in a time of deep moral confusion, widespread indifference to God, and a growing loss of souls. Our Lady has already given us the remedy. The answer is prayer, sacrifice, and the holy rosary."
The initiative, called "The 153-Day Fátima Invitation," asks the faithful to offer 153 Hail Marys a day for 153 days, from May 13 to Oct. 13 — the exact span of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fátima.
At Fátima in 1917, Our Lady appeared to three shepherd children and pleaded with the world: "Pray, pray much, and make sacrifices for sinners, for many souls go to hell because there is no one to sacrifice and pray for them."
For Cervantes, that appeal remains as urgent today as ever.
"This is an act of love, an act of faith, and a great work of mercy for the salvation of souls," he said. "It will be an intense time of spiritual harvesting, done with great love and sacrifice, to honor and console Our Lord and Our Lady and to heed their request to help save many souls."
Why 153?
The number 153 is not arbitrary. Cervantes points to several striking spiritual and biblical connections.
First, Our Lady's apparitions at Fátima lasted from May 13 to Oct. 13 — a span of exactly 153 days.
Second, at the time of the Fátima apparitions, the full traditional rosary consisted of 15 mysteries — the joyful, sorrowful, and glorious mysteries — containing 153 Hail Marys. The luminous mysteries were later added by Pope John Paul II in 2002.
Third, in the Gospel of John, after the Resurrection, the disciples cast their nets at Christ's command and caught 153 large fish. According to St. Jerome, 153 represented all the known species of fish at the time — a symbol that all nations would be gathered into the net of the Church.
"It is a time of spiritual fishing," Cervantes explained. "A time to cast the net for souls lost in the sea of sin and death. As the call of Jesus goes: 'Come after me, and I will make you fishers of men.'"
He also noted another striking providence: Our Lady appeared in 1917, and the sum of the numbers from 1 through 17 equals 153.
"In subtle but beautiful ways," he said, "heaven keeps pointing us back to 153."
A spiritual battle for souls
The invitation comes at a time when some Catholics sense that the world is entering deeper spiritual darkness.
Families are under strain. Faith is growing cold. Many young people are drifting from God. War, terrorism, and global instability dominate headlines. The battle is no longer merely social or cultural. At its core, it is spiritual, according to Cervantes.
"Our Lady of Fátima showed the children a vision of hell," he said. "She warned that many souls are lost because there is no one to pray and sacrifice for them. That warning should move us."
He added that the rosary is not merely a devotional practice but a spiritual weapon entrusted by heaven.
"The method to catch souls will be the holy rosary — a spiritual net," he said. "For the next 153 days, we are being invited to do spiritual harvesting."
The rosary and the salvation of souls
Throughout history, saints and popes have spoken of the power of the rosary.
St. Louis de Montfort taught that God gave the rosary as a means to convert even the most hardened sinners.
St. Dominic called it one of heaven's most powerful weapons for the conversion of souls.
Pope Pius X described the rosary as "the most beautiful and the richest in graces of all prayers."
Blessed Pius IX famously declared: "Give me an army saying the rosary and I will conquer the world."
And one of the children of Fátima, St. Francisco Marto, once said with childlike simplicity: "Oh, Our Lady! I'll say as many rosaries as you want." The children of Fátima were said to pray as many as nine rosaries a day.
A simple invitation
Cervantes emphasized that the invitation is simple: Place prayer at the center of daily life.
"Step into a sacred rhythm of prayer," he said. "For the next 153 days, place the rosary at the heart of your day and gently witness how God begins to move."
The purpose is not merely personal devotion but a concrete response to Our Lady of Fátima's request to help save souls through the power of the rosary.
"This is a great work of mercy for souls," he said. "The harvest is abundant, but the laborers are few. Who will be the 'few' to respond?"
From May 13 to Oct. 13, Catholics are invited to pray the full rosary — the 15 traditional mysteries — offering 153 Hail Marys each day for sinners, for souls in danger, and for those who are far from God.
YouTube evangelizer Gabriel Castillo, featured in the National Catholic Register about his book "The Power of the Rosary" and his "Rosary Testimonies" documentary, has spoken extensively about the power of praying the full rosary every day versus only one or two a day.
In a world marked by confusion, moral relativism, and spiritual darkness, Cervantes said heaven's answer remains astonishingly simple.
"Let us be the few who answer the call of Our Lord and Our Lady," he said.


