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Mankind Submerged in the Muddy Tide

Divine Appeal Reflection - 148

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 148: "What a sorrow! Mankind is submerged in the muddy tide. Corruption tries to drown the world in tears of blood. I beg you to pray and suffer for souls. Sacrifice yourself however painful it is."

One of the most piercing words in this appeal is "submerged." Our Adorable Jesus does not simply lament that humanity occasionally falls into corruption; He grieves that many souls have become so immersed in it that they no longer realize they are drowning . Like someone who has lived too long beneath polluted waters and forgotten the freshness of clean air, the human heart can slowly grow accustomed to lies, impurity, selfishness, dishonesty, and indifference until they seem normal . This is the tragedy of every age: evil rarely conquers through dramatic rebellion before it first enters through small compromises, repeated choices, and a conscience that gradually loses its sensitivity to God (cf. Gen 3:1–7; Jas 1:14–15; CCC 1791). Yet Christ continues calling every soul out of these muddy waters into the freedom, purity, and joy of His light, where repentance restores what sin has slowly buried (cf. Jn 8:12; 1 Pet 2:9; Rev 2:4–5; CCC 1430–1432). Samson did not truly lose his strength on the day his hair was cut; he had begun losing it much earlier when he started treating temptation as something he could control rather than flee. Little by little, he became comfortable with compromises he had once resisted, assuming he could always return to God whenever he wished . The most tragic moment in his story is not the loss of his strength but the realization that he did not even know the Lord had departed from him . Spiritual blindness had already taken root before spiritual defeat became visible (cf. Heb 3:12–13; CCC 1865). The same pattern appears in King Solomon. He did not awaken one morning with a heart divided against God. Gradually, political alliances, worldly success, comfort, admiration, and small concessions weakened the love that had once sought divine wisdom above all else until he could no longer distinguish God's will from the spirit of the world (cf. 1 Kgs 3:9–12; 11:1–10; Jas 4:4). Corruption almost always advances this way. It rarely shouts; it whispers. It rarely destroys overnight; it slowly numbs the conscience, making each compromise seem insignificant until the soul discovers it has drifted far from its first love .

This same muddy tide quietly surrounds modern life. A husband does not usually abandon his family in one decision. Corruption often begins long before anyone notices it. A husband rarely abandons his family all at once. He first becomes emotionally absent, replacing meaningful conversations with endless work, then endless screens, until strangers know his thoughts better than his wife (cf. Eph 5:25–33; Col 3:19). A seminarian may begin with a sincere desire to save souls, yet gradually become more concerned with recognition, influence, or pleasing others than with growing in holiness and intimacy with Christ . A mother may generously provide every material comfort for her children while, burdened by constant anxiety and distraction, unknowingly deprive them of the peaceful presence they long for most . The heart seldom drifts from God through one great decision, but through many unnoticed compromises that slowly replace love with routine and communion with distraction . A religious sister may faithfully observe every rule while silently losing the joy of belonging entirely to Christ. A successful professional may slowly become incapable of praying because productivity has become his true measure of worth. None of these people intended to reject God. They simply became submerged. Like fish unaware of the water surrounding them, many Christians no longer notice that constant entertainment has replaced recollection, endless opinions have replaced truth, and relentless noise has replaced the silence where God speaks . St. Mary of Egypt spent years immersed in sin until one encounter before the Holy Cross revealed not merely her actions but the condition of her heart, leading her into decades of hidden holiness in the desert. St. Benedict Joseph Labre, mocked as a wandering beggar, showed that the purest heart often belongs to the soul least fascinated by the world's muddy waters. Christ's sorrow is therefore profoundly human. He does not merely see sinners breaking commandments; He sees beloved children forgetting what it feels like to breathe the pure air of grace. His lament is the grief of a Father watching His children mistake the mud for their home .

Another deeply mystical dimension of this appeal is that Jesus calls corruption a muddy tide, not a violent wave. A wave crashes suddenly. A tide silently rises. The vast majority of souls are ruined by thousands of small compromises that gradually deform their loves rather than by dramatic moments of defiance.  Scripture offers countless examples. King Asa began as one of Judah's holiest rulers,(cf. 2 Chr 14:2-5) courageously destroying idols and leading national renewal . Yet later, instead of trusting God during crisis, he relied entirely upon political alliances and human calculations, eventually becoming angry even with God's prophet (cf. 2 Chr 16:7-10). His decline was not caused by one catastrophe but by the gradual substitution of self-reliance for dependence upon God. Likewise, Demas, once a companion of St. Paul,(cf. 2 Tim 4:10) eventually abandoned the mission because love for the present world quietly replaced love for Christ . Nothing suggests that Demas became openly wicked overnight. His affections simply drifted elsewhere. Every corruption begins when something finite slowly occupies the place reserved for God alone.

This mystery unfolds silently in ordinary life. A doctor may begin his career seeing every patient as a sacred person created in God's image, yet years of routine can reduce human beings to medical files and appointments. A Catholic teacher may gradually care more about examination results than forming virtuous souls. Parents may provide excellent schools, holidays, and opportunities for their children while never praying with them, unknowingly preparing them for professional success but spiritual emptiness. A parish may become busy with meetings, fundraising, and activities while slowly forgetting that its first mission is adoration before Christ in the Eucharist . Even generous Catholics may defend every doctrine of the faith while becoming impatient, harsh, and incapable of mercy toward those who struggle. This is the muddy tide: religion without conversion, activity without contemplation, knowledge without charity, success without holiness .  Blessed Vladimir Ghika remained spiritually incorruptible amid political persecution because he had first learned to surrender every attachment except Christ. He teachs that the antidote to corruption is not merely denouncing darkness but becoming so deeply united with Jesus that His purity quietly reshapes every environment one enters. One truly holy soul often purifies an entire family, parish, workplace, or nation because holiness spreads more deeply than corruption wherever Christ is welcomed .

Perhaps the deepest tragedy hidden within this appeal is not that corruption multiplies sins, but that it gradually disfigures the image of God within the human person. From the beginning, man was created not merely to exist but to reflect the beauty, wisdom, holiness, and love of the Creator . Every virtue restores that image; every deliberate sin obscures it. Corruption therefore is not simply moral failure—it is the slow distortion of the face God intended every soul to reveal. This mystery appears strikingly in King Uzziah. He began his reign seeking God with humility, and the Lord blessed his kingdom abundantly. Yet success slowly intoxicated him until pride entered the sanctuary itself, and the very king whose face once reflected God's favor left the Temple marked by leprosy, (cf. 2 Chr 26:3-21) an outward sign of an interior corruption that had long preceded it . Likewise, Nebuchadnezzar, whose pride exalted him above all nations, eventually lost the dignity of reason and lived like a beast until he humbled himself before God . Scripture reveals that corruption first dehumanizes before it destroys. The person created for communion slowly becomes isolated; the heart created for gratitude becomes entitled; the soul made for contemplation becomes incapable of silence. This same drama unfolds quietly today. A businessman who once entered his profession desiring to serve society gradually measures every relationship by profit. A gifted musician begins creating beauty but eventually seeks only applause. A young influencer who once desired to inspire others slowly becomes imprisoned by the need for constant approval. Even generous Christians can begin serving Christ while secretly seeking recognition more than hidden fidelity. The greatest danger is not public scandal but the unnoticed erosion of the interior life. St. Angela of Foligno taught that every attachment not surrendered to God slowly reshapes the soul according to itself rather than according to Christ. St. Gregory of Nyssa described the spiritual life as the continual restoration of the divine image through grace. Jesus therefore mourns because corruption does not merely violate commandments; it slowly hides the beauty His Father lovingly created within every human soul .

The words "tears of blood" reveal a mystery rarely contemplated deeply enough: God suffers not because His power is diminished, but because His love is continually refused. Throughout Scripture, divine sorrow is always the sorrow of faithful love meeting persistent indifference. The prophet Samuel spent an entire night grieving over Saul, not because Saul had disappointed him personally, (cf. 1 Sam 15:10-11, 35) but because he witnessed the tragedy of a heart slowly separating itself from God . Likewise, David wept bitterly over Absalom, (cf. 2 Sam 18:33) his rebellious son, longing for reconciliation even after betrayal . These human experiences prepare us to glimpse the infinitely deeper sorrow of Christ. Every soul created by the Father has been imagined from eternity, redeemed by the Blood of the Son, and continually pursued by the Holy Spirit . Yet countless people pass through life without ever responding to that love. Christ's tears therefore are not primarily tears over sin itself but over love that remains unanswered. Consider how deeply human this is. Parents often suffer most not when children fail academically but when they no longer wish to speak with them. A husband or wife can endure poverty, illness, and hardship more easily than indifference from the beloved. Similarly, the deepest sorrow of Our Adorable Jesus is that many hearts no longer long for Him (cf. Jn 1:10–11; Rev 3:20). Countless people do not reject God openly; they simply live as though He were unnecessary, allowing days to pass without prayer, gratitude, or love (cf. Deut 6:5; CCC 2094). Blessed Maria Gabriella Sagheddu offered her hidden life for Christian unity, while St. Margaret of Cortona discovered that no earthly love could satisfy the heart apart from Christ . Every Holy Hour, sincere repentance, and hidden sacrifice consoles His Eucharistic Heart by allowing rejected Love to be welcomed once more .

The final hope contained in this appeal is that God never combats corruption by merely removing evil; He overcomes it by creating saints. Darkness is not defeated by arguing with darkness but by increasing light . Throughout salvation history, God repeatedly answered widespread corruption by quietly preparing one faithful soul. While Egypt oppressed Israel, (cf. Ex 3:1-10) He formed Moses in the hidden desert . While idolatry spread throughout Israel,(cf. 1 Sam 3:1-10)  He quietly prepared young Samuel in the silence of the sanctuary . While the world awaited redemption, He prepared an unknown Virgin in Nazareth whose hidden "yes" changed history forever . God still works this way. When society becomes noisier, He raises contemplatives. When impurity spreads, He forms souls of radiant chastity. When dishonesty becomes normal, He quietly strengthens men and women whose integrity remains unshaken. A forgotten grandfather faithfully blessing his grandchildren each evening, a nurse praying silently before entering every hospital room, a mechanic refusing dishonest work despite financial hardship, a university student defending an isolated classmate, a widow faithfully interceding before the tabernacle for priests she will never meet—these hidden acts participate in Christ's victory over corruption far more than the world imagines . St. Rafqa transformed years of blindness and physical suffering into an offering that strengthened countless souls. Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati climbed mountains while lifting discouraged souls toward heaven through ordinary friendship sanctified by grace. They reveal that holiness is profoundly contagious. One purified conscience awakens another. One courageous act of truth inspires countless others. One faithful family becomes a refuge for generations. The muddy tide may appear to cover the earth, (cf. Jn 4:14; Rev 22:1-2) but beneath its surface the Holy Spirit continues raising springs of living water that cannot be polluted . Christ's final answer to corruption has never been fear but sanctity. Every soul that allows itself to be transformed by grace becomes a living contradiction to the darkness and a quiet prophecy that the Kingdom of God is already breaking into the world (cf. Mt 13:31-33; CCC 2013-2016).

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, we behold Your tears of blood shed for a sinful world. Fill our hearts with love and courage to pray, sacrifice, and labor for the salvation of souls. May our lives bring You consolation and draw many back to Your merciful embrace.

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

Divine Appeal 148

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“Mankind is submerged in the muddy tide.”

“My daughter, in My Presence I am so much abused and blasphemed. Pray a great deal. This is a serious moment for mankind. The world is in ruins. Desolation and death are coming. Those who do not want to repent will throw themselves into perdition. Many nations will disappear from the face of this earth. Sin brings ruin and death, earthquakes, hunger, and famines. Pray a great deal and keep Me company in My lonely hours. I will always draw you strongly to prayer. This will cause you many tears and humiliations. You will have to follow My painful path for the good of souls.

What a sorrow! Mankind is submerged in the muddy tide. Corruption tries to drown the world in tears of blood. I beg you to pray and suffer for souls. Sacrifice yourself however painful it is. I assure you, if enough prayers are not offered, time is approaching. The devil will cast its evil powers into all nations and in a given moment it will destroy the best part of My flock. My... have lost all shame.

This purification will be the greatest scourge in history.

Pray a great deal and meditate on these evils. Bring Me souls. Do not fear. You are a victim of love.”

“I bless you.”

21st May 1988

Copyright © 2015 The Late Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir | Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya. All rights reserved. Reproduced by adivineappeal.com from "On the Eucharist: A Divine Appeal" (Vol. 1).

Jesus and Mary's Repeated Calls

Divine Appeal Reflection - 147

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 147:  "I make this known to souls. I give many communications so that My messages and those of My Holy Mother will defeat the resistance of mankind to repeated calls.”

These words of Our Adorable Jesus reveal one of the most moving mysteries of Divine Mercy: Heaven repeats itself not because it has nothing new to say, but because the human heart easily forgets what is essential. Every repeated communication is another act of Divine Love descending into history, seeking not simply to inform minds but to awaken sleeping hearts (cf. Lam. 3:22-23). Christ does not give many messages because Revelation is incomplete. The fullness of Revelation has already been given in His Divine Person, and no new public revelation is expected before His glorious return (cf. Heb. 1:1-2; Jn. 1:14; CCC 66). Rather, authentic private revelations help every generation live the Gospel more faithfully amid its own unique struggles . This appeal therefore reveals not a God who repeats Himself out of necessity, but a Father who refuses to stop calling His children home . God has been incredibly patient throughout the history of salvation. Noah preached conversion and built the ark for years prior to the Flood. Each piece of wood he raised turned into a silent sermon, and each hammer blow was an additional call to repentance. The people did not perish because Heaven was silent, (cf. Gen. 6-7; 2 Pet. 2:5) but because they grew accustomed to the warning until it no longer moved them . Likewise, the Lord continually sent Jeremiah to a stubborn nation. God lamented that He rose early to send His prophets again and again, (cf. Jer. 7:23-26) yet His people hardened their hearts instead of listening .

 Human love eventually grows tired after repeated rejection, but Divine Love continues knocking because it sees not only what a soul is, but what it can still become through grace (cf. Ez. 33:11). One of the most beautiful biblical images of repeated grace is the calling of Samuel. Three times the Lord called him during the night before the young prophet finally understood who was speaking (cf. 1 Sam. 3:1-10). God could have stopped after the first misunderstanding, but His patience became part of Samuel's formation. The same happens in our lives. Christ often calls quietly through the Holy Mass, Scripture, the Rosary, an interior conviction, a faithful friend, a homily, suffering, or an unexpected moment of silence .  A nurse senses the invitation to show more compassion to a difficult patient but suppresses it out of exhaustion. A young person repeatedly feels called to Confession yet keeps saying, "Next week." These gentle invitations are not coincidences. They are the patient footsteps of Christ walking beside the soul.The increase of heavenly messages does not reveal Heaven's frustration but Heaven's compassion. When the world grows darker, God sends more light. When prayer declines, Heaven reminds us to pray. When the Eucharist is neglected, Christ calls souls back to His Real Presence. When families are wounded, He sends His Mother to gather them again around her Son. Every authentic message is another expression of sanctifying grace pursuing humanity before it is too late (cf. CCC 2000-2002). The greatest tragedy is never that God stops speaking. The tragedy is that a soul slowly becomes so distracted, comfortable, or self-sufficient that it no longer recognizes the familiar Voice that has loved it from all eternity .

Mary freely welcomed the Incarnate Word through her obedient fiat, allowing the eternal Son to take flesh within her virginal womb and offering herself entirely to the Father's saving plan . From Bethlehem to Calvary, she remained inextricably linked to Jesus, stood obediently beneath the Cross as the New Eve, welcomed the beloved disciple as her son, prayed with the Apostles for the arrival of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, and continues to provide maternal care for all of Christ's siblings as Mother of the Church. As a result, Jesus speaks of His Mother because her whole life draws souls closer to His Sacred Heart and perfect submission to the will of the Father.  This explains why every approved Marian apparition is profoundly Christ-centered, echoing the Gospel rather than replacing it . At Guadalupe, Mary revealed herself as a tender Mother, drawing an entire people to Christ through compassion, conversion, and faith . At Lourdes, she invited sinners to penance, purity, prayer, and confidence in God's healing mercy . At La Salette, her tears expressed Heaven's sorrow over sin, sacrilege, neglect of the Lord's Day, and indifference toward God . At Fatima, she pleaded for daily conversion, the Rosary, Eucharistic reparation, and prayer for sinners before great trials would come . At Kibeho, years before Rwanda's genocide, she warned against hatred, division, and unforgiveness, calling hearts back to reconciliation . At Akita, she again summoned the Church to prayer, penance, fidelity, and reparation (cf. 2 Chr 7:14; Rom 12:12). Though separated by centuries and continents, these messages form one harmonious call flowing from the Heart of Christ, inviting His children home through repentance, holiness, and love . The saints consistently recognized this perfect harmony between Jesus and His Mother. St. Louis-Marie de Montfort taught that authentic devotion to Mary always forms souls into faithful disciples who belong entirely to Christ . St. Maximilian Kolbe contemplated Mary as the masterpiece of the Holy Spirit, who leads receptive souls most perfectly to Jesus (cf. Lk 1:35; Rom 8:14). St. Gertrude the Great experienced Mary's maternal tenderness gently introducing fearful souls into the merciful Heart of Christ . Venerable Concepción Cabrera de Armida reflected that priests become authentic images of Christ by allowing Mary to form them interiorly through humility, sacrifice, and complete surrender to God's will . Their witness reminds the Church that Mary's mission is never to draw attention to herself but to lead every soul to know, love, adore, and faithfully follow her Divine Son with ever greater purity, perseverance, and Eucharistic love .

This also teaches a profoundly human lesson. Not because the father's words were insufficient, but rather because she is aware of how readily her children forget, every loving mother repeats what the father has already taught. Heaven does the same. Jesus speaks, and Mary lovingly repeats His call. He invites us to repentance; she encourages us not to fear returning. He offers His Sacred Heart; she opens the way through her Immaculate Heart. Together, the Two Hearts patiently overcome our resistance. Fatima protects Eucharistic love. True healing starts in the soul, Lourdes teaches us. Every human being has dignity, according to Guadalupe. Kibeho warns us that nations and individuals are destroyed by unforgiveness. Every apparition protects some neglected aspect of the Gospel. This mystery reaches into ordinary life. A father leading one decade of the Rosary before work quietly answers Fatima's appeal. A teacher patiently reconciling two students lives the call of Kibeho to forgiveness and reconciliation, becoming a quiet instrument of peace where division once prevailed (cf. Mt 5:9; Eph 4:31–32). The spirit of Guadalupe is reflected in a physician who treats every patient with reverence, recognizing the dignity of each person created in the image of God . Fatima comes alive in the priest who remains an extra hour before the Blessed Sacrament, making reparation and interceding for sinners with Christ's Eucharistic Heart (cf. Heb 7:25; CCC 1378). Lourdes is echoed in the young woman who joyfully embraces purity amid a culture of compromise, witnessing that holiness is both beautiful and liberating (cf. Mt 5:8; 1 Cor 6:19–20). In this way, Mary's messages become lived realities whenever ordinary Christians choose fidelity, charity, prayer, and sacrificial love in the duties of everyday life . A grandmother offering hidden suffering for priests continues Mary's maternal mission beneath the Cross. Heaven's messages were never meant to remain at famous shrines. They are meant to become visible in ordinary homes, workplaces, parishes, hospitals, schools, and religious communities, where Christ and His Holy Mother continue speaking through lives transformed by grace .

When Jesus states that His repeated teachings are intended to "defeat the resistance of mankind," He makes it clear that the biggest barrier to grace is not necessarily overt disobedience but rather the covert resistance that exists within regular people's hearts. Resistance is frequently silent, dignified, and nearly undetectable. A soul may attend Mass faithfully yet resist forgiving one family member. A priest may preach beautiful homilies yet quietly resist deeper humility. A religious may observe every rule while protecting hidden self-love. A successful professional may generously donate to charity yet never ask whether God is calling him to simplify his life for the sake of the poor. Resistance is rarely loud; it usually whispers, "Later... not today... perhaps after I have accomplished my own plans" (cf. Lk. 9:59-62; CCC 1430-1433). Scripture reveals this hidden struggle repeatedly. The rich young man (cf. Mt. 19:16-22) sincerely desired eternal life, yet walked away sorrowful because one attachment remained stronger than his willingness to surrender . Unlike Judas, he was not malicious; unlike Pharaoh, he was not openly defiant. He simply loved Christ without loving Him above everything else. King Agrippa listened attentively to St. Paul's testimony and was deeply moved, yet almost persuaded remained entirely unconverted (cf. Acts 26:27-29). Even Martha loved Jesus profoundly, (cf. Lk. 10:38-42) yet anxiety and excessive activity distracted her from the one thing necessary until Christ gently redirected her heart . These are sobering examples because they resemble many sincere Christians today. We are not resisting because we hate God, but because we fear what complete surrender might ask of us.   This explains why Heaven repeats its messages. Christ is not trying to overcome ignorance alone; He is patiently softening the places within us that still remain closed. Every repeated invitation is another gentle knock upon a door that He alone can see . 

The bare fig tree is arguably the most stunning biblical image. The gardener begged for another season (cf. Lk 13:6-9 ) even though it had not yielded any fruit for three years. He would cultivate the soil, remove the stones, and nourish the roots before judgment would come . This is exactly how Christ treats every soul. Before allowing justice, He first sends another homily, another confession, another retreat, another illness that awakens reflection, another Marian feast, another faithful friend, another page of Scripture, another interior inspiration, another message from His Sacred Heart or from His Holy Mother. Heaven never stops cultivating the soil around the soul. Yet each grace carries responsibility. If repeatedly ignored, the heart gradually loses its sensitivity, not because God stops speaking, but because the soul no longer desires to listen (cf. Heb. 3:15). The ultimate purpose of Heaven's repeated communications is not simply that we read them, admire them, or discuss them. Christ desires that we become living messages ourselves. Throughout Scripture, those who truly encountered God became visible witnesses long before they spoke. Moses descended Mount Sinai carrying not only the commandments but a face radiant with God's presence (cf. Ex. 34:29-35). After Isaiah encountered God's holiness, his entire life became a mission to a difficult people (cf. Is. 6:1-8). Following Pentecost, the Apostles preached with authority because their lives had first been transformed by the Holy Spirit . St. Paul therefore tells souls that they themselves become letters written by Christ, read by the world through the witness of their lives . This is where many generous Christians unknowingly stop. They accumulate spiritual knowledge while remaining unchanged. They read books on the saints, follow Marian apparitions, attend conferences, and speak passionately about prophecy, yet remain impatient at home, unforgiving at work, harsh toward difficult people, or indifferent to the lonely. 

Every vocation becomes an extension of Heaven's messages. A bishop becomes Christ's message by shepherding with humility rather than authority alone (cf. 1 Pet. 5:2-4). A priest becomes Mary's message when he leads souls to Eucharistic adoration and Confession. Married couples become living reflections of Nazareth by choosing forgiveness before resentment takes root (cf. Eph. 5:25-33). Parents answer Fatima whenever they gather their children to pray the Rosary. A teacher becomes Guadalupe by recognizing the dignity of every child. A doctor becomes Lourdes by treating each patient as a soul before seeing a diagnosis. A businessman becomes a message of Christ when integrity matters more than profit. A student becomes Kibeho by refusing hatred, gossip, and revenge. An elderly widow offering hidden suffering for priests continues the silent mission of Mary at Calvary (cf. Col. 1:24). Heaven continues speaking through ordinary people who quietly live extraordinary fidelity. The final victory promised in this Appeal is therefore not merely the triumph of messages but the triumph of transformed hearts. Satan spreads confusion through countless voices, but Christ answers with countless saints. Every soul that truly listens becomes another light in a darkened world (cf. Mt. 5:14-16). Every family that returns to prayer weakens the kingdom of division. Every sincere confession defeats another hidden resistance. Every Holy Communion received with love enlarges the reign of the Sacred Heart. Every Rosary prayed with faith allows the Immaculate Heart to continue her maternal work. The repeated calls of Jesus and His Holy Mother are therefore not signs that Heaven has failed. They are proof that Divine Mercy refuses to abandon humanity. Until our final breath, Christ continues saying through His Church, His saints, His Eucharistic Presence, and His Holy Mother: "Come back to Me." The greatest victory over resistance begins the moment a soul finally answers with Samuel, "Speak, Lord, for Your servant is listening" (cf. 1 Sam. 3:10).

Prayer

Our Adorable Saviour, through the intercession of Mary, Queen of Heaven, give us a heart that loves as Yours loves. Teach us to carry unknown souls in silence, to recognize Your call hidden in daily events, and to cooperate generously with every grace You desire to pour upon the world . Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 147

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“My left Hand points to a warning and My right Hand to a miracle.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. I come here to seek shelter. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. Pray very hard for the scandals of the world. My left Hand points to a warning and My right Hand to a miracle. I beg you to do penance for the souls of mankind. I have nothing more precious than that.

I make this known to souls. I give many communications so that My messages and those of My Holy Mother will defeat the resistance of mankind to repeated calls.”

“I bless you.”

10.30 a.m., 20th May 1988

Copyright © 2015 The Late Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir | Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya. All rights reserved. Reproduced by adivineappeal.com from "On the Eucharist: A Divine Appeal" (Vol. 1).

Saved Through Suffering on the Cross

Divine Appeal Reflection - 146

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 146:  "I have saved the world through suffering on the cross. Pray and do penance for souls."

One of the greatest mysteries ever revealed to humanity is not simply that Jesus suffered, but that He freely chose suffering as the path through which He would save every human person. This completely overturns human thinking. If God wished merely to display His omnipotence, (cf. Ps 33:6-9) He could have spoken one word and sin would have disappeared forever . If He wished only to judge, every sinner could simply have received the consequences of justice (cf. Rom 3:23). If He wished only to prove His divinity,(cf. Jn 20:30-31) the miracles already performed during His public ministry had accomplished that abundantly . Yet none of these became the means of redemption. Instead, Jesus stretched out His hands upon rough wood, (cf. Phil 2:6-11) accepted humiliation rather than honor, silence rather than self-defense, wounds rather than comfort, and death rather than escape . Why? Because humanity's deepest wound was never merely guilt; it was the inability to love as God loves. Sin had distorted the human heart. Pride had replaced humility. Possession had replaced self-giving. Violence had replaced communion. Fear had replaced trust (cf. Gen 3:1-13). Only a love willing to descend into the darkest consequences of sin without ceasing to love could heal humanity from within . 

Jesus did more than just settle a debt at Calvary—he recreated what it is to be fully human. Every injury turned into an act of submission. Every insult became forgiveness. Every rejection became an invitation to reconciliation. Therefore, the Cross reveals not only what true love is but also how immeasurably God loves each one of us . We instinctively imagine love as something that gives when it is convenient, remains when it is appreciated, and serves when it is rewarded. Yet everything changes when we gaze upon the Crucified Christ. There we discover a love that remains when it is rejected, forgives when it is wounded, perseveres when it is abandoned, and gives itself completely without expecting anything in return . The Cross overturns every merely human understanding of love, revealing that authentic love is measured not by comfort or recognition, but by self-giving that seeks the good and salvation of the other, even at great personal cost (cf. 1 Jn 4:9–10; CCC 618). Jesus overturns every human definition. He loves when abandoned, (cf. Lk 23:34; Jn 13:1) remains faithful when betrayed, blesses when cursed, forgives while bleeding, and continues loving when no visible response is given . The Cross (cf. CCC 604-605) is therefore not simply the place where salvation happened; it is the definitive revelation of the Heart of God .

One of the most deeply human dimensions of the Cross is that Jesus did not redeem suffering by avoiding it but by entering every form of human pain from within. There is almost no sorrow that the human heart experiences which Christ did not personally embrace. He knew the pain (cf. Mk 3:21) of being misunderstood by His own relatives . He experienced betrayal (cf. Mt 26:47-50) from someone He had loved and trusted for years . He endured the loneliness of watching close friends fall asleep (cf. Mt 26:36-46) when His soul was overwhelmed with sorrow . He experienced false accusations, public humiliation, injustice, abandonment, physical exhaustion, emotional anguish, and the terrifying silence that accompanies suffering . Even His cry from the Cross (cf. Mt 27:46) reveals that He entered the darkness experienced by countless suffering souls . This changes everything for Christians. No grieving widow suffers alone. No father silently carrying financial burdens walks alone. No mother exhausted by caring for a child with special needs struggles alone. No seminarian battling discouragement, no religious enduring spiritual dryness, no young person rejected for living chastity, no elderly person forgotten in a nursing home, no patient lying awake through another night of chemotherapy, no prisoner regretting years of sin, no addict fighting for freedom, no missionary laboring where no one seems to respond—none suffer outside the experience already embraced by Christ . The saints understood this profoundly.  St. Elizabeth Ann Seton discovered the Heart of Christ not in comfort but through widowhood, financial hardship, and the painful uncertainty of beginning again, learning that God's providence remains faithful even when earthly securities disappear (cf. Rom 8:28; Phil 4:19). St. Josephine Bakhita came to recognize that the chains which had once humiliated and wounded her became, through grace, the path by which she encountered the liberating love of Christ, who alone heals every human dignity . God did not save humanity from a distance or merely offer sympathy from heaven. In the mystery of the Incarnation, He entered our suffering, carried our wounds, embraced our Cross, and transformed pain into the very place where love achieved its greatest victory (cf. Jn 1:14; Heb 4:15–16; Phil 2:6–8; CCC 457–460). He entered every room where tears are shed so that no human suffering would ever again be meaningless (cf. CCC 1505).

Another remarkable aspect of the Cross is that love is often most powerful when it appears weakest. On Calvary, Our Adorable Jesus seemed to possess nothing that the world associates with victory. His disciples had scattered, He commanded no army, held no political authority, exercised no earthly influence, and appeared to have failed completely (cf. Mt 26:56; Jn 19:14–30). Yet it was precisely in this apparent defeat that sin was conquered, death was overcome, and the gates of heaven were opened (cf. Col 2:14–15; Heb 2:14–15; CCC 634–635). The Cross reveals that divine love does not triumph through domination but through total self-giving. What looked like history's greatest weakness became the greatest victory ever accomplished, proving that God's power reaches its perfection through sacrificial love (cf. 2 Cor 12:9; Phil 2:8–11). Everything appeared to indicate failure. Yet at that very moment, heaven was accomplishing the greatest victory in history. This paradox runs throughout Scripture. Gideon's tiny army (cf. Judg 7:1-22) overcame overwhelming numbers because victory belonged to God rather than human strength . David defeated Goliath (cf. 1 Sam 17:45-50) not by superior force but through humble confidence in the Lord . The widow of Zarephath discovered that God's abundance often begins where human resources appear exhausted, offering her final handful of flour in trusting obedience and witnessing the Lord's unfailing providence (cf. 1 Kgs 17:8–16). Likewise, Isaac carrying the wood up Mount Moriah unknowingly became a prophetic image of Christ carrying the wood of the Cross to Calvary, where the beloved Son would freely offer Himself for the salvation of the world . What seemed to be moments of loss became revelations of God's faithful love and His eternal plan of redemption. 

God repeatedly chooses to work through apparent weakness (cf. 1 Sam 16:7; Rom 8:28) because His deepest purpose is not merely to change circumstances but to transform hearts . He often permits human strength to reach its limits so that His grace may become the true source of hope and renewal . In His providence, He is concerned not only with solving life's problems but with conforming souls to Christ, teaching them humility, trust, perseverance, and self-giving love . The same mystery unfolds quietly every day. A wife patiently caring for her husband through the slow loss of dementia may wonder whether anyone notices her quiet sacrifices, yet Christ treasures every act of faithful tenderness . A father (cf. Col 3:23–24) who works long hours with honesty rather than compromising his conscience offers a hidden witness that shapes his family more deeply than wealth ever could . A teacher (cf. Gal 6:9) who patiently encourages discouraged students may never witness the lives transformed by a single word of hope . A priest celebrating the Holy Mass each day, even before a small congregation, may never know the countless graces flowing from Christ's sacrifice into the Church and the world . While the world applauds what is visible, God delights in the hidden fidelity that quietly builds His Kingdom . Heaven treasures sacrifices that are hidden. St. Charles de Foucauld spent years apparently accomplishing very little outwardly, yet his hidden life continues inspiring countless souls. Blessed Solanus Casey quietly welcomed everyone who came to him, often through simple listening and prayer. The Cross (cf. Jn 12:24; CCC 2011) teaches that the greatest works of God usually grow in silence, humility, and unnoticed fidelity .

Finally, the appeal reveals perhaps its most demanding truth: Jesus continues saving the world through the Cross because He invites His disciples to make His sacrifice present within their own lives. Redemption (cf. Col 1:24; CCC 618) is complete in Christ, yet He lovingly permits His beloved sons and daughters to share in distributing its fruits . Every vocation contains its own Calvary. Marriage has the Cross of daily self-giving. Priesthood has the Cross of spiritual fatherhood and hidden loneliness. Religious life has the Cross of continual surrender. Parenthood has the Cross of sacrificial love without guarantees. Youth has the Cross of choosing holiness against powerful cultural pressures. Old age has the Cross of increasing dependence and hidden suffering. The Christian life is therefore not about searching for extraordinary sufferings but about transforming ordinary ones into extraordinary acts of love. Picture a mother waiting outside an operating room while silently praying. Consider a businessman refusing corruption even though it costs him promotion. Consider a university student choosing honesty rather than cheating despite academic pressure. Consider an elderly woman who can no longer leave her bed yet offers every painful hour for seminarians, missionaries, broken families, and dying sinners. Consider a parish volunteer serving faithfully for years without recognition. These people may never be remembered by the world, yet heaven sees them as quiet collaborators in Christ's saving work . St. Benedict Joseph Labre, poor and unnoticed, touched countless hearts simply by his hidden life of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. St. Frances Xavier Cabrini transformed ordinary acts of compassion into channels of God's mercy for immigrants, the sick, and the forgotten . Venerable Fulton Sheen believed that one Holy Hour united to the Cross could change the spiritual destiny of nations. This is the astonishing invitation hidden within the appeal: the Cross is not merely an event to admire but a life to embrace. Whenever suffering is accepted in faith, transformed by love, and offered with Christ for souls, Calvary is mystically prolonged in history, and the saving love of Jesus continues reaching hearts until the end of time .

Prayer

Oh , our Adorable Jesus, we bow before Your Holy Cross, the source of our redemption and hope. Transform our hearts with Your grace, teach us to embrace sacrifices with love, and guide us in bringing souls to You. May Your mercy and love reign in us now and forever, Amen

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