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Divine Appeal 90

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Innumerable are the sins committed innumerable the souls that are damned.”

“My daughter, spend these hours with Me. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart.

My great love for mankind keeps Me day and night a prisoner in the tabernacle. What a pain to Me! So many of My own... pour scorn upon Me. They treat Me as one far away from them.

Pray and atone. Innumerable are the sins committed and innumerable the souls that are damned. Pray and implore mercy for souls. I ask you to hide Me in your soul. Do not be tired or fear to be importunate. I remain in the tabernacle full of tenderness thirsting and longing for souls. Bring Me souls in your prayers.

Do not leave Me alone. I am like a terrified child begging not to be left alone.

The ingratitude of My own... continuously pains Me. I am so lonely and afflicted in so many tabernacles of the world. With My voice full of supplication I want to fly to the very ends of the earth saying again and again ‘repent!’

I love mankind. I am never tired of My vigil for sinners. Pray a great deal for souls. Many of them are heading for perdition. With love I call all back to My sheepfold before it is too late.

These are grave moments. I am agonising over souls. The world advances towards the precipice from one day to the next.

Pray a great deal. As I am exposed I will pour my infinite mercy in human souls.”

“I give My blessing.”

19th February 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.

Praying for Souls with Humility and Concern

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 89

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 89: "With humility and concern, pray for souls."

Humility, in this Appeal, is not an abstract idea but a lived experience: the moment one realizes the limits of self—unable to fix everything or save everyone, yet still moved to love . It is truth embraced interiorly.That interior breaking is where true prayer begins. Our Adorable Jesus shows this not in power, but in surrender—especially in Gethsemane,(cf. Matthew 26:38–39) where His human will trembles yet yields fully to the Father . Humility is this tension: feeling deeply, yet entrusting completely. In real life, humility appears when a parent stops trying to control a child’s path and instead begins to pray sincerely. It appears when someone fails, falls into sin, or feels spiritually dry—and instead of pretending strength, they turn to God with nothing but need (cf. Psalm 51:17). This is where prayer becomes real. The saints lived this deeply human humility. St. Peter, after denying Christ,(cf. Luke 22:61–62) did not reclaim dignity through argument but through tears that reopened his heart to grace . St. Augustine’s long search for truth ended not in intellectual pride but in surrender. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2559) teaches that prayer arises from the depths of a humble heart aware of its need . Without humility, concern for souls becomes judgment; with humility, it becomes solidarity. You begin to see others not as “worse,” but as fellow strugglers.Humility is where one no longer stands above others, but chooses to kneel among them—entering their reality with compassion rather than judgment (cf. Phil 2:5–7; CCC 544). It is a descent into truth, where love replaces comparison.

Concern for souls is something every human heart already knows in fragments: the quiet worry for a friend, remembering someone in the night, or sensing unease when a loved one drifts . It is love reaching beyond itself. But in Christ, this natural concern is purified—it becomes redemptive, not anxious. Our Adorable Jesus carries souls constantly, (cf. John 17:9, 15) yet He remains in perfect peace because His concern is rooted in the Father . The difference is crucial. Human concern often turns into control or fear. Divine concern becomes intercession. It doesn’t crush the heart—it stretches it, enlarging its capacity to love through tension held in grace (cf. Ps 119:32; CCC 733). What seems like interior strain becomes, in God’s hands, a quiet formation of charity. You cannot force change, but you also cannot stop caring. This is the place where love becomes patient endurance rather than control (cf. 1 Cor 13:7). The soul learns to remain open without domination, present without possession. In this way, God shapes the heart into His likeness: firm in truth, yet gentle in mercy—able to carry concern without losing peace (cf. Eph 3:17–19). That tension becomes prayer. Or when you see injustice, moral confusion, or even public sin—you feel something stir. Instead of reacting with anger,(cf. 1 Timothy 2:1) concern transforms that reaction into silent prayer . The saints lived this balance. St. Monica did not chase Augustine endlessly with arguments; she accompanied him with years of patient tears and trust in God’s timing. St. Paul carried the struggles of entire communities, yet remained anchored in Christ . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2635) calls intercession an expression of charity that aligns us with Jesus’ prayer . Concern, then, is love refusing to become indifferent. It is the quiet decision: “I will not give up on this soul—even if all I can do is pray.”

When humility and concern converge, (cf. Mic 6:8; CCC 1803) the heart is quietly reoriented—anchored in truth yet expanded in love . Humility roots the soul in reality before God, freeing it from illusion, while concern moves it beyond self toward the good of others. This union mirrors the life of Christ: inwardly surrendered to the Father, outwardly given for humanity . One guards against self-exaltation; the other prevents self-enclosure. In this way, the heart is gradually configured to His. Truth and charity meet, and the soul becomes both grounded and generous—living not for itself, but as a quiet presence of Christ’s love in the world (cf. Eph 4:15). Without humility, concern becomes superiority. Without concern, humility becomes isolation. Together, they form love. Our Adorable Jesus embodies this union perfectly. He kneels to wash the feet of His disciples—an act of radical humility—yet His Heart is deeply troubled for them, (cf. John 13:1–5, 21) knowing their weaknesses and future failures . He does not withdraw from their fragility; He enters it. In daily life, this union becomes very practical. A teacher facing difficult students can become harsh or indifferent—but humility recalls personal limits, while concern opens the path to patience . Authority is then exercised not from superiority, but from shared humanity. A wounded friend can close off or control—but humility softens the heart, and concern preserves love from turning inward . In this way, relationships are healed not by force, but by mercy—a mercy that listens, understands, (cf. Mt 9:13; CCC 1829) and restores rather than controls . It is love that descends in order to raise. St. Vincent de Paul embodied this through humble service, never placing himself above the poor, while St. Catherine of Siena spoke with boldness rooted in deep self-knowledge before God. In both, mercy became concrete: humility grounding the heart,(cf. Jas 3:17) and love reaching outward—transforming relationships from within . In both, humility and concern became concrete love (cf. Jas 2:17). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2565) reminds us that charity animates all prayer . This means prayer for souls must feel something—it must carry real love.A humble and concerned heart does not save the world—but it becomes a place where Christ can.

This Appeal becomes most powerful not in extraordinary moments, but in the unnoticed details of daily life. “With humility and concern” is meant to be lived in traffic, in conversations, in fatigue, in interruptions. It is not about adding more prayers, but transforming the heart behind everything. Imagine scrolling through news filled with conflict or moral confusion. The natural reaction is frustration or numbness. But humility says, “I am not above this broken world,” and concern says, “These are souls.” That shift turns passive consumption into intercession . Or consider moments of personal hurt—misunderstanding, betrayal, or being overlooked. Instead of closing in on oneself, humility acknowledges the pain honestly, while concern dares to offer that pain for the good of others. This is deeply human and deeply supernatural. St. Thérèse of Lisieux lived this in hidden ways—offering small irritations and unnoticed sacrifices for souls she would never meet. St. Josemaría Escrivá taught that ordinary work, done with love,(cf. CCC 901) becomes a channel of grace for the world . Jesus Himself spent most of His life in ordinary hiddenness at Nazareth . That silence was not inactivity—it was preparation, intercession, love. To live this Appeal is not to escape your life, but to live it differently: seeing every moment as connected to the salvation of souls.

The deepest expression of this Appeal is found in the Eucharist, where humility and concern are no longer separate—they are one continuous act of love. Our Adorable Jesus becomes completely hidden under simple appearances, revealing a humility beyond comprehension, and at the same time, He offers Himself entirely for souls, revealing infinite concern (cf. Luke 22:19–20). This is not distant theology—it is intensely human. To receive the Eucharist is to receive a Heart that has chosen to remain vulnerable for love. It is to encounter a God who does not withdraw from human weakness but enters it completely, (cf. Heb 4:15; CCC 470) embracing it from within . In Christ, weakness is no longer a barrier, but a place of encounter. The saints formed by the Eucharist understood this deeply. Faustina Kowalska perceived how Divine Mercy flows into souls through Eucharistic union, while Peter Julian Eymard saw in the Eucharist the continuing presence and mission of Christ for the world. In their witness, the Eucharist is not only adored but received as living transformation: mercy entering the soul and mission flowing outward into daily life . Practically, this means that every Communion is not only reception but mission. Having received Him, the soul is sent to carry His mercy into daily life, (cf. Jn 20:21; CCC 1392) allowing His presence to extend through concrete acts of love . You receive humility—you are sent to live it. You receive concern—you are sent to carry others. Even moments of dryness or distraction can be offered for souls, making them mysteriously fruitful. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1324) teaches that the Eucharist is the source and summit of Christian life . That means it is also the source and summit of praying for souls. To live “with humility and concern” is ultimately to become Eucharistic: quietly present, deeply loving, and entirely given.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, make our hearts lowly and attentive like Yours. Teach us to carry souls gently in prayer, without pride or judgment. Where we feel helpless, let humility open us to grace. Where we feel burdened, let concern become love. Use our hidden offerings to draw souls into Your mercy. Amen.

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

The Token of Kindness in Pain for Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 89

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 89: "Be in My pain for the sake of souls. Give Me this token of kindness. It is an offering for souls."

To hear Our Adorable Jesus say, “Be in My pain for the sake of souls,” is to be drawn into the deepest interior movement of His Sacred Heart—a movement that is at once profoundly human and infinitely divine. His pain is not an abstraction, nor merely a historical memory; it is the living expression of love wounded by indifference, sin, and the refusal of grace . Yet this pain is not closed in upon itself; it is entirely oriented toward salvation, toward drawing souls back into communion with the Father . Thus, when He invites the soul to “be in My pain,” (cf. Col 1:24; CCC 1368) He calls not for emotional imitation but for real participation in His redemptive love . This communion unfolds in ordinary life: unnoticed sacrifices, interior struggles, and fidelity in duty when consolation is absent. A mother rising in the night, a worker persevering despite discouragement, a young person resisting temptation in silence— (cf. Rom 12:1) these become living offerings when united to Christ . In Him, the ordinary is lifted into the mystery of redemption. Scripture reveals this path: Joseph transforms betrayal into mercy (cf. Gen 50:20), (cf. Is 53:5) and the Suffering Servant bears pain that brings healing to many . What seems hidden becomes spiritually fruitful. In this light, suffering is no longer meaningless. It turns into a hallowed space where love is enlarged and purified, silently taking part in Christ's atoning mission for souls.

“Give Me this token of kindness” reveals with striking clarity the humility and tenderness of divine love. The One who holds all creation in being (cf. Col 1:17) asks not for grand achievements, but for a “token”—a small, freely given act that carries the weight of love. This echoes the entire rhythm of the Gospel, where God consistently reveals His preference for what is hidden, simple, and sincere (cf. 1 Sam 16:7; Mt 6:4). The widow’s offering, though materially insignificant, becomes spiritually immense because it expresses total trust and self-gift . In the same way, the daily life of a Christian becomes the arena where these “tokens” are offered: a restrained word instead of anger, a patient listening instead of self-assertion, a moment of prayer when fatigue presses heavily. These acts are deeply human—they arise from real effort, from choosing love in situations that challenge the heart. Yet they are also deeply divine, because charity transforms their value (cf. CCC 1827). The saints teach that holiness is found not in extraordinary deeds,(cf. Lk 16:10; CCC 2013) but in fidelity to love within ordinary life . What matters is not the scale of the action, but the constancy of love that sustains it. There is a deep philosophical truth here: the value of an act flows from the intention that unites it to God, who is infinite Love . Thus, even the smallest act, offered to Christ, participates in eternity. In a world driven by visibility and recognition, this appeal draws the soul into hiddenness. Each quiet sacrifice, each unnoticed act of charity,(cf. Mt 6:4) becomes a real communion with God—silent, yet profoundly fruitful .

“It is an offering for souls” expands the horizon of this appeal into the vast mystery of the Church’s mission. The Christian life is never isolated; it is intrinsically oriented toward others, toward the salvation and sanctification of every person . When Jesus speaks of offering for souls, He reveals that every act of love, every suffering united to Him, enters into the great exchange of grace within the communion of saints (cf. CCC 1475). This gives an immense dignity to daily life. The frustrations, delays, and hidden pains that often seem insignificant can become intercessions of immense value when consciously offered. A moment of anxiety can be given for someone in despair; a physical illness can become a prayer for those who are spiritually distant; a hidden sacrifice can be offered for the needs of the Church. This is not mere symbolism— (cf. Heb 7:25) it is a real participation in Christ’s intercessory mission . Scripture reveals this dynamic repeatedly: Moses stands before God on behalf of Israel (cf. Ex 32:11–14), Esther risks everything for her people (cf. Est 4:16), and Paul pours himself out for the communities he serves . Their lives demonstrate that love takes responsibility for others. This calls for an intentional interior life—beginning each day with a conscious self-offering, then renewing it within the flow of ordinary duties, not as repetition but as deepening union (cf. Rom 12:1; CCC 901). Each moment becomes an altar where the will quietly consents to love.Every encounter is then received not merely as circumstance,(cf. 2 Cor 5:14–15) but as providential participation in Christ’s own mission of mercy . Every circumstance presents a chance to love beyond oneself for the benefit of souls, whether it is accepted or not. The commonplace is therefore internally transformed. Hidden acts, united to Christ, enter into His eternal offering, where nothing is lost but everything is gathered into divine fruitfulness (cf. Jn 15:5; CCC 2011).

The Eucharistic dimension of this appeal reveals its highest theological depth. The sacrifice of Christ, once offered on Calvary, is made sacramentally present in every Mass, not repeated but re-presented in a mysterious and real way . When Jesus invites the soul to “be in My pain,” He is inviting it into this living mystery, where His self-gift is eternally offered to the Father for the life of the world . The altar becomes the place where human life is taken up into divine love. Bread and wine, symbols of human labor and suffering, are transformed into His Body and Blood;(cf. CCC 1368) likewise, the faithful are called to place their own lives within this offering . A person arriving at Mass brings not only intentions, but their whole lived reality—joys, failures, struggles, and hopes. When consciously united to Christ,(cf. Rom 12:1; CCC 1368) all of this is drawn into His redemptive offering . The saints recognized the Eucharist as the source of all apostolic fruitfulness, where love reaches its fullest expression . What is offered there does not remain there—it begins to transform the soul. Even outside the liturgy, this Eucharistic life continues through recollection, prayer, and faithful duty. Christ constantly intercedes (cf. Heb 7:25), and the soul united to Him shares in this ongoing act of love. Thus, life itself becomes quietly transfigured: time is drawn into eternity, and the ordinary takes on a sacramental depth . The call is not only to go to the altar, but to live from it in every moment.

This appeal touches the deepest reality of the human heart: the longing not to suffer alone, and the mystery that suffering, when shared, is transformed . Even humanly, pain seeks presence. Jesus Himself, in His agony, desired the presence of His disciples, asking them to remain with Him even briefly . This reveals that divine love, though infinite, seeks communion—it desires a response, a shared presence. When He says, “Be in My pain,” He invites the soul into this communion . Suffering is no longer isolation, but relationship—a participation in His own offering. In this union, even weakness becomes closeness. To remain with Him, even without words, is already love responding to Love (cf. Jn 15:4; CCC 618). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1505) teaches that Christ gives new meaning to suffering by uniting it to His own redemptive act . In practical terms, this means that every human experience of pain—misunderstanding, failure, loneliness—can become a place of encounter with Him. A person who feels rejected can unite that experience to His rejection (cf. Jn 18:40); one who feels abandoned can enter into His cry on the Cross . These are not abstract reflections, but real acts of union that transform the heart. The saints discovered that such companionship with Christ brings a deep interior strength and peace, even in suffering. Even figures like Job, who endured profound trials, came to a deeper knowledge of God through them (cf. Job 42:5–6). Philosophically, this reveals the paradox at the heart of Christianity: that suffering, when united to love, becomes a path to communion and transformation . Apostolically, it forms souls capable of carrying others with compassion. Thus, this appeal calls every vocation into a deeper participation in love—one that embraces the Cross not as an end, but as a means of life for souls.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, draw us into the mystery of Your redeeming pain for souls. In every trial, teach us to remain with You and to love. Transform our hidden sacrifices into grace for the world. Unite our lives to Your Eucharistic offering, that many souls may return to Your merciful Heart. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 89

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I raise My eyes with tears towards My own.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal and spend these hours with Me. Keep Me company. Implore
mercy for sinners.

You will be My victim. Offer yourself in union with Me. Offer yourself in each moment with the purpose of bringing Me souls. Forget everything. Achieve the grandiose of this grace.

In the Sacrament of My Love it is My desire that many souls may know My clemency. Pray a great deal for souls. I want you to repent. My joy is to forgive and to save souls. The great love for mankind keeps Me day and night a prisoner in the tabernacle.

I am agonising over souls. What a pain for Me to see many among My own... who treat Me as one far away and unable to understand My feelings towards souls that I love so much. I come to call the lost souls back to My sheepfold. Never shall I weary of repentant sinners.

Be in My pain for the sake of souls. Give Me this token of kindness.  It is an offering for souls.

In the Sacrament of My Love I am so lonely in the empty churches. Pray to console Me and implore mercy for souls. These are grave moments. Never before has the world needed prayers as at this fragile time. Be gracious to souls.

In the Sacrament of My Love I am so ridiculed and insulted. I raise My eyes with tears towards My own... Receive My share of pain. What more could I have suffered for mankind? Pray and atone. Do not waste any of these precious times.

I am always watching beneath My Sacramental veils, waiting for souls to come to Me.

What a pain for Me to see so many souls on the way to perdition. With humility and concern, pray for souls.”

“I give My blessing.”

3.00 a.m., 18th February 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.

Divine Appeal to All: Jesus’ Love and Mercy

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 88

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 88: "My appeal is addressed to all those living in the world: the good, sinners and those consecrated to Me. To those who obey and to those in authority I say: ‘I AM  LOVE AND MERCY."

At the deepest level of the human heart—beneath roles, titles, wounds, and even virtues—Our Adorable Jesus speaks a word that is not first a command but a revelation: “I AM Love and Mercy.” This is the same divine “I AM” disclosed in the burning bush (cf. Ex 3:14), now unveiled in tenderness through the Incarnation (cf. Jn 1:14; CCC 456–460). What is striking is that this appeal is addressed to everyone without exception: the good, sinners, the consecrated, the obedient, and those in authority (cf. Rom 3:22–23). This removes every quiet excuse we carry—that we are either “too far” or “already close enough.” The good are reminded that their fidelity is sustained by grace, not self-mastery (cf. 1 Cor 4:7; CCC 2001); sinners are reassured that their story is not finished, that mercy seeks them before they seek it (cf. Lk 15:20; CCC 1847); the consecrated are called to remember that love, not routine,(cf. Rev 2:4–5) is the center . In ordinary life, this becomes very real: a person who prays daily yet struggles with judgment, someone who falls repeatedly but still desires God, a religious who serves faithfully yet feels interior dryness. All are equally addressed. Before the Eucharist (cf. CCC 1374), we are not “categories” but persons—loved, known, and invited. Jesus does not begin by telling us what to fix; He reveals who He is. And slowly, that changes everything, because when a person realizes they are loved like this, they begin to live differently—not out of pressure, but from encounter (cf. 1 Jn 4:10–11).

When Jesus explicitly speaks to those in authority, it feels almost unsettling—because authority often assumes distance from correction. Yet here, it is directly named (cf. Wis 6:1–6). This reveals something deeply human and deeply divine: the more influence one has, the more one’s heart must resemble God’s Heart. Authority in Christ is never about control; it is about responsibility for others’ dignity and growth . We see this clearly in Scripture—Saul, who loses everything by clinging to his own will , and David, (cf. 2 Sam 12; Ps 51) who falls gravely yet returns through repentance and becomes a vessel of mercy . In daily life, authority is not only about presidents or bishops—it is present in parents, teachers, older siblings, supervisors. A parent choosing patience instead of anger , a boss choosing fairness over exploitation, a teacher correcting without humiliating—these are deeply spiritual acts. They reflect whether authority is rooted in ego or in love. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1905–1907) reminds us that authority must serve the common good and respect persons , but Jesus goes further—He calls authority to heal. That means listening, forgiving, guiding, and sometimes sacrificing one’s own comfort for others. Mercy becomes demanding here: it does not allow harshness to hide behind “discipline.” It asks the powerful to become vulnerable in love. In this light, authority becomes something sacred—a place where God’s own way of loving can either be revealed or obscured.

The heart of this appeal becomes especially alive in the Eucharist, where Jesus remains quietly present as both Love given and Mercy receiving (cf. Lk 22:19–20; CCC 1324, 1374). This is not abstract—it is deeply human. The Incarnation itself reveals that God enters real human condition, not an idealized one . Instead of meeting us where we think we should be, grace meets us where we are. Jesus receives us as we are—distracted, tired, joyful, (cf. Mt 11:28; CCC 1385) burdened—and gently begins His work of transformation . His presence is medicine for the whole person, not a reward for the already whole. Thus, every approach to the altar becomes an act of trust rather than achievement. The soul learns that being received by Christ is the beginning of healing, (cf. Lk 5:31–32) not its conclusion . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1324) teaches that the Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life , because here Christ unites our lives to His own offering . Think of how this plays out daily: someone going to Mass after a difficult week, carrying stress or regret; a student offering their studies quietly; a worker uniting exhaustion to prayer. These are not small things—they are received by Christ. The Gospel shows this pattern again and again: the prodigal son embraced before he explains himself (cf. Lk 15:20), the woman healed by simply reaching out . Jesus receives first, then transforms. Even when prayer feels empty and distracted, something real is happening because He is truly present (cf. Mt 28:20; CCC 1374). The Eucharist assures us that grace works beyond our feelings, (cf. Is 55:10–11) quietly accomplishing what we cannot see . Saint Teresa of Calcutta reminds us that fidelity in small things is what allows love to grow. A distracted but persevering prayer, humbly offered, becomes a real gift in God’s sight (cf. CCC 2011; 2 Cor 8:12). In the Eucharist,(cf. Jn 6:51; CCC 1380) Jesus shows that love is not intensity but fidelity—remaining, receiving, and giving in silence . Over time, this hidden faithfulness transforms the heart, making it more patient, merciful, and like His .

At a deeper level, this appeal touches the question many people carry quietly: “Who am I, really?” In a world that pushes achievement, independence, and control, (cf. Gen 1:27; CCC 1700) Jesus reveals something very different—that our identity is rooted in being loved . Sin disrupts this, creating distance, shame, (cf. Rom 5:12; CCC 397–400) and confusion . Mercy, then, is not just about being forgiven—it is about being restored to who we are meant to be. We see this in Peter, who fails dramatically but is gently restored and entrusted with mission (cf. Jn 21:15–19), and in Paul, whose entire life changes after encountering Christ . These stories feel close to our own experiences: moments of failure, regret, or confusion that seem defining—yet are not final. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1999–2003) teaches that grace heals and elevates human nature . This means that even our weaknesses become places where God works most deeply,(cf. 2 Cor 12:9; CCC 2015) because His power is revealed through what is fragile . What we often try to hide becomes, in His hands, an opening for grace. In daily life, this takes simple but concrete forms: admitting a mistake instead of covering it, asking forgiveness rather than defending oneself, choosing humility when pride feels easier . These small acts allow truth to enter the heart. Through this, the soul is quietly transformed. Weakness, accepted and offered, becomes a meeting place with Mercy,(cf. Rom 5:20; CCC 1996) and ordinary moments become occasions of grace . These are small but powerful movements. Jesus’ words “I AM Love and Mercy” remind us that we are not self-made—we are received. And when we begin to accept that, we become freer. Not perfect, but real. Not controlled, but trusting. Slowly, we learn that depending on God is not weakness—it is where true strength begins .

Finally, this appeal is not meant to remain personal—it naturally flows outward into how we live with others. When someone truly experiences mercy, they begin to see people differently. The Church teaches that every baptized person shares in Christ’s mission (cf. CCC 897–900), and that mission is lived in ordinary situations. The Good Samaritan (cf. Lk 10:25–37) is a powerful example—not because he was extraordinary, but because he responded. In daily life, this might mean forgiving someone who hurt you, helping without expecting recognition,(cf. Col 3:23; 1 Cor 6:19–20) or choosing honesty when it costs something . Mercy becomes visible in these simple, often hidden actions. It also becomes present in suffering—when we unite our struggles to Christ,(cf. Col 1:24; CCC 618) they take on meaning and even become a source of grace for others . This is not easy, but it is real. The Gospel does not promise ease,(cf. Jn 16:33; CCC 2015) but transformation through grace . Christ's path is frequently obscure and characterised by constant surrender rather than outward achievement. The world frequently demands strength, achievement, or perfection, but these things are unable to mend the deepest emotional scars. What it truly needs is mercy lived concretely—patience, forgiveness, and humility embodied in ordinary life . In this way, the believer becomes a quiet witness. Not through dominance or achievement, but through a life that reflects the Heart of Christ,(cf. Lk 6:36) where mercy speaks more loudly than strength . A kind word, patience in difficulty, truth spoken gently—these reveal God more than we realize. “I AM Love and Mercy” is not only who Jesus is; it is what He desires to live through us. And so, the appeal becomes a quiet mission: to let our lives, in their simplicity and imperfection, become places where others encounter His Heart (cf. Mt 5:16; CCC 2044). Holiness is lived within ordinary existence, not outside it.This is shown in daily choices—speaking gently in tension, choosing honesty over convenience, (cf. Col 3:12–14) or patience over reaction . In such hidden acts, Christ quietly becomes visible. Saint Francis of Assisi’s life reminds us that the Gospel is preached most deeply through lived witness. Even imperfection, when surrendered, becomes a place where grace works, allowing Divine light to shine through human weakness .

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, King of Love and Mercy, we place before You all our responsibilities, relationships, and influence. Purify our authority, correct our intentions, and make our leadership reflect Your Heart. May we serve others with justice clothed in mercy and truth filled with charity. Amen.

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