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Divine Appeal 34

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

(Revelation to Sr Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist)

VOLUME 1

“Adore My Divine Sacrament and offer it to My Eternal Father so that it may serve the salvation of souls.”

“Do not be frightened. Great offences will befall... and ... will be a victim at the perfidious hands of those consecrated to Me. I tell you the times demand accelerated action. My pain is immense and humanity has not become aware.

“My daughter, participate in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass together with Holy Communion; atone, do penance. I want complete obedience from you. I want you to listen to listen to My unique Voice with the intention of paying the debts of sinners and whenever you hear of offences against My dynamic Presence call Me – I will be near you.

“My daughter, the devil torments you. In My Name be calm and strong for it is I who ordain the work which you will accomplish. Adore My Divine Sacrament and offer it to My Eternal Father so that it may serve the salvation of souls. I speak with you amid tears. Pray! In this way My Eternal Father’s anger will be appeased. Firstly, with the Sacrifice of the Cross and then with that of the Altar for the continuous renewal of what I fulfilled on Calvary. ...great cataclysm which will simultaneously convulse the earth will be terrible, frightening as if it were the end of the world. But the end has not yet arrived. However it is not far away. Those who want to believe and whose lives are prepared for the moment of Divine Justice must pray so that they get strength to endure and survive.”

What a pain to Me! After so many messages with painful events still mankind remains indifferent as if it were an idle call. I tell My servant to ask them this, “Who will esteem My Tears of Blood?” I want My Voice full of affliction to fly to the very ends of the earth saying over and over again: ‘be attentive’. Everyone prepare yourselves, both good and bad, adults and children, priests and nuns, all humanity. I love them and I grant them time. That is why I came that they may wake up from their apathetic slumber. Blessed are those who listen to My Voice and prepare themselves.

My daughter, I am continuously receiving crowns of thorns passing through the milling crowds with My bowed Head. Just like Judas, after receiving Me they sell Me, abuse and spit on Me. Woe to them all! Do not be afraid.”

“I bless you.”

11.00 a.m., 29th October 1987

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com.

From Unrepentance to Desolation

Divine Appeal Reflection - 33

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 33: "If they do not repent they will know only desolation.”

There are moments when the soul wakes up tired before the body begins its day. Responsibilities are met, words are exchanged, prayers are spoken from memory, yet the soul moves through its day with a muted interior register. Nothing dramatic has occurred; nothing appears broken. And yet, something essential feels dimmed. This is spiritual desolation as it is most often lived now—not as rebellion or loss of faith, but as a thinning of consolation. God is not absent; He is no longer sensed. The intellect still assents, the will still chooses the good, but the heart no longer feels accompanied. Our Adorable Jesus looks upon this condition with deep tenderness, for He knows that beneath efficiency there is often loneliness of spirit. Scripture (cf. Rom 1:21) describes hearts that remain intelligent and capable, yet no longer warm with wonder or gratitude . The Catechism (cf. CCC 27, 1701) explains that when the living bond with God weakens, the human person experiences inner disintegration, even if outward life appears successful . In ordinary terms, desolation shows itself when prayer feels like talking into the air, when moral effort feels heavy, when joy seems remembered rather than lived.It is the moment when the soul realizes it cannot sustain itself. Our Adorable Jesus allows this awareness not to shame us, but to gently loosen our grip on self-reliance, making room for a deeper dependence on His quiet, sustaining presence. Biblical figures knew this terrain well: (cf. 1 Kgs 19:4–8) Elijah collapsed under exhaustion not because God had abandoned him, but because he had reached the end of himself . Desolation, then, is deeply human. 

Desolation often grows from small postponements of love rather than dramatic rebellion. The apostolic teaching speaks of hearts that slowly lose sensitivity, not through sudden rejection, but through repeated delay (cf. Eph 4:18). Many today do not refuse God outright; they simply keep Him waiting. The Catechism notes that sin disorders desire, bending it inward until even good things feel heavy and unsatisfying (cf. CCC 1849–1851). In daily life, this appears when forgiveness is delayed “until later,” when prayer is rushed because something else feels urgent, when conscience is negotiated instead of obeyed. Saint Augustine’s insight becomes deeply personal here: the heart grows weary carrying loves it was never meant to bear alone. Yet desolation remains profoundly relational. It is not emptiness for its own sake; it is the ache of a love neglected. Saints understood this ache intimately. Saint John of the Cross did not interpret inner darkness as failure, but as God drawing the soul beyond superficial attachments. In very human terms, this means continuing to show up—to prayer, to responsibility, to love—even when the heart feels dry. Scripture (cf. Rom 8:26) assures that the Spirit works beneath awareness, holding the soul when it cannot feel itself held . Thus, desolation becomes a quiet conversation between human weakness and divine patience.

What transforms desolation is not analysis, but fidelity lived one small choice at a time. Sacred teaching encourages perseverance not because suffering is good, but because love grows mature when it remains present without reward (cf. Jas 1:3–4). Modern desolation is sharpened by the expectation that everything should feel meaningful immediately. When it does not, discouragement sets in. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2731) acknowledges that prayer often passes through dryness, where faith must choose to trust without emotional confirmation . This is deeply human: kneeling when one would rather stay busy, speaking kindly when the heart feels empty, doing the right thing when no one notices. Saint Paul’s experience of weakness (cf. 2 Cor 12:9) reveals that God’s strength quietly unfolds where self-confidence collapses . Mystically, such fidelity places the soul beside Christ in His interior abandonment, (cf. Phil 2:8) where love remained faithful without consolation . In everyday vocations, this looks ordinary yet heroic: spouses remaining gentle amid fatigue, priests preaching with sincerity despite dryness, consecrated souls staying available without interior light, workers choosing honesty when shortcuts tempt. Here, desolation stops being wasted pain and becomes shared ground with Christ’s own human loneliness.

Desolation also spreads socially, shaping the emotional climate of entire communities. Scripture speaks of creation groaning, reflecting humanity’s interior disarray (cf. Rom 8:22). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1869) explains that social patterns influenced by sin reinforce personal alienation, making confusion feel normal . Many today feel this weight without naming it: a quiet sadness, a loss of meaning, a sense of being replaceable. Yet the Christian is reminded that this world,(cf. Heb 13:14) though precious, cannot carry ultimate hope . The saints responded to such climates not by fleeing humanity, but by becoming more deeply human. Saint Benedict answered societal collapse by ordering daily life around prayer, work, and stability. In practical terms, this wisdom becomes simple: shared meals without distraction, honest work done well, time given to God without hurry. Our Adorable Jesus delights in these human-scale fidelities. They restore warmth where systems grow cold. Mystically, they echo the early believers who created pockets of joy and belonging amid cultural uncertainty (cf. Acts 2:42). In this way, desolation becomes the background against which authentic human and Christian presence quietly heals others.

At its deepest point, desolation asks a single human question: Where is my heart truly turned? Scripture urges immediacy in returning to God because delay slowly numbs desire (cf. 2 Cor 6:2). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1427–1429) describes conversion as a daily reorientation, often humble and hidden rather than dramatic . In lived experience, this means admitting weariness honestly before God, seeking reconciliation instead of self-justification, choosing silence over constant noise. King David’s journey shows how truth spoken in humility reopens the soul to joy (cf. Ps 51). Mystically, repentance draws the heart back to the wounded yet open Heart of Our Adorable Jesus,(cf. Jn 19:34) where mercy is never rationed . Desolation then reveals its final meaning: it is not rejection, but an invitation to come closer in truth. For every vocation, this invitation is concrete—parents soften through patience, priests return to intimacy with Christ, consecrated souls renew availability, professionals recover integrity. The end is not emptiness, but elevation. When the heart turns back, desolation becomes a passageway, and the soul rises more human, more free, and more deeply alive in God.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, You know the tired places of our hearts. Meet us in our quiet desolation and stay with us there. Teach us faithful love when feeling fades, honest repentance when pride resists, and gentle hope that trusts Your presence even in the dark. Amen.

Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.

Divine Appeal 33

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

(Revelation to Sr Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist)

VOLUME 1
 
“The Apocalyptical hour.”

“Be prepared for what I expect of you. Pray and atone. With tears in My Heart I am calling everyone to pray. This is the apocalyptical hour... If they do not repent they will know only desolation.”

“I bless you.”

29th October 1987

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com.

Desertion as Divine Intimacy

Divine Appeal Reflection - 32

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 32: "You have to live moments of desertion."

From the heights of divine intimacy, Our Adorable Jesus calls the soul into a mystery that appears like loss but is crowned with glory: the mystery of desertion. This call is not whispered to the lukewarm but entrusted to those whom He desires to lead beyond the senses into mature union. Sacred Scripture reveals that God often withdraws felt nearness precisely when He is drawing the soul into deeper covenantal fidelity. The epistles proclaim that faith reaches its noblest stature when it perseveres without sight or interior reassurance (cf. 2 Cor 5:7). The Catechism (cf. CCC 164–165) illuminates this paradox, teaching that faith is frequently lived in obscurity and trial, where trust must cling without emotional support . Abraham ascended this path when promises seemed contradicted (cf. Rom 4:18), (cf. Job 23:8–9) and Job walked it when heaven was silent . In daily life, this lofty summons descends into ordinary moments: prayer that feels empty, vocations that feel heavy, fidelity that seems unnoticed. A consecrated soul prays in dryness, a priest ministers amid discouragement, a layperson remains honest when integrity costs dearly. Desertion, then, is not descent into meaninglessness but ascent into purified love. Our Adorable Jesus draws the soul upward by stripping it of lesser supports, that it may stand upon God alone, crowned with a faith that no darkness can extinguish.

The highest light of desertion shines from the Cross itself. Our Adorable Jesus, the Eternal Son, entered the abyss of felt abandonment, voicing the cry foretold in the psalms (cf. Ps 22:1), thereby sanctifying every experience of spiritual desolation. The epistle to the Hebrews (cf. Heb 5:8–9) reveals that He learned obedience through suffering, transforming abandonment into redemptive surrender . The Catechism (cf. CCC 618) teaches that Christ’s voluntary participation in human anguish gives salvific meaning to all trials endured in union with Him . When the soul experiences desertion, it is not moving away from Christ but standing beneath His Cross. In practical life, this union unfolds when one continues to serve without consolation: the missionary preaching with no visible fruit, the religious remaining faithful in obscurity, the parent loving without reciprocation. The saints testify that this conformity to the Crucified purifies intention and deepens charity. Saint Paul rejoiced in sharing Christ’s sufferings so that Christ’s life might be manifested more fully (cf. Phil 3:10). Desertion becomes the seal of authentic discipleship, uniting the soul to the hidden agony of Jesus, who loved without relief. Thus, what appears as abandonment becomes a participation in the most luminous act of divine love ever revealed.

Desertion pierces the faculties, testing faith and hope at their roots. The epistles address communities tempted to grow weary when fervor fades, urging steadfast endurance grounded in promise rather than perception (cf. Heb 10:35–36). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1819) describes this trial as a purification wherein hope perseveres against all appearances . Abraham’s journey (cf. Rom 4:19–21) reached its apex when hope stood naked before impossibility . In daily experience, this sacred darkness manifests when prayers seem unanswered, when injustice lingers, when holiness appears fruitless. A student remains faithful after failure, a spouse loves amid misunderstanding, a believer holds truth while mocked. Our Adorable Jesus permits desertion to cleanse the soul of reliance on emotional certainty, anchoring it instead in divine fidelity. Saint Paul’s thorn remained,(cf. 2 Cor 12:9) not as a defeat, but as the place where grace proved sufficient . Faith forged in desertion becomes unshakable because it rests not on interior light but on God’s unchanging Word. Hope, purified of illusion, becomes heroic. Thus, the night becomes a forge where theological virtues are strengthened for eternal glory.

Charity reaches its royal maturity when it loves without sweetness. The epistles (cf. 1 Cor 13:7) exalt love that endures all things, not love sustained by emotion alone . Desertion strips charity of self-seeking motives, revealing whether the soul loves God for His gifts or for Himself. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2098) affirms that authentic worship requires perseverance even when prayer is dry and unrewarded . In practical life, this purified love shines quietly: the caregiver serving without thanks, the contemplative praying without consolation, the Christian forgiving without reconciliation. Such fidelity mirrors the self-emptying of Christ, (cf. Phil 2:7–8) who poured Himself out unto death . The saints teach that God delights especially in this hidden offering because it is free, humble, and total. Our Adorable Jesus gazes with profound tenderness upon souls who remain when nothing is felt, for they love Him in truth. Desertion thus becomes the throne upon which charity reigns, purified of sentimentality and strengthened for eternal communion.

Desertion, though cloaked in darkness, is ordered toward radiant fruitfulness. Scripture reveals that divine abundance is often preceded by barrenness: Hannah’s tears before Samuel’s birth (cf. 1 Sam 1), Paul’s hidden years before apostolic fire (cf. Gal 1:17–18). The epistles assure believers that perseverance yields a harvest in God’s appointed time (cf. Gal 6:9). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2731) teaches that prayer tested by dryness and struggle becomes more deeply rooted in faith . In every vocation, this promise unfolds silently: the priest whose homilies seem ineffective, the religious whose prayer feels empty, the layperson whose witness remains unseen. Our Adorable Jesus works most powerfully when the soul can no longer measure progress. Desertion enlarges the heart, making it capable of bearing divine life for the Church and the world. What feels like loss becomes preparation for glory; what seems sterile becomes a womb of grace. Standing faithful in desertion, the soul rises again to a higher summit, where God alone is enough. Thus, the path that descends into darkness ends in uncreated Light, and fidelity in the night blossoms into eternal dawn.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, from the heights You lead us through the night. When You withdraw all sweetness, keep us faithful. Purify our faith, strengthen our hope, and crown our charity. Let desertion unite us to Your Cross and lead us into Your eternal Light. Amen.

Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.

Three Mankind Parts Under Unclean Spirits

Divine Appeal Reflection - 32

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 32:  "Because of the evil of mankind, unclean spirits have taken over three parts of mankind. As God’s word has been abandoned, the devil has taken possession of the souls which have deserted the way of the creator."

Most beloved souls, from the blazing stillness of Eternity, Our Adorable Jesus unveils with sorrowful clarity the three interior kingdoms entrusted to man: the intellect created to contemplate Truth, the will fashioned to cleave irrevocably to the Good, and the passions ordered to serve love through the body. When the Word of God is abandoned, invasion follows an exact order. First, the intellect ceases to kneel before Revelation; discernment fractures, as seen when the serpent subtly redirected Eve from obedient listening to autonomous reasoning (cf. Gen 3:1–6). Next, the will weakens—knowing no longer culminates in choosing, as revealed in Israel’s repeated vacillation despite covenantal light (cf. Deut 30:15–19). Finally, the passions usurp authority, and desire becomes law, as in the generation that “did what was right in its own eyes” (cf. Judg 21:25). St. Augustine, in his Confessions, traced this descent with surgical precision: the mind darkened, the will divided, the flesh ruling. The Catechism (cf. CCC 405, 407) confirms that original and personal sin wound the harmony of the soul, opening it to domination rather than communion . This is not myth but lived reality: ideologies replacing doctrine, convenience replacing obedience, sensation replacing sacrifice. Our Adorable Jesus does not exaggerate—He diagnoses. Where the Creator’s Word no longer orders the inner life, unclean spirits occupy the vacuum, not violently, but lawfully, through abandonment.

The first seizure occurs in the intellect, once designed for contemplative union. Sacred Scripture shows that when humanity refuses to honor God as God, the mind becomes futile and darkened, mistaking distortion for enlightenment (cf. Rom 1:21–22). St. Thomas Aquinas (Summa Theologiae, I, q.1) taught that the intellect reaches fulfillment only when it rests in God as First Truth; severed from Him, it multiplies conclusions without wisdom . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2104) insists that man is obliged to seek and adhere to divine truth once known . When this obligation is rejected, unclean spirits introduce counterfeit light: relativism disguised as compassion, autonomy masked as dignity. In concrete life, this appears when Scripture is no longer the measure of conscience, when doctrine is replaced by psychology alone, when prayer avoids silence lest truth speak. Our Adorable Jesus desires to reclaim the intellect not by force, but through humble surrender. Daily lectio divina opens the soul rather than satisfies curiosity, catechetical truths received fully become living nourishment, and homilies heal rather than merely instruct . St. Augustine warns that an untended mind becomes a marketplace of distractions, where fleeting voices drown the whisper of God .

In ordinary life, this is the distracted student, the weary parent, the professional tempted to compromise. Yet when the mind surrenders, it becomes a luminous garden where God plants insight, purifies understanding, and aligns every thought with the Heart of Christ . Curiosity transforms into devotion, reasoning into contemplation. The intellect rests in Love, allowing God to act unseen, shaping wisdom and obedience in silence, drawing the soul deeper into mystical union with Him. Parents who teach children truth patiently, professionals who form conscience before decisions—these are not small acts; they are interior liberations. Where Truth is adored rather than debated, the intellect becomes once more a throne for God.

The second region overtaken is the will, created for decisive love but crippled by hesitation. Scripture reveals this tragedy vividly: knowing the law yet lacking power to fulfill it (cf. Rom 7:18–23). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1739) teaches that freedom, wounded by sin, inclines toward servitude unless healed by grace . St. Ignatius of Loyola identified this paralysis precisely: the enemy delays rather than denies, exhausting the soul through indecision. Pilate stands as the eternal warning— (cf. Jn 19:12–16) truth perceived but not chosen, leading to injustice sanctified by fear . In daily life, this enslavement appears concretely: confessions postponed despite conviction, forgiveness delayed though grace urges, vocational calls silenced by security. Our Adorable Jesus strengthens the will not through emotion but through sacramental obedience. Frequent confession restores decisiveness; Eucharistic fidelity anchors choice. Each deliberate act—keeping vows when unseen, refusing corruption at cost, obeying legitimate authority—reclaims territory. St. Catherine of Siena taught that the will grows strong only when fastened to God’s will like iron to fire. Where the will consents repeatedly to grace, unclean spirits lose jurisdiction, for they cannot rule a soul that chooses God with perseverance.

The third conquest unfolds in the passions, intended to serve love but now enthroned as masters. Scripture warns that when desire governs without the Spirit, the soul fractures and peace departs (cf. Gal 5:17–21). The Catechism clarifies that passions become virtuous only when governed by reason illumined by faith (cf. CCC 1767–1770). St. John of the Cross exposed this bondage with mystic severity: disordered appetites darken the soul more than ignorance. David’s fall began not with adultery but with neglected vigilance and indulgent gaze (cf. 2 Sam 11:1–4). Today this disorder is precise: digital excess eroding silence, impurity dissolving reverence, anger justified as honesty. Our Adorable Jesus does not condemn the body; He restores it. Fasting reorders hunger, custody of the senses heals sight, disciplined rest sanctifies fatigue. These practices are not ascetic nostalgia; they are spiritual surgery. Where the body is gently trained to obey love, desire becomes luminous again. The passions, once tyrants, become instruments of charity. In such souls, unclean spirits find no shelter, for desire no longer answers to them.

The final movement of Divine Appeal 32 is royal restoration. Possession ends where remembrance begins. Scripture calls the soul to recall its first love and rise from its fall (cf. Rev 2:4–5). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1427–1432) teaches that conversion is not episodic but lifelong, sustained by grace, discipline, and communion . Our Adorable Jesus reclaims the soul by re-ordering: Truth heals the intellect, grace fortifies the will, charity purifies desire. St. Benedict prescribed this restoration through ordered life; St. Thérèse revealed it through faithful littleness. In concrete vocations this becomes visible: parents blessing children nightly, priests guarding silence before the altar, workers refusing injustice when unseen. Where the Word is enthroned again, the soul becomes a sanctuary. Our Adorable Jesus, Shepherd and King, gathers what was scattered and restores what was wounded, not merely forgiving but reigning (cf. Jn 10:10). This is the hour of interior coronation. Let every kingdom within return to its rightful Lord.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, reclaim every kingdom within us. Enlighten our intellect by Your Truth, bind our will to Your Will, purify our desires by Your Love. Where we deserted the Creator’s way, lead us back. Reign wholly in us, now and unto eternity. Amen.

Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.

Divine Appeal 32

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

(Revelation to Sr Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist)

VOLUME 1

“Unclean spirits have taken over three parts of mankind. As God’s Word has been abandoned, the devil has taken possession of the souls which have deserted the ways of the Creator.”

“These are the great warnings obtained from My Divine Mercy. Through the anguish of My Heart, because I want to save mankind. I wound not want anyone to be condemned. Pray a great deal for souls. With great faith unite yourself in all sacrifices, prayers, and Masses offered to me. You will have time to pray for the lost souls and to convert them quietly.

I pity humanity. It is horrible to fall into the Hands of the Living God. Because of the evil of mankind, unclean spirits have taken over three parts of mankind. As God’s word has been abandoned, the devil has taken possession of the souls which have deserted the way of the creator.

My daughter, you must atone for this Godless humanity.

I abandon Myself in your heart. You have to live moments of desertion. With your humility you must bring souls to My Heart. Do not be frightened. If humanity prays much and returns to Me then the punishment could be avoided. What more could I have suffered for them!

I have given messages and warnings but they still do not listen. Satan will try to distract my work in you. Because of them you will have to fight and suffer but do not despair, offer it; the just souls have to suffer while still on this earth.”

“I bless you.”

11.00 a.m., 28th October 1987

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com.

Jesus Acting in Souls as If Asleep

Divine Appeal Reflection - 31

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 31: "What you do is not of you, you remain as if you were asleep and I act in you. This is why you are in a state of slumber.”

From the uncreated stillness of the Most Holy Eucharist, Our Adorable Jesus utters a word not meant to be analyzed, but inhabited. Addressed to Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, this appeal emerges from the highest region of union, where the soul no longer lives at the surface of its own actions but is submerged in God. “What you do is not of you” is not a correction—it is a revelation of a soul already drawn beyond itself. This is the sacred sleep first revealed when Adam was placed into a deep slumber and God alone fashioned life from his side (cf. Gen 2:21–22). Here, human consciousness recedes so divine creativity may unfold. The Church teaches that every movement toward holiness begins with God’s initiative, preceding all effort and merit (cf. CCC 2001–2002). Eucharistic souls live permanently at this threshold, where personal ownership dissolves. In daily life, this mystery unfolds when prayer continues without felt presence, when fidelity persists without reward, when love remains even when the heart feels empty. This is not absence of God, but His total occupation. The soul that consents to rest—poor, trusting, and unguarded—like a child fallen asleep against the Father’s Heart, becomes a living sanctuary where God is no longer resisted. There, without noise or display, He moves with sovereign gentleness, shaping eternity through silence, accomplishing His greatest works while the soul simply remains.

This divine sleep runs like a hidden river through Scripture. Abram falls into a dread-filled sleep, and God alone passes through the covenantal sacrifice, binding Himself without human negotiation (cf. Gen 15:12–18). Jacob sleeps on bare earth, unaware that heaven has opened above him, and awakens transformed (cf. Gen 28:10–17). Hannah prays beyond words, emptied of self-defense,(cf. 1 Sam 1:10–20) and God brings forth life from her surrender . The Virgin of Nazareth stands at the summit of this lineage: (cf. Lk 1:35–38) silent, receptive, overshadowed—where the Word enters history without noise . Contemplation, the Church teaches, (cf. CCC 2715) is this simple, loving gaze where God acts while the soul remains still . Sr. Anna’s Eucharistic vocation participates in this lineage: a life hidden before the Host, where time itself seems suspended so eternity may work. In ordinary vocations, this slumber is lived when parents entrust their children beyond anxiety, when priests offer the Sacrifice without interior consolation, when the faithful remain obedient amid obscurity. God prefers hearts emptied of self-assertion. The sleeping soul becomes fertile ground where divine purposes mature unseen.

The Cross reveals the terrifying beauty of this appeal. Our Adorable Jesus is immobilized, silent, stripped of all visible agency— (cf. Is 53:7; Jn 19:28–30) yet the redemption of the world unfolds in that immobility . Here, divine omnipotence manifests not through intervention, but through surrender. The Church teaches that Christ’s sacrifice is complete, yet mysteriously allows souls to be united to it, filling up what remains in lived participation (cf. CCC 618). Eucharistic souls are drawn into this crucified slumber: they suffer without explanation, love without response, persevere without clarity. In illness, the body ceases to act; in misunderstanding, the tongue falls silent; in prolonged dryness, prayer becomes pure consent. This is the sleep where ego dies. God acts most freely when the soul no longer interferes. The appeal entrusted to Sr. Anna unveils this cruciform mysticism: when human will rests entirely in the Father, divine Love completes its work without obstruction. From this silence flows resurrection, not as noise, but as irreversible transformation.

This holy sleep is not escape from responsibility, but its transfiguration. The soul acts faithfully, then releases possession of results. Prayer becomes surrender, not strategy (cf. CCC 2738). In family life, this slumber heals the tyranny of control. In leadership, it purifies authority into service. In youth, it liberates from frantic self-definition. In consecrated life, it deepens hidden fruitfulness. In old age, it becomes the final Eucharistic offering of being itself. Scripture (cf. Ps 127:1) declares that unless the Lord builds the house, human labor remains empty . Our Adorable Jesus invites souls to labor diligently while remaining inwardly asleep—resting in divine providence. This interior stillness becomes a sanctuary within action. The soul, no longer scattered, becomes recollected. God thinks, loves, and acts within it. Such a soul may feel inactive, yet heaven is moving through it. This is mysticism lived in kitchens, offices, cloisters, hospitals, and streets—where God quietly accomplishes what no strategy could achieve.

This Divine Appeal, flowing from the Eucharistic Heart of Our Adorable Jesus and entrusted to Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, leads the soul to the highest summit of transformation. Here, slumber is no longer metaphor but state of being. The soul no longer acts—it abides. Losing itself entirely, it is found in God (cf. Mt 16:25). Holiness, the Church teaches, is the work of grace animated by charity, not human construction (cf. CCC 826). Eucharistic souls, hidden and forgotten, become pillars sustaining the Church and channels through which divine mercy enters history. God moves in the soul where all personal movement has ceased, accomplishing His designs beyond intention, effort, or awareness. This is the abyss of holy surrender: when the soul lies wholly hidden in God, Love alone keeps vigil—breathing praise into the Father, carrying the secret labor of redemption, and gathering all that exists into the infinite stillness where divine glory eternally rests.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, hidden and living in the Most Holy Eucharist, draw us into Your divine slumber. Empty us of self, quiet our striving, and let Your Love act freely within us. May our surrender awaken grace in the Church and glory in the Father. Amen.

Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.

Divine Appeal 34

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL (Revelation to Sr Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist) VOLUME 1 “Adore My Divine Sacrament and offer it to ...