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Divine Appeal 99

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“In the Sacrament of My Love, I am submerged in an ocean of grief.”

“My daughter, I stay in the tabernacle that all may come and find consolation and find all they need in My Love. It is this great love which keeps Me day and night a prisoner in the tabernacle. Pray a great deal. Spend these dark hours with Me. Give Me company. Outrages and all the nameless abominations are committed against Me, passing before My eyes from My own... With tears, My heart is in search of souls. These are My feelings. I desire you to dress the wounds caused in the body of My Eucharist by My own...

Let Me plunge your soul in bitterness. Have no fear. The power of the evil one is not greater than Mine. Do not worry. Let Me help you and pour out all the feelings of My heart. Give Me yourself and make reparation for the sacrileges that I receive from My own... I am here to reveal to you the painful feelings of My Heart. In the Sacrament of My Love I am submerged in an ocean of grief. Share My agony.

Time is approaching. I assure him that many will turn away from Me. Many will hear My call and they will not listen. My sacred places will be blasphemed. Never before has the world needed prayers like the present time. I must speak to the souls before it is too late. Contemplate Me in this state of ignominy. Look at My pains and let yourself be guided by grace and by the desire to console Me.  I am so lonely.

What more could I have suffered for mankind! The souls I love so much do not understand Me. I willingly endured all the pains in order to draw mankind to follow My way and have eternal life. Pray more and bring Me souls.

My daughter, spend these dark hours with Me. Pray and atone for souls. Contemplate Me in this state of ignominy. Give Me your adoration and reparation. I am thirsting. Bring Me souls. My great love for mankind keeps Me always watching beneath My Sacramental veil. I am so lonely like a terrified child with no one to hold on to. I am in search of love and consolation.

The souls I love so much do not understand Me. The ingratitude of... continuously pains Me. Abused and blasphemed I remain in the tabernacle. Led by the devil... labour hard to abolish My presence. I am calling them all back to My sheepfold. If they do not they will only know desolation. The anger of My Eternal Father is flowing. I come to seek shade. I let you spend these hours with My feelings. I do not want anyone to perish. I feel pain to see very many souls on the way to perdition. In the front line,... Satan wants victory over all souls. These times demand accelerated action. Freemasons hurl themselves against the Church using My own...

These are grave moments. What a pain! The majority of... have degraded the nobility of their ministry through living superficially and not holding fast to the greatness of the works they have received. Bending over the world, I pity the souls that I entrusted to them. I wish to pour My Mercy in their hearts. Pray and implore mercy for them.”

“I give My blessings.”

3.00 a.m., 2nd March 1988

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 the Wounded Hunter of Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 98

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 98: "Bring Me souls. I suffer and thirst for souls. I am like the hunter who would let himself be wounded to death in order to lure his coveted prey... I tell him to go with My living words continually and find sinners for Me."

There is a cry here that does not remain in heaven—it enters the very depth of human experience, touching the heart with a tenderness that is at once unsettling and healing. In this mystery, Jesus is not presented as distant Redeemer alone, but as One personally invested in each soul, freely entering vulnerability out of love (cf. Phil 2:6–8; CCC 478). His Passion is not only endured; it is willed as self-gift.The prophetic depth of this is revealed in the image of the Suffering Servant, wounded not by necessity but by love that chooses to remain exposed for the sake of healing others (cf. Is 53:3–5). Even the piercing of His side, from which blood and water flow (cf. Jn 19:34), becomes a sign that His love does not withdraw from human violence and indifference but transforms it from within. Nothing in His Passion is wasted;(cf. Col 1:20) everything is directed toward reconciliation . What is most striking is the personal dimension: this love is not directed toward an abstract humanity,(cf. Gal 2:20) but toward each person individually known and desired . The shepherd leaves the ninety-nine for the one, not as metaphorical excess, but as revelation of divine attentiveness (cf. Lk 15:4–7; CCC 605). Every life matters in a way that is not general but intimate.This overturns the way we see daily life. The colleague ignored, the child misunderstood, the stranger dismissed—none are neutral presences. Each is a soul held within this same redeeming love. Indifference, therefore, is not simply emotional distance; it becomes a blindness to how deeply Christ is already engaged with the person before us. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2560, 2567) situates this within the mystery of a God who never ceases to seek a response from the human heart . To enter this awareness is to undergo interior conversion: not merely to believe that God loves, but to begin perceiving where that love is actively at work. The human heart is gradually reshaped—learning to recognize where Christ still “aches,” to see where He is already present, and to respond by acting with His own merciful attentiveness in ordinary life.

The phrase “I thirst” echoes across time, not ending at Calvary but continuing mystically in the life of the Church (cf. Jn 19:28; CCC 2560). It reveals not lack in Christ, but the intensity of divine love—an unceasing desire that souls enter life with God (cf. Jn 7:37–38). Yet this love is experienced, from within human history, as a kind of suffering: not because God is diminished, but because love freely given can remain unreceived. In human terms, this is familiar—real love always carries the risk of rejection, silence, or indifference. Christ freely enters this vulnerability. The saints did not only contemplate this “thirst,” but in prayer and sacrifice allowed their own hearts to be shaped by it. The Catechism describes prayer as the mysterious encounter between God’s thirst for us and our thirst for Him (cf. CCC 2560–2561). Prayer is therefore not escape, but communion of desire. This also gives weight to ordinary life. Every moment where grace is ignored, conscience resisted, or mercy refused is not impersonal in the mystery of love. Scripture uses the language of divine sorrow to express how seriously God engages human freedom (cf. Eph 4:30). Not weakness, but the cost of love freely offered. Practically, this reshapes how we meet others. Patience with a difficult person, forgiveness after injury, or quiet endurance in relationships becomes participation in Christ’s own self-giving. Like Joseph forgiving his brothers (cf. Gen 45:4–8), or Stephen praying for those who harmed him (cf. Acts 7:60), the disciple enters into a love that continues even when it is not returned. In this way, the “thirst” of Christ becomes a school of the heart. It forms within us a capacity not only to act rightly, but to remain loving when love is not answered. This is where the human heart is gradually made like His—able to endure love for the salvation of others.

“I tell him to go with My living words continually” reveals a deeply apostolic reality: the disciple never goes alone, but carries Christ Himself present in His Word (cf. Mt 28:20; CCC 905). Evangelization is therefore not self-expression, but participation in a living presence that precedes and accompanies every mission. The Word is “living” because it is active—penetrating the heart, revealing truth, healing hidden wounds, and creating new life within the listener (cf. Heb 4:12; Is 55:11). It is not static information, but divine action communicated through human language and witness. This transforms ordinary existence into mission. A gentle correction spoken in truth, a testimony offered with humility, or silent integrity lived under pressure all become channels through which Christ Himself continues to speak. The effectiveness lies not in human eloquence, but in fidelity and openness. The Catechism (cf. CCC 904–905) teaches that the baptized share in Christ’s prophetic mission . This is seen in Scripture: Jeremiah speaks despite fear (cf. Jer 1:7–9), Peter proclaims after failure (cf. Acts 2:14–41), (cf. Lk 1:39–45)and Mary bears the Word quietly yet powerfully into the world . The word “continually” is decisive. It removes the illusion that mission depends on mood, confidence, or circumstance, and restores it to its true source:(cf. 2 Cor 12:9; CCC 849) grace that precedes and sustains the disciple . The Christian life is not activated by inner readiness, but by faithful availability to God in every moment. The disciple, therefore, remains open in every setting—family life, work,(cf. Col 3:17) and ordinary encounters—allowing faith to permeate reality rather than remain compartmentalized . Nothing is “outside” the reach of God’s word when the heart is surrendered. In this light, withholding truth or witness out of fear or comfort is not spiritually neutral. It risks narrowing the flow of grace intended for others, who may be silently waiting for a word, gesture,(cf. Mt 5:14–16) or presence through which God can reach them . Thus, the appeal gently forms an interior readiness: not a forced activism, but a stable availability. The soul becomes a living space where Christ’s Word continues to speak—not only through speech, but through a life quietly aligned with Him (cf. Gal 2:20).

The “wounded hunter” reveals a sobering truth of discipleship: seeking souls is never costless. Christ does not conceal this;(cf. Jn 15:20; CCC 618) He unites it to love itself . To love as He loves is to enter a struggle that is both external and interior. This struggle is not only against visible sin, but also against resistance, misunderstanding, (cf. Eph 6:12) and the quiet fatigue within oneself . Yet Scripture consistently shows that spiritual conflict is not a sign of failure, but of participation in a real mission of grace. What is striking is that these wounds are not wasted. In Christ, suffering is not absorbed into meaninglessness, but becomes participatory—joined to His redemptive act. As Paul writes,(cf. Col 1:24; CCC 1521) even affliction can serve the growth of the Church when united to Christ .This gives concrete shape to daily life. Hidden exhaustion, quiet perseverance, being misunderstood for choosing what is right—these are not spiritually neutral moments. Offered in love, they become part of a larger fruitfulness that is not immediately visible. The Eucharist stands at the center of this mystery . There, Christ’s one sacrifice is made present, and the disciple learns to place personal struggle within His offering. Life becomes an altar where both gift and cost are united. Thus, the mission is never superficial when it is truly Christian. Love always carries cost, but in Christ, nothing offered in love is lost—it becomes seed for life, even when unseen in the moment.

At its deepest level, the appeal unveils a startling trust: (cf. 1 Cor 3:9; CCC 307) Jesus freely chooses to involve human hearts in His saving work . This is not because He needs us, but because love desires communion. He does not act alone when He can act with. This mirrors His relationship with the apostles—fragile, imperfect, yet sent (cf. Mt 28:19–20). Peter’s restoration shows that mission flows not from strength, but from forgiven love that has encountered mercy (cf. Jn 21:15–17). God works through what is human,(cf. 2 Cor 4:7; CCC 307) not what is flawless . Grace does not wait for perfection; it enters weakness and transforms it from within.  What matters is not having everything together, but being willing—offering what is real, however limited,(cf. 1 Cor 1:27) and allowing God to act through it . One begins simply: praying for another, choosing patience in tension, (cf. CCC 953)speaking truth with charity . Small acts, when united to Christ, carry real weight in the life of the Church. There remains an urgency—souls are eternal and deeply desired by God . Yet the method is not impersonal strategy, but relationship: presence, love, and fidelity in concrete situations. Here the mystical dimension emerges. The soul becomes a living extension of Christ’s Heart, carrying His desires into the world. Not activism, but communion in action—until Christ lives and works within, seeking and loving through the person for the salvation of many (cf. Gal 2:20).

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, wounded Lover of souls, let us feel Your thirst within our own hearts. Break our indifference, purify our love, and send us with Your living Word. May our daily sacrifices draw souls to You. Teach us to love even when it wounds, and never to refuse Your burning desire to save. Amen

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

Calvary Path: Never Cease, Keep Going

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 98

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 98: "Keep going. Do not stop. I kept going on the road to Calvary and in spite of such agony, I got there.  Gaze on Me and find courage." 

At the very threshold of this Appeal, the soul is not merely addressed—it is personally called forward: “Keep going.” It touches something deeply human, because there are moments when continuing feels heavy, quiet, and unseen. Yet in Christ, even this becomes sacred. On the road to Calvary, Our Adorable Jesus did not move forward through comfort, but through love that endured in weakness (cf. Is 53:3–4; Heb 12:2–3). He knew exhaustion, abandonment, and the silence of being misunderstood (cf. Mt 26:40–43), yet remained turned toward the Father in trust . This reveals a hidden truth: perseverance is not about never struggling—it is about remaining in love even while struggling . In real life, this is where it becomes deeply human. It is the Rev. Deacon who feels overwhelmed and discouraged, yet returns again to try (cf. Gal 6:9). It is the young person who feels alone in trying to live rightly among peers,(cf. Rom 12:2) yet quietly chooses what is true . It is the moment when prayer feels empty, words fail, and the only thing left is a silent “Lord, I am still here” (cf. Ps 22:1; Rom 8:26). It is also in holding back anger when hurt, choosing patience when tired,(cf. Col 3:12–14) or continuing to care when appreciation is absent . These are not small things—they are places where love remains real. Scripture shows this same quiet endurance: Noah building without visible results (cf. Gen 6:22), Jeremiah speaking while feeling rejected (cf. Jer 20:7–9), and even Peter returning after failure because love had not ended . The Catechism reminds us that grace sustains perseverance (cf. CCC 2008; 2010), meaning that even the desire to continue is already supported by God. So “keep going” becomes something deeper than effort—it becomes staying with Christ. And in that staying, even when fragile, the soul discovers it is being carried, slowly, faithfully, into His own enduring love (cf. Jn 15:4).

Strangely, the command “Do not stop” reaches its deepest meaning precisely where the soul feels least able to continue. It is there—at the edge of fatigue, discouragement, or quiet failure—that Christ becomes most understandable. On the way to Calvary, He who sustains all creation (cf. Col 1:17) allows Himself to fall beneath the Cross (cf. Jn 19:17), not as defeat, but as a revelation:(cf. Heb 4:15) God has entered even the experience of human limitation . What appears like weakness becomes the very place where divine strength begins to act . This transforms how we see our own struggles. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1427–1429) teaches that conversion is not a single moment but a continual returning of the heart . So the repeated effort, the starting again, the quiet rising after falling—these are not signs of failure,(cf. Prov 24:16; CCC 1428) but the real shape of grace at work . In daily life, this is profoundly human: it is learning to begin again without harshness toward oneself, to return without losing hope,(cf. Phil 1:6) to trust that God is still at work even in what feels incomplete . It is the moment when concentration fails again in prayer, yet the soul gently returns without frustration (cf. CCC 2729). It is continuing to try after poor results, choosing honesty when shortcuts are easier, or praying through emotional exhaustion with nothing but a simple “Lord, stay with me” (cf. Lk 22:42). Scripture reveals this path: Peter weeping yet returning (cf. Lk 22:61–62),(cf. Ps 51) David falling yet opening himself to mercy . Holiness is not built on never falling, but on never refusing to rise under grace. Even the Eucharist reflects this mystery—Christ continues to give Himself despite human indifference . Thus, “not stopping” becomes something deeply Eucharistic: a hidden, repeated offering of oneself, where each return, however small, quietly mirrors His own faithful, unbroken love.

With a quiet yet unshakable certainty, the words “I got there” reveal that Calvary was not confusion,(cf. Jn 19:30; Heb 9:12) but fulfillment—love brought to completion . Nothing in Christ’s path was wasted; every step, even the slowest and most painful, moved toward a definitive act of redemption. This reshapes how we understand perseverance: it is not wandering without direction,(cf. Rom 8:28) but a hidden movement toward communion and victory . Scripture echoes this pattern—Abraham ascending Moriah without seeing the outcome (cf. Gen 22:2–12), Moses holding steady under exhaustion (cf. Ex 17:12),(cf. Phil 3:13–14; 2 Tim 4:7) Paul pressing forward despite trials . Their lives reveal that fidelity carries a direction even when it is not felt. The Catechism teaches that hope anchors the soul in what is not yet seen,(cf. CCC 1817–1821) sustaining endurance by fixing it on eternal fulfillment . In daily life, this becomes deeply human. There are seasons that feel repetitive, unnoticed, even stagnant—studying without visible progress, serving without appreciation, praying without consolation. Yet the Appeal quietly reorients the heart: nothing lived in Christ is lost . Each small act—returning again, remaining faithful, choosing love—moves the soul forward in ways unseen. In the Eucharist, this mystery becomes present: Calvary is not past, but made real,(cf. CCC 1366–1367) and every offering—however hidden—is drawn into His . Like Mary standing beneath the Cross , the soul learns to remain without needing to see. And in that quiet fidelity, something eternal is already unfolding: what feels small and unnoticed is becoming part of a greater fulfillment, where Christ gently draws every persevering heart into His risen life.

Then, almost gently yet with a depth that reaches the core of the soul, the Appeal turns: “Gaze on Me.” Here, perseverance is no longer only about continuing—it becomes about seeing, about allowing the heart to rest its attention on Christ (cf. Heb 12:2). This gaze is not symbolic; it is transformative. As Israel looked upon the bronze serpent and received life (cf. Num 21:8–9; Wis 16:7), so the soul that looks upon Christ crucified begins to receive interior healing, often quietly and without immediate feeling. The Catechism teaches that faith is a personal adherence that engages the whole person (cf. CCC 150–152), and this adherence deepens when the soul learns to remain in a simple, loving attention before Him. This is not reserved for extraordinary moments. It becomes profoundly human in daily life. It is the student pausing briefly before an exam, not to escape stress, but to place it in God’s presence (cf. Jas 1:5). It is the person in the middle of conflict choosing, even for a second, to turn inward and become still before reacting (cf. Ps 46:10). It is the tired heart that cannot form words in prayer, yet simply remains,(cf. Rom 8:26) aware of being seen by God . Even in confusion, temptation, or pressure, this interior gaze becomes a quiet anchor. The saints insist that this simple attention reshapes the soul more deeply than many external efforts, because it allows Christ Himself to act within. In the Eucharist, this becomes especially real: the same Christ of Calvary remains present, inviting the soul not to produce strength,(cf. CCC 1366–1367) but to receive it . Thus, courage is not forced—it is given. And the one who learns to gaze, even briefly and imperfectly, begins to discover a strength that does not come from within, but from being quietly held in His presence .

Beneath the surface of this Appeal lies its deepest current: perseverance is not reduced to mere endurance, but revealed as love that continues to choose God even when nothing is felt, seen, or immediately understood . It is the quiet fidelity of a heart that remains turned toward Christ in time, allowing love—not exhaustion, not emotion—to have the final word (cf. CCC 1827–1829). Christ did not simply endure suffering—He loved unto completion (cf. Jn 13:1). Every step toward Calvary was not forced, but freely embraced as a gift of Himself for others . This reveals something profoundly human and divine at once: perseverance becomes meaningful only when it is rooted in love. The Catechism teaches that charity gives life and form to every virtue (cf. CCC 1827–1829), which means that without love, perseverance becomes dry resistance—but with love, it becomes transformation. It is no longer just “getting through,” but “giving oneself.” In daily life, this changes everything. It is the priest who continues to serve even when he feels unseen, not out of obligation, but out of love for Christ (cf. 2 Cor 4:1). It is the consecrated soul who offers hidden sacrifices in silence, (cf. Col 3:3)trusting that nothing given in love is lost . It is the parent who forgives again, the young person who chooses truth when it is difficult, the student who continues honestly despite pressure (cf. Col 3:12–14; 1 Tim 4:12). Even Job, in his suffering, reveals that perseverance flows not from control, but from trust that holds onto God beyond understanding (cf. Job 1:21–22; Jas 5:11). In the Eucharist, this mystery reaches its fullness: Christ continues to give Himself—quietly,(cf. CCC 1366–1367) constantly—never withdrawing His love . When the soul unites even the smallest struggles—fatigue, repetition, unnoticed sacrifices—to this offering , they are no longer empty. They become part of His love. And so the Appeal leads to something deeply simple yet immense: to live in such a way that nothing is abandoned, where every step, however small, is taken in love—and where perseverance itself becomes a quiet participation in the Heart of Christ.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, engrave in us the courage of Your Heart. When trials press heavily, keep us moving in trust. May our gaze never leave You, especially in dryness and doubt. Unite our steps to Yours, so that in loving endurance, we may reach the Father’s will each day. Amen. 

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

Divine Appeal 98

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I am like the hunter who would let himself be wounded to death in order to lure his coveted prey.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. Keep going. Do not stop. I kept going on the road to Calvary and in spite of such agony, I got there. Gaze on Me and find courage. My love knows no seasons. I am the changeless one. Give Me even the rhythm of your breathing and not only of the body but of your stream of your thoughts. I always accompany my faithful ones and give strength and comfort to those who suffer for Me. You are in My Heart though you feel you are far from Me. Hide Me in your heart as though in this way you could save Me from wounds, insults, blasphemies and abuses. For I receive them above all in My Divine Sacrament from... to whom I entrusted my children.

There is your heart to console Me with your sufferings. Do not get the idea that it is only prayers that console Me. Rest on Me. Do not grow weary of looking at Me. Do not waste any of your precious suffering. Bring Me souls. I suffer and thirst for souls. I am like the hunter who would let himself be wounded to death in order to lure his coveted prey... I tell him to go with My living words continually and find sinners for Me.

Never before has the world needed prayers as at this tragic times. My Heart is full of tears to see many innocent souls on the way to perdition. My Eternal Father’s anger is flowing. Pray and atone to appease His wrath and console Me. Drenched with blood I am walking through the multitudes of souls. My Mercy is followed by Divine Justice.

Pray and cloister souls in your heart. Implore mercy for them. Do not fear to suffer. Rest in Me.”

“I give My blessing.”

1st March 1988

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.

Not Deserting Jesus, Offering Him Shelter

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 97

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 97: "I beg you not to desert Me when I leave you as a prey to anguish. I have come to obtain shelter and to preach to you My feelings."

There are moments in the spiritual life when everything becomes profoundly personal—when faith is no longer something we hold, but something that holds us, wounds us,(cf. Heb 4:12; cf. Jer 20:7) and quietly reshapes us from within . It is in such depths that this Appeal is born. Our Adorable Jesus does not remain distant or untouchable; He draws near with a disarming closeness, revealing a Heart that freely chooses to feel the weight of human absence . This is not weakness, but the revelation of divine love in its most vulnerable form—a love that does not shield itself from rejection, but opens itself completely to it (cf. Phil 2:7–8; cf. Rev 3:20). Like in Gethsemane, where His anguish was not only physical but relational—yearning for companionship yet remaining alone —so here He allows the soul to glimpse something of that same interior solitude. His plea, “do not desert Me,” is not confined to the past; it enters into the hidden fabric of our lives—into fatigue, interior battles, silent disappointments—where the temptation to withdraw, to become distant, quietly emerges (cf. Ps 42:6; cf. Lk 22:45). The Catechism (cf. CCC 162; 164; 2731) teaches that faith is tested not to weaken it, but to purify and anchor it more deeply in God until it becomes a living surrender . And it is precisely here, in this purification, that Jesus is most intimately present—though not always perceptible (cf. Isa 45:15). Like the Blessed Virgin Mary who remained in silent, pierced fidelity beneath the Cross , the soul is invited into a love that is profoundly human and divinely sustained: to remain. To stay when prayer feels empty (cf. CCC 2731), when words fail (cf. Rom 8:26), when love no longer consoles,(cf. Mt 7:13–14) when the world offers easier paths that demand less sacrifice . This remaining is not passive—it is a quiet, courageous consent, a fidelity that chooses presence over escape (cf. Heb 10:36). And in that fragile yet persevering “yes,” the soul begins to share in Christ’s own love—not the love that depends on feeling, but the love that endures, that abides, that remains (cf. Jn 15:9–13). In this way, what appears as emptiness becomes a hidden communion, where the human heart meets the Heart of Christ in a silence filled with grace, and a darkness already bearing the dawn of resurrection .

When Jesus says He comes “to obtain shelter,” He unveils a mystery so profound that it overturns human expectations: the Infinite God seeks refuge within the finite human heart . This continues the humility of the Eucharist,(cf. Jn 6:56; cf. CCC 1374) where Christ entrusts Himself to human response under hidden signs . Divine love does not impose—it waits, it asks, it desires to be received. St. Teresa of Avila speaks of the soul as an interior dwelling where God longs to remain, yet often finds distraction, noise,(cf. Jn 14:23) or closed doors . To offer shelter, then, is to create interior space—through attention, through humility,(cf. Ps 51:17) through a willingness to let Him enter even into unfinished, imperfect places . In daily life, this shelter is often built in difficult and very concrete situations. It is the student who refuses to join in mocking another, even at the cost of being excluded (cf. Mt 5:11–12); the young person who chooses silence instead of reacting in anger during conflict at home (cf. Prov 15:1); the one who remains honest when pressured to compromise for success (cf. Prov 10:9); the person who resists the pull of constant distraction and instead chooses a moment of recollection (cf. Ps 46:10). It is also found in quieter struggles: staying present to prayer when the mind wanders repeatedly (cf. CCC 2729), returning to God after failure without giving in to discouragement (cf. Mic 7:8), choosing forgiveness when hurt lingers (cf. Eph 4:32), (cf. Mt 6:6)or offering hidden emotional burdens without seeking recognition . The Catechism(cf. CCC 901; cf. 1 Pet 2:5) teaches that such ordinary acts, united to Christ, become spiritual sacrifices . In this way, every vocation, every interior battle, becomes a living tabernacle—where Jesus is not only welcomed, but quietly consoled by a love that chooses Him in the midst of real life.

The phrase “I leave you as a prey to anguish” touches the deepest interior layers of the soul, where faith no longer rests on clarity but is asked to stand within darkness (cf. Ps 88:3–6). Yet this is not abandonment—it is a mysterious participation in the Cross. Our Adorable Jesus Himself entered into the depths of human desolation, crying out in apparent distance from the Father (cf. Mt 27:46), not because love had ceased,(cf. Heb 2:10) but because love was reaching its most hidden and redemptive form . In this light, anguish becomes a place where the soul is invited to share, however faintly, in that same mystery. St. John of the Cross describes this as a night of purification, where attachments, illusions, and even spiritual consolations are gently removed so that love may become pure, (cf. Jn 12:24) stripped of self-seeking . What feels like loss is often a deeper preparation for union . In daily life, this anguish takes very real and human forms: confusion about one’s direction (cf. Prov 3:5–6), feeling unseen or misunderstood among peers (cf. Ps 142:4), the quiet weight of trying to remain faithful in environments that do not support or understand faith (cf. Jn 15:18–19). It may also appear in interior struggles—prayer that feels empty, efforts that seem fruitless, or a longing for God that is not immediately consoled (cf. CCC 2731). Yet within all this, Jesus is not absent—He is intimately present in a hidden way,(cf. Isa 45:15) inviting trust beyond what can be felt . Like Job, who remained faithful without full understanding (cf. Job 2:10), the soul learns a deeper surrender. Thus, what feels like interior heaviness, silence in prayer, emotional fatigue, or the hidden burden of daily trials can become a “hidden altar” where the soul stands before God without needing words or strength (cf. Ps 62:1–2). It is often precisely in these unspoken moments—when no one sees and even the heart feels unable to pray—that love becomes most simple and most real (cf. Rom 8:26). The soul, stripped of consolation, remains present, and that very presence becomes its offering. In this way, Christ is not distant from human suffering; He is mysteriously present within it,(cf. Gal 2:20) receiving it and uniting it to His own self-gift on the Cross . And the person, even without fully understanding how, is quietly drawn into His redemptive love for the world,(cf. CCC 1521) where even hidden fidelity becomes part of His work of salvation .

It begins in a way the human heart does not expect: not in loud revelation, but in the quiet intrusion of a Presence that speaks from within ordinary struggle—“I have come to preach to you My feelings.” This is Jesus entering the interior rhythm of daily life, not as an observer, but as One who shares His own Heart with the soul (cf. Jn 15:15). He is not asking for abstract devotion; He is drawing the person into His own interior world—His longing, His sorrow,(cf. Lk 15:7) His joy over even hidden acts of love . This transforms prayer from speaking about God into being with God in what He feels. In very concrete life moments, this becomes startlingly real. It is the nurse in a crowded hospital ward who quietly continues caring for a difficult patient even when no one notices,(cf. Mt 25:40) and in that hidden fidelity senses a deeper compassion rising within her . It is the college student sitting in a noisy classroom where everything competes for attention,(cf. Ps 46:10) choosing instead a brief interior return to God before reacting in frustration . It is the parent cleaning up repeated messes at home with fatigue in the body but patience slowly deepening in the heart (cf. Col 3:13). It is even the person scrolling through constant noise on a phone, suddenly pausing—not because of obligation, but because something within becomes aware of being “seen” and gently called back (cf. Heb 4:13). In these very human, often unglamorous places, Christ does not remain outside. He enters them as One who communicates His own interior life, shaping reactions, softening judgments, and awakening love where irritation or numbness would normally take over. The Catechism(cf. CCC 1822) teaches that charity is the soul of Christian life and mission , but here that charity is shown as something deeper still: not merely what we do for God, but what we receive from His own Heart and then allow to pass through our lives. When Jesus “preaches His feelings” within the soul, He quietly re-educates the heart in love—until even ordinary decisions begin to carry His presence into the world .

To not desert Jesus is not first a heroic gesture, but a very human struggle lived in the ordinary fragility of the heart—a daily, sometimes painful decision to remain when everything within feels tired, distracted,(cf. Mt 26:41) or unsure . It is the quiet battle between love that endures and love that slowly slips away through neglect. Our Adorable Jesus does not speak here as one far away, but as One who knows this interior struggle from within human experience itself—He has felt abandonment, silence, (cf. Mt 27:46)and the weight of being misunderstood . That is why His Appeal does not accuse; it gently reveals how love can be quietly lost, not in a single moment,(cf. Rev 2:4) but in small inner withdrawals of the heart . The difference between Judas and John is not only moral, but deeply relational: one allowed despair to isolate him from mercy,(cf. Jn 19:26–27) while the other remained close even when everything collapsed externally . Remaining is not strength in the world’s sense—it is love refusing to let go even when it feels almost empty. In daily life, this mystery is painfully familiar. It is the parent who continues caring for family duties while feeling emotionally drained, yet still chooses gentleness in one more moment (cf. Col 3:12–13). It is the seminarian who sits with distraction and inner fatigue but still turns the heart back to God for a brief second of honesty (cf. Ps 34:18). It is the person who feels spiritually dry in prayer, tempted to stop, but instead stays just long enough to say, “I am here, Lord,” even without emotion (cf. Rom 8:26). It is also the quiet struggle of forgiving someone inwardly when the memory still hurts, or resisting the instinct to withdraw from prayer when life feels heavy. The Catechism (cf. CCC 162; 2010) reminds us that perseverance is sustained by grace, not self-confidence , meaning even the smallest act of staying is already grace at work. Eucharistically, this “remaining” becomes very concrete: sitting before the Blessed Sacrament not because the heart is full,(cf. Jn 6:68) but because love chooses presence over feeling . Mystically, it becomes the hidden offering of oneself as a “small host”—fragile, unnoticed, yet placed deliberately near His Heart (cf. Rom 12:1). In this quiet fidelity, something profound happens: the soul discovers that even in its poverty, it is not alone. Christ is not only the One it remains with—He is also the One who has been remaining with the soul all along .

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, we desire not to leave You alone in Your sorrow. Let us stay united to Your Heart and share Your interior feelings for souls. Send us as Your witnesses, even in weakness, that our lives may speak of Your love where words cannot reach. Amen.

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