ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL
VOLUME 1
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.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 126: "I have dwelt in the tabernacles for centuries waiting and longing for souls. I need every soul as if it was the only one on earth."
How astonishing is the mystery of divine love: before the infinite Heart of God, no soul is ever lost in the crowd. One of the deepest spiritual errors is to imagine ourselves merely one among billions in the eyes of heaven. Human society counts people as numbers, categories, or passing faces, yet Our Adorable Jesus beholds each soul with infinite tenderness, as though it alone stood before Him. Divine love is never divided. God sees all souls at once, yet loves each personally, completely, and intimately . Sacred Scripture reveals this profoundly. The Good Shepherd leaves the ninety-nine to seek the one who is lost, not because others are forgotten, but because every soul matters infinitely to His Heart . He calls His own by name (cf. Jn 10:3), knows them before they are formed (cf. Jer 1:5), and treasures them beyond measure . The Church (cf. CCC 356, 1700; Jer 1:5) teaches that every human person is uniquely created in the image of God and called to eternal communion with Him . No soul is accidental, forgotten, or spiritually insignificant, (cf. Is 43:1) because each life is willed and loved into existence by Divine Love . Before Our Adorable Jesus, every person is profoundly known, patiently sought, and eternally loved (cf. Jn 10:14; Jer 31:3). Even when the world overlooks, misunderstands, rejects, or forgets, Christ continues beholding the hidden dignity of the soul and gently calling it toward communion with Himself, for His gaze penetrates beyond appearances into the depths of the heart . This truth runs throughout salvation history. Before nations existed, God called Abraham personally (cf. Gen 12:1-4). Before Israel was formed, Moses was called by name from the burning bush (cf. Ex 3:4). Before David became king, (cf. 1 Sam 16:7-13) God saw him while others overlooked him . Before the Apostles preached to the world, (cf. Mk 3:13-19) Christ called each one individually . Divine love never loses itself in crowds.
Before the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus, every person carries an unrepeatable dignity and an irreplaceable place within the mystery of divine love . There has never been, nor will there ever be, another person identical to you. Your history, wounds, struggles, vocation, gifts, temptations, hidden sacrifices, and deepest longings are uniquely known and lovingly held by God, (cf. Jer 1:5; Ps 139:1–4; Heb 4:13) who searches the depths of the heart and understands every thought before it is spoken . Before Our Adorable Jesus, nothing is generic: even what seems hidden, unfinished, (cf. Jn 10:14–15) or misunderstood remains held within a personal love that knows the soul more deeply than it knows itself . Our Adorable Jesus does not merely know your name; He knows every hidden movement of your heart . He knows the prayer you never finished, the sorrow you never shared, the fear you never expressed, and the sacrifice no one noticed. His attention toward each soul is complete, personal, and uninterrupted.
Human love is beautiful yet limited because it must divide attention among many people. Even if a mother may have a lot of children in her heart, her attention must inevitably be divided among them. No matter how kind, a father's care is nonetheless constrained by human capacity, strength, and time. Divine love, by contrast, is never divided, reduced, or exhausted. Our Adorable Jesus never loves one soul less because He loves many; rather, He gives Himself wholly to each person with perfect intimacy, as though that soul alone stood before Him (cf. Isa 49:15–16; Wis 11:24–26; Jn 10:14–15). His love never grows distracted, exhausted, or divided, (cf. Ps 145:8–9; Mt 10:29–31; CCC 605) for God’s care reaches every soul completely and personally . Human beings cannot give themselves entirely to everyone simultaneously. God alone possesses such infinite capacity. This is why Our Adorable Jesus can love every soul as though no other soul existed. His love does not diminish because it is shared. It remains complete for each person. The love He gives to one soul takes nothing away from another. Every soul receives the whole Heart of Christ. The Cross reveals this mystery. Christ died once for all humanity (cf. Heb 10:10), yet the Church (CCC 605) teaches that His sacrifice was offered for every individual person . In the mystery of divine knowledge, every soul was present before Him. Every act of suffering, every humiliation, every wound of His Passion carried personal significance. Consider daily life. A young person struggling with addiction may think God is occupied with greater concerns. A widow grieving in solitude may feel forgotten. A businessman carrying secret guilt may believe he is invisible before Heaven. A student battling anxiety may think his struggles are insignificant. Yet Christ's attention toward each of them remains complete.Saint Catherine of Siena frequently thought about how intimate God's love is. She understood that Christ's sacrifice was made for individual souls as well as for mankind as a whole. The more a person understands this truth, the more impossible it becomes to believe that God is indifferent to any aspect of their life .
Many people do not reject God because they hate Him; they drift away because they secretly believe they do not matter enough to Him. This hidden wound appears in countless forms. Some believe their sins are too great. Others believe their lives are too ordinary. Others think they are spiritually unimportant because they are neither saints, priests, religious, nor public apostles. Yet Scripture repeatedly reveals God's preference for the overlooked. He chose David (cf. 1 Sam 16:6-13) while others focused on stronger candidates . He called Gideon (cf. Judg 6:11-16) despite his feelings of inadequacy . He noticed the widow's small offering (cf. Mk 12:41-44) while many ignored her . He sought Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:1-10) when others dismissed him . Our Adorable Jesus continues acting this way. He notices hidden acts of fidelity that the world overlooks. He sees the mother praying for her children late at night. He sees the elderly person enduring suffering with patience. He sees the seminarian struggling for holiness. He sees the worker choosing honesty despite financial pressure. He sees the young adult resisting temptation in silence. No soul is accidental. No soul is unnecessary. No soul is forgotten. The devil constantly attempts to convince souls that they are insignificant. Christ continually proclaims the opposite. Every soul possesses such value that Heaven pursues it tirelessly, grace surrounds it constantly,(cf. 1 Tim 2:4; 2 Pet 3:9) and Christ Himself desires its salvation .
The realization that Christ loves each soul individually is both consoling and demanding. It consoles because no one is forgotten. It challenges because no one can hide behind the crowd. Many people compare themselves to others. They measure holiness against neighbors, parishioners, family members, or public figures. Yet Our Adorable Jesus does not judge souls according to comparison. He looks at each person according to the unique mission, grace, and vocation entrusted to them. The parable of the talents (cf. Mt 25:14-30) demonstrates this clearly . Each servant received different gifts and responsibilities. What mattered was not comparison but fidelity. Likewise, (cf. Mt 25:31-46) the judgment described by Christ focuses on personal response to grace . This transforms ordinary life. The question is not whether another person prays more. The question is whether I respond to the grace given to me. The question is not whether others are holier. The question is whether I allow Christ to transform my own soul.Saint John Henry Newman thought carefully about each person's special mission. He understood that each soul has a unique position in God's design. When Our Adorable Jesus examines a person's soul, He sees opportunities that the individual is unable to perceive. He sees virtues not yet developed, missions not yet fulfilled, conversions not yet completed, and sanctity not yet attained. His personal love therefore becomes a constant invitation to deeper holiness .
At the heart of eternity lies a truth that many souls spend their entire lives learning: God loves them personally. Not symbolically. Not generally. Not collectively. Personally. The realization of Christ’s intimate love has overwhelmed countless saints, revealing that the heart of the spiritual life is not abstraction but encounter. Saint Angela of Foligno was drawn into profound awe before the mystery of God’s nearness, discovering that divine love is not distant but deeply personal (cf. Eph 3:17–19; CCC 2565). Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity lived with an intense awareness of God’s indwelling presence in the soul, allowing this silent communion to shape her entire interior life . Saint Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows responded to this same love with joyful surrender, embracing a life marked by simplicity, devotion, and total offering to Christ . In this light, the whole spiritual journey can be understood as a gradual awakening to a single reality: that God is not only to be sought, (cf. Ps 139:7–10; CCC 260) but already intimately present, loving, and drawing the soul into ever-deeper communion with Himself . One way to think of the entire spiritual life is as a slow awakening to this fact. Prayer becomes easier when one realizes Christ is personally listening. Trust becomes possible when one realizes Christ is personally guiding. Repentance becomes hopeful when one realizes Christ is personally forgiving. Suffering becomes bearable when one realizes Christ is personally accompanying. This truth also changes how we see others. Every person we encounter is someone personally loved by Christ. The difficult colleague, the struggling family member, the lonely neighbor, the confused young adult, the poor, the sick, and the sinner are all souls whom Christ knows and loves individually. The Church (CCC 1, 260, 1703)teaches that God calls every person to share in His divine life . Therefore, every soul carries an eternal significance that exceeds all earthly measurements. The day a soul fully believes it is personally loved by Our Adorable Jesus is often the day true conversion begins. For holiness does not primarily grow from fear. It grows from the discovery that the Eternal God has loved us from all eternity, pursues us throughout life, and desires us with a love so personal that each soul can truly say: "Before His Heart, I am never one among many; I am known, desired, and loved as though I were the only soul on earth."
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, let us never measure our worth by the standards of the world. Help us remember that we are loved with an everlasting love and called to share in Your divine life. Keep us faithful until we behold You face to face. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 125: "It is time to pray and reach the consciences of souls."
One of the greatest spiritual confusions of our time is the reduction of conscience to mere feeling, emotion, or personal opinion, when in reality conscience is the deepest place where the human person is addressed by God’s truth. Our Adorable Jesus calls us to pray and reach consciences because this interior sanctuary determines how souls choose, love, and ultimately live eternally. The Church (CCC 1776) teaches that conscience is the “innermost sanctuary” where a person is alone with God whose voice echoes in the depths of the heart . Yet this voice is often confused with competing internal movements. To understand conscience, one must distinguish it from other interior voices. There is the voice of emotion, often loud yet unstable, rising and falling according to changing circumstances (cf. Jas 1:6–8). There is the voice of fear, which exaggerates danger, magnifies uncertainty, and discourages holy courage, causing the soul to retreat from trust in God . There is the voice of desire, which seeks immediate satisfaction and often resists sacrifice, preferring comfort to obedience and pleasure to virtue (cf. Jas 1:14–15; Gal 5:16–17). There is the voice of memory, replaying wounds, regrets, attachments, or former pleasures that continue to influence the present, sometimes imprisoning the soul within sorrow or nostalgia . There is also the voice of culture, subtle yet powerful, quietly shaping what people consider acceptable, desirable, and normal, even when such standards conflict with divine truth . Yet conscience is different. It does not merely whisper what feels pleasant, emotionally satisfying, or socially acceptable, but what is true, good, and morally right before God.
Conscience stands as a sacred interior sanctuary (cf. Rom 2:14–15; CCC 1776–1778) where the human person encounters the moral law written by God upon the heart and becomes aware of responsibility before Him . Sacred Scripture reveals this interior struggle with remarkable clarity. After sin, Adam experienced profound inner conflict and hid from God rather than responding to His loving call, (cf. Gen 3:8–10) revealing how guilt clouds perception and produces fear instead of trust . Cain received an interior warning, yet ignored conscience and allowed jealousy to harden into violence, (cf. Gen 4:6–9) demonstrating how neglected conscience gradually darkens moral vision . King Saul continued outward religious acts while inward obedience weakened, illustrating how one may appear faithful externally while drifting from God interiorly (cf. 1 Sam 15:22–23). Judas Iscariot repeatedly resisted the movements of grace until attachment to worldly motives overwhelmed fidelity . In contrast, the Blessed Virgin Mary (cf. Lk 2:19, 51) reveals the beauty of a conscience fully attentive to God. She “pondered in her heart” , reflecting prayerfully upon divine mysteries and remaining interiorly receptive even amid uncertainty. Likewise, young Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10) learned gradually to recognize the Lord’s voice above confusion, responding with humble availability: “Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening” . To live with a rightly formed conscience, therefore, is to recognize this divine interior voice above competing inner movements and to cultivate the humility required to obey it. Such discernment demands prayer, silence, examination of conscience, Scripture, wise spiritual guidance, sacramental grace, and continual conversion . Conscience must be formed, purified, and educated according to truth, (CCC 1783–1785) lest it become weakened by habitual sin, pride, fear, or cultural confusion . Saint Paul speaks of consciences that may become weak or even hardened , reminding us that moral sensitivity requires vigilance. Living conscience is therefore not merely hearing an inner voice, but continually returning to truth illuminated by grace, where God gently forms the soul toward holiness, freedom, and loving obedience .
A formed conscience does not automatically speak clearly; it must be purified, trained, and listened to with humility, because many internal voices imitate truth while subtly leading the soul away from it (cf. Heb 5:14; Rom 12:2). Our Adorable Jesus desires not only that we have a conscience, but that we recognize His voice within it, distinguishing His gentle prompting from the many competing interior movements . Psychological noise often appears as confusion, anxiety, or overthinking, especially during moments of decision-making, when the soul feels pressured and unsettled (cf. Jas 1:5–6). Temptation often presents itself as urgency: “do it now,” or “it doesn’t matter,” pushing the soul toward haste rather than discernment . Self-justification disguises sin as necessity or exception: “everyone does it,” or “I deserve this,” weakening moral clarity through rationalization . The voice of conscience, however, carries a quiet clarity that leads toward truth, responsibility, and peace aligned with God, even when it is demanding or costly . Scripture (cf. 1 Sam 3:10; 1 Thess 5:21) shows this discernment at work, where the faithful are called to test every spirit and remain attentive to God’s guiding truth in the heart . Pilate (cf. Mt 27:24) heard conscience but drowned it in political fear and crowd pressure . Judas Iscariot (cf. Mt 27:3–5) experienced remorse but confused guilt with despair instead of returning to mercy . In contrast, Peter the Apostle (cf. Lk 22:61–62) allowed conscience to lead him to repentance and restoration . A student deciding whether to cheat feels pressure (temptation), fear of failure (emotion), and rationalization (“others cheat”). Practical discernment appears daily. Conscience quietly says: remain truthful. A businessperson facing corruption feels financial anxiety (fear), ambition (desire), and social pressure (culture), yet conscience calls to integrity. A spouse in conflict feels anger (emotion), pride (self-justification), yet conscience calls to reconciliation. The Church (CCC 1783–1785) teaches that conscience must be formed and clarified through truth, prayer, and grace . Discernment grows when the soul regularly pauses, prays, and asks: “What leads me closer to God, even if it costs me something?”
A weak conscience is not absent; it is simply clouded, like a mirror covered with dust, unable to reflect truth clearly until it is purified by grace . Our Adorable Jesus calls for prayer precisely because prayer restores clarity to the interior eye of the soul, reordering desires and reawakening sensitivity to truth (cf. Ps 139:23–24; Phil 4:6–7; CCC 1779). Prayer allows conscience to breathe, freeing it from the suffocation of distraction, fear, and self-deception, so that the soul can again perceive God’s will with simplicity and peace (cf. Lk 18:1; Rom 8:26). Without prayer, conscience becomes overwhelmed by noise and loses sensitivity. Silence allows truth to surface. Scripture provides divine criteria for judgment. Sacraments strengthen the will to act according to what conscience perceives. Together, they form the environment in which conscience becomes reliable. Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:9–10) learned to recognize God’s voice through attentiveness and repeated listening . David allowed prayer and repentance to restore his conscience after failure (cf. Ps 51). Mary of Bethany chose contemplative listening as the foundation of right action (cf. Lk 10:39). In daily life, this formation is concrete. A person begins the day with brief prayer, asking for clarity in decisions. Before speaking in conflict, they pause to listen inwardly. Before purchasing, they examine whether the choice aligns with honesty and need. Before reacting emotionally, they allow silence to filter response. The Eucharist becomes the highest school of conscience because in the presence of Our Adorable Jesus, truth becomes interiorly intelligible. The Church teaches that conscience must be formed by God’s Word and guided by grace (CCC 1785). Without this formation, conscience becomes either overly rigid or dangerously permissive. With it, conscience becomes a stable interior guide capable of discerning truth amid confusion.
A well-formed conscience is not meant to remain a passive interior voice; it demands embodiment through action, even when such action is costly or misunderstood (cf. Jas 1:22–25; Lk 11:28). Our Adorable Jesus does not only ask that consciences be heard, but that they be obeyed, for truth is fully received only when it is lived . To live according to conscience is to align external behavior with internal truth, allowing faith to take visible form in concrete choices shaped by grace . It is the unity of inner conviction and outward action, where love becomes consistent in both intention and deed. Without this unity, the soul becomes divided, experiencing inner tension and spiritual instability, as competing loyalties weaken interior peace . When conscience is followed consistently, peace gradually deepens even in difficulty. Scripture presents powerful examples. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (cf. Dan 3) obeyed conscience and refused idolatry despite threat of death . Daniel continued faithful prayer despite legal persecution (cf. Dan 6). Joseph of Arimathea acted according to conscience by courageously honoring Christ publicly at a critical moment . Modern examples are equally concrete. An employee refuses to falsify reports even if it risks promotion. A nurse refuses to neglect a patient despite exhaustion. A young person refuses peer pressure even when isolated. A priest speaks truth even when it is unpopular. A family chooses forgiveness instead of revenge. Living conscience is often quiet but deeply courageous. The Church (CCC 1778, 1790–1791) teaches that acting according to conscience is a moral obligation . Yet it also teaches that conscience must remain open to correction when wrongly formed. Over time, such living produces interior harmony, where peace confirms right action and repeated fidelity strengthens spiritual maturity.
The ultimate goal of conscience is not mere moral correctness but communion with God, where the soul learns to live habitually in truth, peace, holiness, and divine friendship . Conscience is not only an inner judge but a living interior dialogue that draws the person toward God and keeps them anchored in His truth, where the law of God is written on the heart and continually illuminated by grace . Our Adorable Jesus desires that conscience becomes a continual relationship rather than an occasional struggle, where the soul learns to recognize His voice amid competing voices of fear, emotion, desire, and culture . A mature conscience does not merely avoid sin but seeks to act from love, asking in all things what pleases God . Such maturity brings interior stability. Life may remain complex, but the soul is anchored in God rather than in impulse, fear, or public opinion. Decisions are shaped by grace and truth rather than reaction or pressure . Saint Paul (cf. Acts 23:1) shows this stability when he speaks of acting with a clear conscience before God even amid trials . Conscience becomes a steady inner compass formed by prayer, Scripture, and obedience to truth . The saints show how this conscience is formed in real life. Saint Ignatius of Loyola taught discernment of spirits to recognize movements leading toward or away from God. Saint Catherine of Siena and Saint Thomas More reveal how a well-formed conscience produces courage, fidelity, and truth even under pressure (cf. Mt 16:24–26; CCC 1806). Daily life becomes its training ground: honesty in small things, patience in trials, purity in thought, and charity in speech . Over time, conscience becomes sensitive to even subtle disorder and quickly returns the soul to God. The Church teaches that conscience is ordered toward truth and happiness in God (CCC 1780, 1784). Formed by grace and obeyed in love, it becomes the pathway through which Our Adorable Jesus leads the soul toward eternal communion with Him .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, purify our consciences and make them sensitive to Your truth. Silence every false voice within us and teach us to recognize Your gentle call. Help us to live faithfully what we discern, even in difficulty. Lead all souls through conscience into holiness, peace, and eternal communion with You. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 125: "Do not be afraid. Serve Me and give Me shelter in which to rest."
One of the most subtle spiritual illusions is believing that nearness to holy things is the same as nearness to Our Adorable Jesus. A soul may spend years serving the Church, speaking about Christ, defending truth, organizing ministries, teaching catechism, singing in choirs, or carrying heavy apostolic responsibilities, (cf. Mt 15:8; Rev 2:4–5) yet remain inwardly unrecollected—busy around Jesus while quietly distant from His Heart. Activity can sometimes become a refuge from encounter. This is the sorrow hidden beneath much religious labor: the soul gives Christ its work while withholding its interior dwelling. Yet Our Adorable Jesus does not first seek usefulness; He seeks communion (cf. Jn 15:4–5). Before asking for labor, Christ asks for a dwelling. Before sending apostles, He called them first to remain with Him (cf. Mk 3:13–14). Before commanding Peter to feed His sheep, He first examined whether Peter loved Him (cf. Jn 21:15–17). The Heart of Our Adorable Jesus seeks servants who are also friends, disciples, and living tabernacles. Without interior shelter, service can become self-promotion, routine, ambition, activism, or mere obligation. A person may spend hours speaking about Jesus while rarely speaking to Jesus. They may defend Him publicly while neglecting Him privately. They may work tirelessly in His vineyard while leaving His Heart abandoned within their own soul. The Church teaches that apostolic fruitfulness depends upon union with Christ (CCC 864, 2074). Thus every authentic service begins by giving Jesus a home within the depths of one's being, where He is loved, heard, welcomed, and allowed to reign (cf. Jn 15:4–5).
The appeal of Our Adorable Jesus reaches far beyond outward religious activity because His deepest desire is not usefulness, but communion (cf. Jn 14:23). He seeks shelter within the soul so that His Heart may truly live, love, act, and reign there. Many serve Him externally while interiorly remaining occupied by anxiety, resentment, pride, hidden ambition, self-will, vanity, impatience, or unhealed attachments . Grace may still bear fruit through such souls, yet Christ often remains more a welcomed visitor than the quiet center of the heart. But Our Adorable Jesus desires more than cooperation; He desires holy possession—not domination, (cf. Gal 2:20) but intimate indwelling . Our Adorable Jesus knocks gently upon every hidden chamber of the soul (cf. Rev 3:20): wounded memories still carrying pain, restless thoughts unable to trust, troubled emotions, fearful imaginations, secret shame, hidden resentment, and grief left silently unresolved (cf. Ps 147:3). He does not enter these places to condemn, but to heal—to bring light where fear has settled, peace where confusion reigns, and mercy where the soul has long suffered alone . The heart becomes His refuge only when it no longer keeps locked rooms. Shelter means allowing Him access to areas we often hide even from ourselves. This truth applies to every vocation. The teacher no longer teaches merely to succeed professionally but because Christ loves each student. The physician no longer treats patients merely as a career but becomes an instrument through which Christ touches suffering humanity. The judge seeks justice because Christ loves truth. The farmer cultivates the land with gratitude toward the Creator. The parent no longer sacrifices only from obligation but because Christ Himself loves the family through that parent's fidelity. The priest no longer ministers merely because of duty but because the Good Shepherd desires to reach His flock through him. This is the mystery of divine indwelling. Christ is no longer merely assisted by the soul; He lives within it and continues His mission through it. Such service bears lasting fruit because it flows from divine life rather than mere human effort .
Many souls begin serving Christ with genuine zeal but gradually lose intimacy with Him. The ministry remains, the activities continue, the responsibilities increase, yet the interior friendship weakens. This is one of the most subtle temptations in spiritual life. A person becomes occupied with the works of God while neglecting the God of the works. Recognition begins replacing humility. Efficiency replaces prayer. Results become more important than fidelity. Slowly the soul becomes spiritually exhausted because it is drawing from its own strength rather than from Christ. This danger appears everywhere. A parish leader becomes controlling because personal ambition enters unnoticed. A catechist explains doctrine beautifully while carrying bitterness toward others. A choir member sings sacred hymns yet neglects personal conversion. A parent encourages children to pray while allowing personal prayer to disappear. A religious fulfills every duty yet gradually loses recollection. A priest may give himself generously to others yet slowly neglect the hidden place where ministry draws life: lingering before the Blessed Sacrament. Outward responsibilities continue, sermons are prepared, sacraments celebrated, people served—yet interior love quietly begins to fade (cf. Rev 2:4). The deepest danger in spiritual life is not always visible failure, but hidden distance from God beneath faithful activity. The contrast between Saul and David (cf. 1 Sam 15; Ps 51) reveals this mystery . Saul preserved religious appearances while resisting deeper surrender, whereas David, despite grave sin, repeatedly returned his wounded heart to God through repentance. St. Bernard of Clairvaux warned against becoming merely a channel that pours endlessly outward while remaining inwardly empty. The Church (cf. CCC 864) teaches that apostolic mission must flow from union with Christ rather than replace it . When Our Adorable Jesus truly finds shelter within the soul, service remains alive because love remains alive (cf. Jn 15:5).
Many Christians welcome Christ into certain aspects of life while reserving others entirely for themselves. They invite Him into Sunday worship but exclude Him from financial decisions. They pray faithfully but refuse forgiveness. They participate in ministries but cling to pride. They honor Him publicly while resisting Him privately. Yet shelter implies residence, not visitation. Our Adorable Jesus desires a permanent home, not an occasional guest room. When Christ is truly sheltered, practical transformation follows. Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:1–10) encountered Jesus and immediately his relationships, possessions, and priorities changed . Genuine shelter always produces visible consequences. A businessperson refuses corruption despite financial pressure. A university student maintains integrity when cheating would be easier. A spouse chooses forgiveness after betrayal. A worker remains honest when dishonesty would bring advantage. A young person protects purity amid powerful temptations. A community leader rejects manipulation and chooses justice. Saint Charles de Foucauld sought to make every ordinary moment available to Christ. Shelter therefore extends beyond the Eucharist, (CCC 1391) although Holy Communion remains its highest sacramental expression . Shelter also exists in workplaces, homes, schools, hospitals, workshops, farms, offices, and hidden struggles. Every area surrendered becomes a place where Our Adorable Jesus may rest. The more room we give Him, (cf. Jn 14:23; CCC 521) the more fully He lives His life within ours .
The world measures greatness through accomplishments, visibility, influence, and success. Our Adorable Jesus often measures greatness through fidelity. Some of the most beautiful shelters ever offered to His Heart are unknown to the world. A mother caring daily for a child with special needs. An elderly man praying faithfully despite loneliness. A widow remaining devoted to Christ after profound loss. A worker refusing dishonest profit despite financial hardship. A young adult remaining faithful to Catholic values while surrounded by compromise. Such souls may never receive recognition, yet they provide profound consolation to the Heart of Jesus. Hannah transformed sorrow into trusting prayer (cf. 1 Sam 1:9–20). Job welcomed God even amid devastating suffering, allowing affliction to become a place of surrender rather than rebellion (cf. Job 1–2). Likewise, St. Lidwina of Schiedam and Blessed Chiara Luce Badano reveal how suffering united to Christ can quietly become a sanctuary of divine love rather than despair . Ultimately, the deepest question of this appeal is not how much we are doing for Our Adorable Jesus,(cf. Jn 14:23) but how much room we have given Him within ourselves . One soul may accomplish extraordinary works while leaving Christ at the threshold; another may live hidden and unnoticed, yet provide such interior shelter that every duty, sacrifice, and encounter quietly radiates His presence. One offers activity; the other offers hospitality. When Christ truly finds a dwelling within the soul, life itself becomes transformed: (cf. Col 3:23) work becomes prayer , suffering becomes offering (cf. Col 1:24), ordinary duties become hidden love, and vocation becomes participation in His life. Then Our Adorable Jesus is not merely served—He is welcomed, consoled, loved, and allowed to reign.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, teach us to give You not only our labor but our hearts. Make our souls a peaceful shelter where You may dwell, reign, and rest. Let every duty, sacrifice, prayer, and suffering flow from union with You, consoling Your Sacred Heart always. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.