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Jesus' Saving Power to Entire Universe

Divine Appeal Reflection - 141

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 141: "My saving power  must be extended over the entire universe. In Me there is the throne of  mercy and the most wretched are the best welcomed."

At the highest apostolic and mystical horizon, this appeal reveals that the saving power of Christ possesses a universality that far exceeds the limits of human imagination. Our Adorable Jesus does not merely desire to save isolated individuals; He desires that His redeeming grace penetrate every culture, nation, profession, family, institution, and human heart until all things are brought under His merciful lordship . This is why the Church (cf. CCC 849–856) is missionary by her very nature . Yet many souls unconsciously reduce the mission of salvation to priests, religious, missionaries, theologians, or recognized Church leaders. This appeal destroys such narrow thinking. Every baptized person (cf. Mt 28:19–20; 1 Pt 2:9) has received a share in Christ's mission . A mother teaching her children to pray, a mechanic working honestly, a student defending truth among unbelieving friends, a nurse comforting the dying, a farmer blessing his work before sunrise, a businessman refusing corruption, and a bedridden soul offering suffering for conversions all participate in extending Christ's saving power. The hidden monastery and the crowded marketplace are both missionary territories. The office, classroom, hospital, prison, social media platform, refugee camp, and family dining table become places where Christ seeks entrance. Every Christian is sent not merely to a geographical location but into the vast universe of human hearts, especially those who have never encountered Jesus, those who have abandoned faith, those wounded by scandal, and those who no longer believe that God cares for them. The Lord's saving power seeks to reach them through ordinary believers who become living witnesses of mercy.

From the eternal depths of divine wisdom, Our Adorable Jesus reveals that in Him stands the true throne of mercy (cf. Heb 4:16; Jas 2:13). This revelation quietly overturns many assumptions that can gradually enter even the life of the Church. Human beings naturally admire competence, education, influence, eloquence, wealth, leadership ability, and social standing . Consequently, within parishes, small Christian communities, apostolic groups, and ministries, there can emerge a subtle tendency to assume that the most learned should always speak, the most influential should always lead, the wealthiest should always be consulted, or the most visible should always be considered indispensable. David (cf. 1 Sam 16:6–13) was chosen while overlooked among his brothers . Gideon considered himself insignificant (cf. Jdg 6:11–16). Amos was neither prophet nor prophet's son according to worldly standards (cf. Am 7:14–15). The Apostles themselves were not selected from religious elites (cf. Mk 3:13–19). The Catechism (cf. CCC 799–801; 1 Cor 12:4–11) teaches that the Holy Spirit distributes His gifts according to God's wisdom and for the good of the entire Body of Christ . Consequently, spiritual fruitfulness cannot be measured solely by visibility, influence, or public recognition. The elderly widow praying quietly before Mass may contribute more to the spiritual vitality of a parish than those whose contributions are widely noticed . The shy member of a Small Christian Community who seldom speaks may be sustaining the group through hidden prayer, sacrifice, and fidelity known only to God . The cleaner who lovingly prepares the church before dawn may be cooperating in Christ's mission as truly as the person proclaiming Scripture or leading a ministry . Divine mercy therefore overturns merely human measurements of importance. Before God, every vocation, service, and charism receives its dignity from love rather than prominence . All stand equally dependent upon grace, equally sustained by mercy, and equally called to participate in the mission of Christ according to the gifts entrusted to them . The saints consistently recognized that in the Kingdom of God, hidden fidelity often accomplishes more than visible success, for God sees not only what is done, but the love with which it is offered .

The appeal reaches its deepest paradox when Our Adorable Jesus reveals that the most wretched are often the best welcomed. Such a statement overturns the instinctive logic of fallen humanity. The world naturally admires strength, competence, achievement, influence, intelligence, and self-sufficiency (cf. 1 Cor 1:26–29), yet God continually draws near to those who know they cannot save themselves . Divine mercy flows most freely where illusions of self-mastery have finally collapsed. The tragedy of many souls is not that they are too weak, but that they still imagine themselves strong enough without God . Throughout Scripture, divine mercy repeatedly enters through the doorway of acknowledged poverty. The widow of Zarephath encountered God's provision when every earthly security had disappeared (cf. 1 Kgs 17:8–16). Hannah's tears became the soil from which unexpected blessing emerged (cf. 1 Sam 1:9–20). Bartimaeus received sight because he refused to surrender his cry for mercy (cf. Mk 10:46–52). The tax collector returned home justified because he possessed no spiritual achievements to present, only a wounded heart seeking compassion (cf. Lk 18:9–14). The prodigal son (cf. Lk 15:11–24) discovered that the Father's love awaited him precisely at the point where self-reliance failed completely . Again and again, Scripture  reveals the same mystery:(cf. Jas 4:6; 2 Cor 12:9) God is not attracted by human greatness but by humble openness to His mercy . This truth penetrates every vocation within the Church. The priest standing at the altar depends entirely upon mercy (cf. Heb 5:1–3). The bishop shepherding a diocese depends entirely upon mercy (cf. 2 Cor 4:7). The theologian searching divine mysteries depends entirely upon mercy (cf. 1 Cor 8:2–3). The wealthy benefactor, the hidden contemplative, the missionary, the parent, the laborer, the saint, and the newly converted sinner all stand before the same throne with empty hands (cf. Heb 4:16; Rom 3:23–24). Every grace is mercy received . Every act of repentance is mercy awakening the heart (cf. Rom 2:4). Every perseverance in holiness is mercy sustaining fidelity . At its deepest level, this appeal reveals that heaven is populated not by the self-sufficient but by those who learned to live entirely from mercy. The closer a soul comes to God, (cf. 1 Cor 15:10) the less it boasts of its virtues and the more it marvels at divine compassion . Thus, the most dangerous poverty is not moral weakness but the refusal to acknowledge one's need for grace. Conversely, the most blessed poverty is the humble recognition that without Christ one can do nothing, yet with Him all things become possible . In the kingdom of mercy, those who arrive with empty hands often discover that they are already standing closest to the Heart of God.

This appeal also contains a profound ecclesial lesson concerning the unity, dignity, and missionary significance of every member of Christ's Body. Saint Paul repeatedly teaches that the parts of the Body that appear weaker are often indispensable, and that God deliberately gives greater honor to what the world overlooks . This divine logic echoes throughout salvation history, where God consistently chooses what appears small, hidden, or insignificant to accomplish His purposes . Yet even within Christian communities, subtle divisions can quietly form between what is seen and what remains hidden: public service and unnoticed fidelity, recognized ministries and silent endurance (cf. 1 Cor 12:14–22). Some souls carry a quiet ache, not because they are unwilling, but because they are rarely asked to speak, lead, or visibly contribute. Others, without realizing it, begin to measure their value by whether they are seen, affirmed, or entrusted with responsibility . St. Paul gently corrects this interior distortion by revealing that the Body of Christ depends profoundly on what appears least significant, because God often hides greatest love in least recognition . In this light, dignity is no longer borrowed from visibility but received from belonging to Christ. A life quietly offered in love, even without acknowledgment, is not diminished in the eyes of God but mysteriously enlarged in its spiritual fruitfulness (cf. Mt 6:4; Col 3:23–24).  Christ's throne of mercy corrects both errors, for before His Eucharistic Presence every human distinction becomes secondary to belonging to Him (cf. Gal 3:28; Col 3:11; CCC 791). The one proclaiming Scripture, the one arranging flowers before dawn, the one supporting parish life through sacrificial generosity, the one cleaning the church after everyone has departed, the catechist teaching children, the elderly parishioner praying quietly before Mass, the mother offering daily sacrifices for her family, and the patient enduring suffering in a hospital bed all participate in the same saving mission of Christ . The Holy Spirit (cf. 1 Cor 12:4–11; CCC 799–801) distributes diverse gifts according to divine wisdom, not human preference, and each gift is given for the good of the whole Church . What appears hidden before human eyes may be profoundly fruitful before God, who looks not at appearances but at the heart .

Saint Thérèse of the Child Jesus discovered that within the heart of the Church, love itself is the highest vocation . This insight unveils a mystery often forgotten: grace transcends visible boundaries. A prayer offered in solitude may obtain graces for missionaries proclaiming Christ in distant lands . A suffering accepted with faith may strengthen another soul unknown to the sufferer (cf. Col 1:24; 2 Cor 1:3–6). A hidden act of forgiveness may release graces far beyond what can be measured (cf. Mt 6:14–15). A Holy Communion received with profound reverence may mysteriously assist the conversion of someone who has never heard the name of Jesus . The communion of saints reveals that no act united to Christ remains isolated, for all who belong to Him are spiritually connected within His Mystical Body (cf. Rom 12:5; CCC 946–962). Thus, every baptized person possesses a missionary significance extending far beyond visible activity . The elderly widow, the hidden contemplative, the laborer, the student, the parent, the priest, the religious, and the suffering soul each participate in Christ's redemptive work according to their vocation . Divine mercy therefore invites every soul to abandon comparison, jealousy, and discouragement, recognizing that the Kingdom grows not only through public ministry but also through hidden fidelity . No prayer offered in faith is forgotten (cf. Rev 8:3–4). No sacrifice united to Christ is wasted (cf. Rom 8:28). No act of love disappears into obscurity (cf. 1 Cor 15:58). Through the mysterious communion established by grace, every soul can help carry the light of Christ to places it will never physically visit, participating in the universal mission of the Church and the salvation of souls throughout the world .

Ultimately, this Divine Appeal invites the Church into radical confidence in mercy and radical commitment to mission. The throne of mercy is not merely a refuge for wounded souls; it is the command center of Christ's universal work of redemption. From this throne, Our Adorable Jesus sends every believer into the world as an ambassador of His compassion . The mission field includes not only distant nations but also neighbors, colleagues, family members, skeptics, atheists, indifferent Catholics, those wounded by the Church, those trapped in addictions, those enslaved by materialism, and those who have never encountered authentic Christian love. Some Christians will travel physically to lands where Christ is scarcely known. Others remain in ordinary places yet become true missionaries through prayer, sacrifice, witness, and charity . Saint Patrick evangelized entire nations through courageous preaching and tireless journeying, while Saint Catherine of Siena, though living in relative seclusion, influenced the Church profoundly through prayer, letters, and spiritual counsel offered from within her hidden life. Both shared the same missionary heart, revealing that the power of evangelization flows from union with Christ rather than from external movement . The Catechism teaches that Christ died for all and desires all to be saved (cf. CCC 605, 851; 1 Tim 2:4). Therefore every soul is called to a heart as wide as Christ’s own, offering their daily life for the salvation of souls (cf. Rom 12:1). The deeper one enters divine mercy, the more one understands that salvation is not private but overflowing: received to be shared, given to be multiplied, and lived as a gift for the whole world .

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, Throne of Mercy, make us little in our own eyes and great in love for souls . Preserve us from pride and discouragement. May every prayer, sacrifice, and hidden act of charity become a channel of grace through which others encounter Your saving mercy. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 141

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEA

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

VOLUME 1

“I am Jesus who loves souls so tenderly.”

“I cannot stand seeing souls eternally lost.”

“My daughter, listen to Me, I am in search of souls. My saving power must be extended over the entire universe. In Me there is the throne of mercy and the most wretched are the best welcomed. I want you now to come deep into the Sacrament of My Love and make reparation. I have so many consecrated to Me and they forsake Me. I love them so much and in return they only give Me their ingratitude. I come to seek shelter. Give Me souls in your prayers. In the prison of My tabernacle I am steeped. Souls abuse Me and trample Me underfoot. What a pain to Me! I am very thirsty and consumed with the desire to forgive souls. Souls throw themselves to perdition and after that they are eternally lost.

Pray a great deal.

Time is short for saving souls. The world is rushing to ruins. My Heart is agonising over My Church. It is full of perils. Every soul is dear to Me. I bear them because I suffered so much for them and I do not wish anyone to perish. Pray a great deal. Atone for souls. Abandon yourself to My dear service of bringing Me souls day and night. I am waiting for souls. It is My great love for mankind that caused Me to embrace all the miseries of human nature. It made Me suffer the most ignominious contempt and horrible tortures. This is why I pour My tears of blood over this world. I cannot stand seeing souls eternally lost.

I am Jesus who loves so tenderly. I never cease calling and thirsting for them. Pray and cloister souls in your heart. I draw you to pray and let you spend time united to My feelings. Many souls seek to offend Me. I long to forgive them yet they do not come. Finally they are eternally lost. Pray and atone.”

“I give My blessing.”

2.30 a.m., 8th May 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.

The High Spirit of Contemplation

Divine Appeal Reflection - 140

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 140: "Do not fear to put yourself in the high spirit of contemplation."

One of the most striking truths hidden within this appeal is that many souls are more comfortable serving God than belonging completely to Him. They willingly work, sacrifice, defend the faith, and engage in apostolic activity, yet hesitate when Jesus invites them into deeper intimacy . Contemplation can feel unsettling because it requires surrender. It places the soul before God without achievements, roles, or masks, allowing Him to see and love it in its poverty and truth . Many fear not what God may ask of them, but what He may reveal about them—and how deeply He desires to love them . Abraham (cf. Gen 12:1-4) was called to leave familiar securities before becoming the father of faith . Jacob wrestled through the night and emerged transformed (cf. Gen 32:24-30). Moses (cf. Ex 24:15-18) ascended Sinai and remained hidden within the cloud of divine presence . Before speaking publicly, (cf. Lk 6:12; Mk 1:35) Jesus spent nights alone with the Father . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2564) teaches that prayer is fundamentally a covenant relationship between God and man . Yet many Christians unconsciously reduce prayer to requests, duties, formulas, and obligations. Jesus' appeal calls souls beyond this. He invites souls into the "high spirit" of contemplation, where prayer becomes communion rather than merely conversation . Many imagine contemplation belongs only to monasteries, convents, or secluded places, yet Jesus reveals something far more accessible and profound.  It is learning to remain interiorly united to God amid the realities of ordinary life . A busy mother caring for her children, a priest carrying pastoral burdens, a student facing examinations, or a businessman surrounded by responsibilities can all live this contemplative spirit. The essence of contemplation is allowing God to become more real than the anxieties, fears, ambitions, and distractions that constantly compete for the heart's attention . As this communion deepens, the soul gradually discovers that God's presence is not reserved for moments of prayer alone, but can accompany every duty, suffering, decision, and encounter throughout the day .

A profound dimension of this appeal is that contemplation teaches souls to see reality through God's eyes rather than through human calculations. Most people spend their lives interpreting events according to immediate appearances. Success is viewed as blessing, failure as disaster, suffering as abandonment, and uncertainty as weakness. Yet contemplation gradually purifies this vision. Joseph, (cf. Gen 37:23-28; Gen 50:20) sold by his brothers, could have seen only betrayal, but through years of prayerful trust he discovered divine providence operating through apparent tragedy . Hannah (cf. 1 Sam 1:5-20) endured years of humiliation before witnessing God's hidden plan unfold . The disciples on the road to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13-35) interpreted the Crucifixion as failure until Christ opened their eyes to a deeper reality . Contemplation transforms perspective in the same way. A parent caring for a child with special needs may discover that what appears as limitation becomes a path of sanctification. A religious struggling with hidden dryness may realize that God is teaching pure faith beyond emotions (cf. Job 23:8-10). A widow enduring loneliness may encounter a deeper companionship with Christ than she ever imagined. A worker facing injustice may learn perseverance and trust through suffering .The contemplative person begins to understand that God's greatest works are often hidden beneath appearances.   This vision does not remove suffering but transfigures it. The soul learns to recognize grace where others see only difficulties and discovers that divine providence is often most active when it appears absent (cf. Rom 8:28; CCC 302-314).

Another extraordinary dimension of contemplation is that it becomes the place where God gently dismantles false versions of ourselves in order to reveal the identity He has always known and loved . Many people spend years building their sense of worth upon reputation, achievements, intelligence, ministry, relationships, possessions, influence, or even spiritual accomplishments. Yet these foundations remain fragile because they depend upon realities that can be diminished, lost, misunderstood, or taken away . A change in circumstances, a personal failure, advancing age, criticism, disappointment, or unexpected suffering can suddenly expose how unstable such identities truly are. God therefore invites the soul to rest upon something deeper: not what it possesses, accomplishes, or appears to be, but the unchanging truth that it is known, loved, and called by Him . Scripture repeatedly reveals this pattern. Before Gideon became a deliverer of Israel, he first had to see himself through God's call rather than through his own fear and inadequacy (cf. Judg 6:11–16). Before Jeremiah could speak God's word, he was reminded that he had been known, chosen, and loved before birth (cf. Jer 1:4–8). Before Peter became the rock of the Church, he had to experience the painful collapse of self-reliance through denial, tears, and repentance, discovering that his mission would rest upon grace rather than personal strength . For this reason, contemplation is often uncomfortable before it becomes consoling. 

In silence, illusions begin to surface. The soul gradually discovers how much peace depends upon human approval, how much confidence depends upon success, and how much identity rests upon realities that can disappear overnight . Yet this unveiling is not cruel. It is an act of divine mercy. Our Adorable Jesus removes false securities not to impoverish the soul, but to free it from everything that prevents it from resting in the unchanging truth that it is known, loved, and held by God before all achievement, failure, praise, or recognition . This is why modern society fears silence. Noise allows people to escape themselves. Contemplation does the opposite. It places the soul before the truth. Yet Christ never reveals wounds in order to condemn. He reveals them in order to heal. A successful professional may discover hidden pride. A devoted parent may uncover excessive control. A priest may realize that activity has replaced intimacy with God. A religious may find that obedience still conceals self-will.  St. Catherine of Siena called the knowledge of self and God the two rooms in which sanctity is formed. In contemplation, false identities gradually die so that the soul may discover its deepest identity as a beloved child of the Father .

The appeal also possesses an intensely Eucharistic and apostolic dimension. Many imagine contemplation as withdrawal from mission, but Scripture reveals the opposite. Every great apostolic mission flows from contemplation. Isaiah first beheld God's holiness before being sent to Israel (cf. Is 6:1-8). The Apostles first remained with Jesus before they preached to nations (cf. Mk 3:13-15). Mary Magdalene (cf. Jn 20:11-18) encountered the risen Lord before becoming the first witness of the Resurrection . The Eucharist reveals this mystery perfectly. Hidden beneath sacramental appearances, Jesus remains in perpetual contemplation of the Father  while simultaneously pouring grace upon the world . St. Teresa of Calcutta frequently insisted that service separated from contemplation eventually risks becoming mere activism. Human beings were not created simply to work for God, but to remain with Him and receive from Him (cf. Mk 3:14; Jn 15:4–5). Many people today live under constant pressure, carrying anxieties, responsibilities, disappointments, and expectations that were never meant to rest entirely upon their own shoulders . As a result, activity multiplies while interior peace diminishes. The contemplative soul learns another way. A teacher enters the classroom carrying not only lesson plans but the peace received in prayer (cf. Jn 14:27). A doctor treats suffering patients while remaining interiorly united to Christ, drawing compassion from Him rather than solely from personal reserves . A husband returns home after a demanding day and responds with patience instead of frustration because grace has slowly transformed his heart through prayer (cf. Eph 4:31–32). A missionary perseveres amid difficulties because strength flows from Eucharistic adoration rather than human enthusiasm alone . Contemplation does not diminish apostolic zeal; (cf. Lk 10:38–42; CCC 2712) it purifies, strengthens, and orders it . The soul gradually ceases working merely for God and begins working with God. The difference is immense. One often produces exhaustion because everything depends upon human effort; the other produces fruitfulness because the soul learns to cooperate with divine grace . Every tabernacle therefore becomes a hidden school where Christ teaches souls the wisdom of union before action, teaching them that the deepest transformations in the world begin with hearts transformed in His Presence .

At the highest mystical level, Jesus reveals that contemplation is preparation for eternity itself. The fear He addresses in this appeal ultimately arises because contemplation leads toward complete surrender. Human nature fears losing control. Yet every saint discovered that surrender is not loss but fulfillment. Enoch (cf. Gen 5:24) walked so closely with God that his entire life became a journey of communion . The Psalmist (cf. Ps 63:1-8) thirsted for God more than earthly security . Mary (cf. Lk 2:19, 51) lived continually in the presence of God, treasuring His mysteries within her heart . St. Elizabeth of the Trinity taught that the Christian soul is called to become a living dwelling place of the Blessed Trinity. This is the ultimate purpose of contemplation. It is not the pursuit of spiritual experiences but participation in divine life itself (cf. 2 Pet 1:4; CCC 460). Heaven will not consist primarily of activity but of perfect communion with God (cf. Rev 21:3-4; CCC 1023-1029). Every moment of authentic contemplation quietly anticipates humanity's eternal destiny: communion with God (cf. Jn 17:3; CCC 1023–1029). When a soul remains silently before the Blessed Sacrament, even without words, it is already learning the language of heaven, where love gazes upon Love without distraction . When suffering is accepted with trust rather than rebellion, the soul begins participating in Christ's own surrender to the Father (cf. Lk 22:42; Col 1:24). When hidden acts of charity are performed without recognition, the heart is gradually conformed to the self-giving love that fills eternity (cf. Mt 6:3–4; 1 Cor 13:4–8). Even resting peacefully in God's presence without seeking consolations becomes a quiet foretaste of the blessed vision for which every human heart was created . Do not fear silence. Do not fear surrender. Do not fear intimacy. Do not fear losing yourself in God. The heights of contemplation are not reserved for extraordinary mystics. They are the normal destiny of every soul courageous enough to allow divine love to possess it completely. There the soul discovers that the greatest adventure is not accomplishing great things for God but being drawn into the infinite depths of God Himself.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, free us from every fear that prevents us from ascending the heights of Your love . Draw us from the distractions of earthly concerns into the sacred intimacy of Your Heart. Teach us to prefer Your presence above every consolation, Your will above every desire, and Your glory above every ambition. May the Blessed Trinity find within our souls a place of repose, transforming us into living tabernacles of divine love and contemplation . Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 140

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I speak so simply to you.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. Pray a great deal. I ask you to get used to My Presence when My Presence takes hold of you tightly... You are a victim in the Sacrament of My Love. You have to pray. I speak so simply to you. I draw all your attention to pray. I lead and give you light.

I am thirsty. I care for you. Look at Me in prison. I am so lonely and blasphemed.

My daughter, bring Me souls. Each soul is a part of My Love. I gave all of Myself for mankind. Bring Me more souls. My Love is not a global love. I do not wish anyone to perish. This is why I bring My warning from My Divine Mercy. Time is short for saving souls.

The world has lost its senses. The good do not pray. The consecrated souls have whipped Me and abused Me on all sides of My Presence. I wait and long for each soul as if it was the only one on earth. For the sake of souls look at Me always and give Me your oblation. Do not lose any of this precious time for saving souls. In the Sacrament of My Love keep Me in silence and give Me company. Dress the many wounds caused by the consecrated souls. My invitation is for all. As I am exposed I will pour the treasures of My infinite mercy into human souls. Allow all your intentions to be a part of My intentions for the sake of praying for souls. Do not fear to put yourself in the high spirit of contemplation.”

“I give My blessing.”

2.30 a.m., 7th May 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.

Quietness Which Follows Jesus' Voice

Divine Appeal Reflection - 139

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 139: "As you hear My voice always, the quietness which follows is in Me."

Most souls imagine that the most important moment in their relationship with God is when He speaks. They long for guidance, inspirations, answers, consolations, spiritual lights, and moments of certainty. Yet Our Adorable Jesus reveals a profound mystery: His greatest works often begin after His voice has been heard. Human beings naturally cling to words, but God often works through the silence that follows them. A seed is planted in a moment,(cf. Mk 4:26–29; Ps 1:2–3) but it grows hidden beneath the soil, developing roots long before fruit appears . Rain falls quickly, yet the earth absorbs it slowly until life emerges from what seemed dormant . In the same way, a word from God may enter the soul in an instant, but its transformation may unfold over months, years, or even decades . The Scriptures reveal this divine pattern repeatedly. The Blessed Virgin Mary received the angel's message in a brief encounter, (cf. Lk 1:26–38; Lk 2:19, 51) yet she spent the rest of her life pondering and entering ever more deeply into its meaning . The Apostles (cf. Jn 14:26; Jn 16:12–13; Acts 2:1–4) listened to Christ daily, yet many truths remained beyond their understanding until the Holy Spirit gradually illuminated their hearts . Peter heard predictions of the Passion numerous times, but only through failure, repentance, tears, and restoration did he fully grasp the mystery of mercy and discipleship. Even the disciples on the road to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13–35) understood Christ's words only after a journey of reflection and grace .

Many Christians consume an endless stream of homilies, books, conferences, videos, and spiritual reflections, yet experience little interior conversion because they rarely remain long enough in silence for grace to penetrate the deeper levels of the heart . A person may hear a powerful sermon on forgiveness, yet unless he remains recollected before God, old resentments continue to survive beneath the surface (cf. Eph 4:31–32; Col 3:13). Another may receive a profound inspiration during Eucharistic adoration, only to lose its fruit amid constant noise, distractions, and restless activity . Many seek new revelations (cf. Mt 7:24–27) while neglecting the transformation demanded by the revelations already received . Jesus teaches that the silence following His voice is not inactivity but sacred labor. It is the hidden workshop of the Holy Spirit (cf. Heb 4:12–13; Rom 8:26–29) where convictions deepen, wounds are purified, attachments are exposed, and virtues slowly take root . It is there that selfish ambitions are uncovered, hidden fears are brought into the light, and trust gradually replaces self-reliance . Like gold purified in fire, (cf. Mal 3:3; 1 Pet 1:6–7) the soul is quietly refined through processes it often cannot fully perceive . What feels like silence is often God working at depths beyond conscious awareness . Thus, the silence after hearing God is often more important than the hearing itself. The word may enter through the intellect in a moment, but it must descend into the heart through prayer, obedience, suffering, and perseverance (cf. Lk 8:15; Rom 5:3–5). There grace becomes character, conviction becomes virtue, and inspiration becomes holiness . In eternity, many souls may discover that God's greatest work was accomplished not when He spoke most clearly, but when He seemed silent while quietly conforming them to the image of His Son .

Another striking dimension of this appeal is that God frequently gives His presence before He gives explanations. One of the deepest sufferings of humanity is not pain itself, but unanswered questions—because the human heart is not only made to endure, but to understand, to interpret, and to find meaning in what it carries. Physical suffering can often be faced when its purpose is known, but interior suffering grows heavier when meaning is hidden and the soul is left alone with “why” (cf. Ps 13:1–2; CCC 2726). The human heart longs to understand: Why did this illness come? Why did a loved one die? Why did a marriage fail? Why does prayer seem dry? Why do the innocent suffer? Why does God sometimes appear silent? Yet throughout salvation history, (cf. Ex 3:11–14; Jn 14:8–9) God often responds to such questions not first with explanations but with Himself . His presence becomes the answer before understanding arrives. Scripture reveals this pattern repeatedly. Job demanded explanations for his suffering, yet God ultimately responded not by unveiling every reason but by revealing His majesty, wisdom, and sovereignty (cf. Job 38–42). Job's (cf. Job 42:1–6) peace came not from solving the mystery but from encountering the One who held the mystery . Abraham obeyed the divine call without seeing the entire journey ahead, walking by faith rather than certainty (cf. Gen 12:1–4; Heb 11:8). The Blessed Virgin Mary (cf. Lk 1:29–38; Lk 2:19, 51) received revelations she could not fully comprehend, yet she carried them within her heart, trusting before understanding . Even St. Joseph accepted divine guidance through obedience despite receiving only partial light for the path ahead . Modern culture trains people to seek immediate answers, instant clarity, and complete control. Yet the spiritual life often matures through holy uncertainty. Faith grows strongest not when every question is resolved but when the soul remains faithful amid unresolved questions . 

St. Francis de Sales teaches that trust becomes pure when it rests in God's goodness rather than in explanations. St. John of the Cross similarly explains that God often leads souls through darkness so that they may cling to Him rather than to their own understanding . This mystery becomes deeply human in everyday life. A mother praying for a wayward child may receive no immediate answer. A priest carrying hidden burdens may continue serving while receiving little consolation. A young person discerning a vocation may walk through seasons of uncertainty. A family facing financial hardship may find no quick solution. Yet through persevering prayer, something mysterious begins to happen. The circumstances may remain unchanged, but the soul slowly changes. Fear gives way to trust, anxiety to surrender, and restlessness to peace . God is often transforming the heart before He transforms the situation . The silence after hearing God's voice therefore becomes a school of trust. There the soul learns to rely not on visible evidence but on the fidelity of God Himself (cf. Prov 3:5–6; Ps 46:10). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2730–2734) teaches that prayer often confronts souls with apparent unanswered petitions and trials of faith, calling them to deeper perseverance and confidence in divine providence . In this silence, Christ gradually becomes more precious than the answers sought. The soul discovers that His presence is not merely preparation for the answer—it is already the beginning of the answer itself . What begins as a search for explanations ultimately becomes an encounter with the living God, and there the heart finds a peace that surpasses understanding .

The appeal reveals something deeply human: silence is often where God gently breaks the identities we have built to survive. Most people live with inner labels formed over years—“successful” or “failure,” “strong” or “weak,” “wanted” or “forgotten,” “useful” or “useless.” These are not abstract ideas;  they shape how a person wakes up in the morning, how they face others, and how they quietly judge themselves . Yet God does not begin by reinforcing these labels. He begins by quietly placing the soul in silence, where none of them can hold. This is deeply human because silence feels uncomfortable before it feels holy. When distractions fade, a person begins to notice what they normally avoid: regrets that were never processed, fears that were never named, desires that were buried under busyness, and questions they have been too tired to face . This is why silence can feel heavy. It removes the noise that helped the person manage their inner world. Yet precisely here, God is near. Scripture shows this pattern in very human lives. Moses spent years in obscurity after acting in his own strength and failing; in that silence, his identity as “rescuer” is stripped before God calls him again, this time in grace (cf. Ex 2:11–25; Ex 3:1–10). Joseph is reduced to powerlessness in prison, where every human plan collapses before divine purpose quietly forms within him (cf. Gen 39:20–23; Gen 41:38–44). Peter, (cf. Lk 22:61–62; Jn 21:17) after his denial, is not immediately restored to public strength but is first broken by tears and silence, where he learns he is loved beyond his failure . Paul himself must disappear into hidden years after his encounter with Christ so that his identity is no longer built on achievement but on grace alone (cf. Gal 1:15–18). Even Jesus (cf. Lk 2:51–52; Mt 4:1–11) Himself enters long hidden years in Nazareth and later the desert, where nothing visible happens, yet everything interior is being formed . This reveals something essential: God does not rush identity formation; He deepens it. In daily life, this becomes very concrete. A person who has always felt defined by success may experience silence as loss of control, yet slowly realize their worth is not collapsing with their achievements. A parent who feels defined by their children may learn, in quiet prayer, that love is not possession. A person carrying past sin may feel stripped of all self-image, yet begin to discover that they are not their failure (cf. Rom 8:1). A priest or consecrated person may feel unproductive in hiddenness, yet slowly understand that being loved by God precedes being useful to Him. This is why silence feels both painful and truthful. It removes what is false, not to harm the person, but to free them. God is not erasing identity—He is uncovering it. Beneath all the shifting labels, the soul slowly discovers a deeper truth: it is known, loved, and held by God even when it has nothing left to present . This awareness often emerges in silence, when external supports fade and even interior clarity feels distant. Yet in that very hiddenness, the soul learns that God’s love was never dependent on achievement, feeling, or understanding . Thus, the silence after God speaks is not emptiness. It is the quiet place where a life is gently freed from fragile identities and taught to rest in a love that cannot be lost .

A profoundly Eucharistic dimension emerges when we realize that the quietness following God’s voice mirrors the silent presence of Christ in the Eucharist. The Host does not speak audibly. The tabernacle does not display outward movement. During long hours of adoration, nothing “appears” to happen—no dramatic signs, no visible change—yet the Church quietly confesses that Christ is truly and wholly present . This is deeply human, because it touches the part of us that struggles with what is unseen and unmeasurable. And yet, this very silence becomes transformative. This reveals something that clashes with modern instinct: holiness is not measured by visibility. In a world driven by constant expression—speaking, posting, explaining, reacting, proving—Christ remains silent and yet profoundly effective. He does not compete for attention, yet He transforms hearts more deeply than all noise combined . The Eucharist evangelizes not by force of presence that demands recognition, but by a presence that patiently waits and silently changes those who remain. This is intensely practical and deeply human.  A religious brother or sister faithfully doing hidden tasks without recognition participates in the same hidden fruitfulness as the tabernacle. An elderly person offering pain in silence, without complaint or visibility, becomes an intercessor in ways the world cannot measure. A worker choosing honesty when no one is watching enters this same Eucharistic logic of hidden fidelity (cf. Mt 6:6; Lk 21:1–4). The silence of the Eucharist teaches that influence in God’s Kingdom is not about exposure but about union. Just as Christ changes souls from within the tabernacle, He continues to transform the world through hidden love, unseen sacrifices, and faithful presence that seems small but is eternally significant . In this way, the quietness of God is not absence of action, but the deepest form of divine action—Love that does not need to announce itself in order to be infinitely effective.

At the deepest mystical level, Our Adorable Jesus reveals that the quietness following His voice is not merely a condition of prayer, but a participation in His own interior life. Silence is not outside Him—it is in Him (cf. Jn 15:4–5; CCC 2717). To enter silence is therefore to enter communion with a living Person whose presence is hidden, not absent. The entire earthly life of Christ is marked by this redemptive silence: Nazareth  where God is hidden in ordinary life , the desert where He battles without spectacle , Gethsemane  where anguish is carried without explanation , Pilate’s court where Truth remains silent , Calvary where Love endures without defense , the tomb  where divine power works invisibly , and the Eucharist where He remains hidden yet fully given . These are not separate silences—they are one Heart revealed in different depths. St. John of the Cross teaches that God withdraws sensible consolation to purify love from dependence on feeling, experience, or understanding (cf. CCC 2731–2733). Silence humbles because it removes possession; the soul can no longer “hold” God through emotion or clarity. It is taught to remain with Him without grasping Him. Revelation shows the deepest destiny of this silence: “silence in heaven” before God (cf. Rev 8:1). Not emptiness, but perfect union. Thus, silence after Christ’s voice is not absence. It is participation in God’s own hidden life—where the soul ceases merely to hear Him and begins to rest within Him (cf. Ps 62:1–2; CCC 260).

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, hidden in the Sacrament of Love , gather our scattered thoughts and restless desires into the peace of Your Heart. Teach us the wisdom of silence, where words cease and grace speaks. When answers seem delayed and understanding fails, help us trust Your providence. May Your Eucharistic Presence purify our souls, deepen our faith, and prepare us for the everlasting silence of heavenly union with You. Amen.

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