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The Wound of Bitter Ingratitude

Divine Appeal Reflection - 74

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 74: "Bitter ingratitude has wounded My Heart. What a pain to Me!"

The Gospel account of the ten lepers recorded in the Gospel of Luke reveals a profound theological anthropology — an unveiling of how divine grace encounters human freedom and awaits response. All ten received the same visible healing, an objective manifestation of mercy given without partiality (cf. Lk 17:12–18; Mt 5:45). Yet only one returned, revealing that grace offered does not eliminate freedom, (cf. Sir 15:14–17) but summons it into relationship . The miracle restored all physically, but gratitude transformed only one interiorly, drawing him into deeper communion with the Giver (cf. Lk 17:19; Jas 4:8). Thus the narrative exposes a fundamental spiritual law: God’s saving action precedes human response,(cf. Dt 8:10; Rom 1:21)  yet its fullness unfolds only where freedom turns back in recognition and praise . The event becomes more than healing — it becomes revelation. Grace is universal in offer, but personal in reception; abundant in gift, yet relational in fulfillment . This contrast exposes a mystery deeper than physical restoration: grace is offered universally, but communion requires response. Jesus Christ heals generously, yet the human heart often receives divine gifts without entering divine relationship. Scripture consistently reveals this pattern: Israel receives manna yet murmurs (cf Ex 16:2–8); humanity enjoys creation yet forgets the Creator (cf Wis 13:1). 

The Catechism  teaches that grace is entirely gratuitous and precedes human merit (cf CCC 1996), (cf CCC 2638) and that intercessory and thankful prayer flows from recognizing this radical dependence . In ordinary life this spiritual amnesia appears quietly. One prays fervently in distress yet becomes self-sufficient in relief. One begs for divine intervention yet later attributes success to personal strength (cf Dt 8:11–18). St. Ignatius of Loyola identified ingratitude as a root disorder of the spiritual life because it obscures God’s continuous action in history and in the soul. The nine lepers embody this blindness: grace touched their bodies, but not their interior orientation. Without thanksgiving, healing remains external. Divine mercy becomes an event rather than a relationship. Thus the sorrow of the Heart of Christ is not merely rejection—it is forgotten love. When the soul does not return, grace remains received but not welcomed, experienced but not contemplated, granted but not transformed into communion (cf Hos 11:1–4).

The one who returned reveals the first movement of authentic thanksgiving: awakened awareness. Upon perceiving his healing (cf Lk 17:15), he turns back. This turning is not geographical but theological—it is conversion of perception. Gratitude begins when the soul recognizes reality as gift. St. Augustine of Hippo described the human heart as restless until it discovers that all good originates in God’s merciful initiative. This awakening corresponds to the biblical call to remembrance, a central covenantal act (cf Dt 6:12; Ps 103:2). The Catechism teaches that thanksgiving permeates Christian prayer precisely because salvation itself is pure gift (cf CCC 2637). The healed leper interrupts his forward movement—symbol of human striving—to contemplate divine action. In daily life this contemplative pause is decisive. A parent discerning hidden grace within routine burdens, a worker perceiving providence within difficulty, or a seminarian recognizing wisdom beyond personal capacity—these moments constitute spiritual illumination (cf Jas 1:17). Gratitude transforms perception: what once appeared ordinary becomes sacramental, a sign mediating divine presence. Even suffering (cf Rom 8:28) acquires meaning when recognized within providential love . The returning leper demonstrates that thanksgiving begins with interior recollection—the soul gathering scattered awareness and directing it toward God. This remembrance guards against spiritual dissipation. 

The Gospel further reveals that gratitude seeks expression. The healed man glorifies God with a loud voice and falls at Christ’s feet (cf Lk 17:15–16). Interior awareness overflows into proclamation. Scripture (cf Ps 34:1; 50:14; Heb 13:15) consistently unites remembrance with praise . The Catechism (cf CCC 2649) explains that praise arises when the soul recognizes God simply for who He is and what He has done . St. John Chrysostom taught that a grateful voice consecrates time itself, transforming daily speech into liturgy. Spoken gratitude has ecclesial power—it builds faith within community. Silence about grace allows forgetfulness to spread; proclamation preserves memory. This explains why biblical faith (cf Ps 66:16) is inherently testimonial . Speech shapes interior reality; repeated gratitude forms habitual reverence. Conversely, habitual complaint forms interior resistance to grace (cf Phil 2:14–15). The leper’s loud praise signifies courageous faith—he refuses private gratitude detached from public witness. His voice did more than express personal gratitude—it revealed mercy as a living reality meant for all. What began as an individual healing became a sign for the community, a visible proclamation that God still acts among His people (cf Mk 5:19). In the same way, whenever believers give voice to thanksgiving, they do more than speak—they preserve and transmit the living memory of divine love. Gratitude, once spoken, does not remain private; it becomes witness, (cf Ps 107:2) fulfilling the call that the redeemed must openly declare what the Lord has done . The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that praise and thanksgiving arise from hearts that recognize God’s saving works and proclaim them (cf CCC 2649). Thus grateful speech becomes mission itself— (cf Acts 1:8) words shaped by mercy are sent outward to strengthen faith and awaken hope . Through thanksgiving that is spoken and heard, grace is remembered, shared, and made present again in the life of the world.

Yet the leper’s thanksgiving is not confined to speech; it becomes embodied. He approaches Christ physically (cf Lk 17:16) and prostrates himself . Gratitude engages the whole person—intellect, voice, and body. This gesture reveals that thanksgiving culminates in relational surrender. The Catechism (cf CCC 1822) teaches that charity is the form of all virtues and the living response to divine love . Scripture consistently links encounter with transformation: (cf Lk 19:8) Zacchaeus restores justice ; (cf Lk 22:32) Peter strengthens brethren after mercy received ; (cf Lk 7:47) the forgiven woman loves greatly .  The nine lepers resumed their path unchanged; the one who returned entered communion. This reveals a fundamental spiritual law: thanksgiving converts blessing into intimacy. In daily life, embodied gratitude appears through fidelity to duty, generosity toward the needy, (cf Col 3:15–17) patience within suffering, and reconciliation with others . Every act of charity becomes sacramental memory— (cf 1 Jn 4:19) love given because love was first received . When a thankful soul is open to grace, the world can experience the flow of heavenly giving.

The culmination of the narrative reveals the ultimate fruit of gratitude. Christ declares (cf Lk 17:19) that the returning leper’s faith has brought him salvation . All were healed; only one was restored in the fullness of covenantal communion. Gratitude opened his interior capacity for salvation. The Catechism (cf CCC 2639) teaches that thanksgiving leads naturally to deeper praise and union with God . St. John Paul II emphasized that Christian existence must become eucharistic—structured entirely around thanksgiving. The Eucharist is the definitive return of humanity to God through Christ — (cf. 1 Cor 11:23–26; Lk 22:19–20) remembrance, praise, offering, and communion inseparably united . It is the living memorial through which redemption is not only recalled but entered anew, where thanksgiving becomes participation and sacrifice becomes communion (cf. Heb 13:15; Jn 6:56). The healed leper anticipates this profoundly eucharistic posture — he returns, glorifies God aloud, offers himself in grateful surrender,(cf. Lk 17:11–19) and receives not only healing but restored relationship . His return reveals that grace seeks completion in thanksgiving, and blessing finds fulfillment in communion.

Daily life becomes eucharistic when the believer continually returns to Christ in every movement of existence. The morning offering becomes remembrance — placing the whole day within the saving mystery (cf. Rom 12:1). Work becomes oblation — ordinary labor united to divine purpose (cf. Col 3:17). Charity becomes communion — love shared because Love has first been received (cf. Jn 13:34–35). Evening reflection becomes praise — (cf. Ps 116:12–17) the heart lifting gratitude for mercies seen and unseen . The narrative of the ten lepers ultimately poses an enduring spiritual question that echoes through every generation:(cf. Jas 1:17; Rev 3:20) do we merely receive grace, or do we return to the Giver?  Gratitude determines whether grace remains an isolated event or becomes living communion. Healing may restore the body — but returning restores the heart. When the soul continually returns in thanksgiving, existence itself becomes liturgy. Every breath becomes praise, and the Heart of Christ—so often forgotten—finds consolation in a soul that remembers love.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, we return to You in reverent gratitude. Awaken our memory of Your mercy in every moment. Let our thoughts recall, our voices proclaim, and our actions embody thanksgiving. Transform our lifes into continual praise, that receiving Your grace, we may remain always with You in love. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 74

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

 VOLUME 1

“The Chalice is filled.”

“My daughter, spend these dark hours with Me. These are My difficult hours. Bitter ingratitude has wounded My Heart. What a pain to Me! Mankind does not want to listen to My call of tears. Their hearts are invaded by satan. My Mercy is followed by Divine Justice. The souls I love so much do not understand to what extent I suffered all the pains for mankind. What more could I have suffered!”

“The Chalice is filled. Time is approaching when I will speak with My Judge’s Voice. These are grave moments. Pray a great deal and do what I ask you without wanting to know how and when. The Cross is the joy of paradise. Mankind must know that the light shines in the darkness. I love them all and I need them to be docile to My warnings of Mercy. Pray and do not lose these precious times.

I would like My Voice full of affliction to fly to the ends of the earth saying over and over ‘be attentive’. In the Sacrament of My Love I am continually receiving abuses; passing through the milling crowds with bowed head because of the many sacrileges against My Divine Sacrament in the tabernacle.

I am calling everyone to pray and atone. I will pour My infinite mercy in human hearts. More and more I will draw them to Myself. Everyone should come to the ocean of My mercy before it is too late.”

“I bless you.” 

1.15 a.m., 21st January 1988

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com. 

Jesus, Forgotten and Rejected in the Tabernacle

Divine Appeal Reflection -  73

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 73:"In the Sacrament of My Love I am so lonely and afflicted without any visitors for many hours. In My tabernacles I am forgotten and rejected by very many souls."

Beloved souls, awaken your hearts and listen: the Eternal Son, before whom the heavens tremble and angels veil their faces , remains quietly hidden in our tabernacles. The same Jesus who calmed storms with a word (cf Mk 4:39), who walked upon the sea (cf Mt 14:25), who called Lazarus from the silence of death , now lives among us under the humble veil of the Eucharist. The Council of Trent solemnly affirmed that the whole Christ — (cf. CCC 1362–1367) Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity — remains beneath these humble signs, veiled yet fully real, a Presence both sacrificial and abiding . This truth is not only doctrine to be believed but mystery to be encountered, communion to be lived. Yet here the soul confronts a piercing contradiction: the King of the universe dwells quietly in countless churches where few hearts come to remain with Him. Love abides, yet is seldom visited. Presence endures,(cf. Mt 26:40; Rev 3:20) yet is rarely accompanied .

St. John Paul II, reflecting deeply on this Eucharistic mystery, sorrowfully observed that the Lord is often left almost abandoned—quietly waiting, offering Himself to distracted hearts (cf Rev 3:20). Thus the hidden life of Jesus Christ continues in sacramental humility: Love dwelling unrecognized among His own, patiently awaiting their return (cf Jn 1:10–11; Heb 13:5).In daily life, people organize every hour around work, studies, or anxieties, yet rarely around the living Presence sustaining their existence . Like the Bridegroom searching through the night (cf Sg 5:2–6), Christ knocks gently upon human attention. His whisper from Gethsemane still echoes through history: remain with Me (cf Mt 26:40). This solitude is not weakness but the astonishing humility of divine love.

This Eucharistic solitude wounds the Heart of Christ not primarily through hostility but through quiet neglect. Humanity rarely persecutes the Eucharist openly; it simply forgets. Like travelers who passed the wounded man on the road (cf Lk 10:31–32), many hurry past church doors with respectable explanations. Yet the Second Vatican Council solemnly taught that the Eucharist is the living heart of Christian existence—the inexhaustible source from which the Church’s life continually springs and is renewed (cf 1 Cor 10:16–17; Jn 6:53–57). St. John Paul II deepened this vision, affirming that the Church truly lives from the Eucharist; whenever this divine center is obscured, faith gradually loses vitality, (cf Jn 15:5; Rev 2:4–5) and the fire of apostolic mission grows dim . Our Adorable Jesus does not reproach human responsibilities. He sanctified ordinary labor during the quiet years of Nazareth . Yet He desires to be included in our daily rhythm. The Catechism (cf CCC 1393–1395) explains that Holy Communion strengthens union with Christ and protects the soul from grave sin .  Even a few faithful moments before the tabernacle with a spiritual communion quietly reshape the interior landscape. What once felt tense begins to yield; anxieties soften, resentments loosen, and the wandering heart finds again its hidden center . In seeking to console the Eucharistic solitude of Jesus Christ, the believer gradually discovers a deeper mystery: the One they come to comfort has already been gently healing and consoling them from within.

Mystically, every silent church shelters a continuation of Calvary. The sacrifice of the Cross is made sacramentally present in the Eucharist (cf CCC 1366–1367). The Council of Trent clarified that the same sacrifice offered on Golgotha becomes present upon the altar in an unbloody manner. Beneath the appearance of bread rests the Lamb once slain yet living forever (cf Rev 5:6–9).  When a believer kneels before the tabernacle,  they mystically stand with Mary and the beloved disciple at the foot of the Cross in reparation. St. John Paul II explained that every Eucharistic celebration draws the Church into the very hour of Christ’s sacrifice. Reparation means refusing to leave Love alone. In contemplative stillness Christ reshapes the human heart: hidden pride is softened, wounds are healed, (cf Ps 51:10–12) fidelity grows strong . Apostolically, adoration never remains sterile. Like Moses descending Sinai radiant with divine light (cf Ex 34:29–30), the adorer carries quiet fire into workplaces, families, and society. The tabernacle becomes the hidden furnace where authentic Christian witness is formed.

Beloved souls across every vocation—priests weary from ministry, parents stretched by sacrifice, students searching for meaning, workers carrying silent burdens—hear this Eucharistic appeal. Our Adorable Jesus waits personally for each heart. On the Cross He cried out in thirst (cf Jn 19:28), revealing the divine longing for human love. The Catechism (cf CCC 1397) teaches that the Eucharist commits believers to charity because communion with Christ creates communion among His people . St. Peter Julian Eymard, one of the Church’s great apostles of the Eucharist, called the tabernacle the living Heart of Jesus beating among humanity. When no one approaches, that Heart continues beating in silent fidelity. Love often begins in movements so quiet they scarcely draw attention: a brief pause before the tabernacle in the middle of an ordinary day, a lingering thanksgiving when the church grows empty, a simple prayer whispered before stepping back into life’s demands. Yet grace gathers power in such hidden fidelity (cf Zech 4:10; Mt 6:6). Like Peter after his denial, whose heart was pierced and restored beneath the Lord’s merciful gaze (cf Lk 22:61–62; Jn 21:15–17), one true encounter with Christ can reawaken courage, (cf Ps 51:12; 2 Cor 12:9) steady the wavering soul, and rekindle love that seemed lost . Fidelity in adoration gradually reshapes the soul. Even one faithful visitor consoles the Heart of Christ and strengthens the entire Mystical Body (cf 1 Cor 12:26–27).

Beloved souls, awaken your hearts with holy urgency. The King of Heaven remains hidden in our midst, waiting with patient love beneath fragile sacramental veils (cf Jn 6:51–58; CCC 1374). Therefore begin anew today with renewed interior resolve. You should not let another week to elapse without visiting the Eucharistic Jesus because He dwells in the Eucharist as the Church's living presence. St JosemarĂ­a Escrivá encouraged souls to cultivate a habit of greeting Jesus whenever they passed a church.  For him, this simple gesture was not sentimental devotion but a practical path to sanctity within ordinary responsibilities. The Gospel itself shows how brief encounters with Christ transform lives: Zacchaeus climbed a tree to glimpse Him and discovered conversion (cf Lk 19:3–9), while the hemorrhaging woman touched His garment and found healing . In similar ways, a short pause before the tabernacle—perhaps only a moment of recollection—becomes a silent dialogue between the soul and its Savior. The Catechism (cf CCC 1418) reminds the faithful that Eucharistic adoration prolongs the grace of the sacrifice and deepens participation in Christ’s love . That same Eucharistic humility still waits today in every tabernacle—quiet, faithful, and infinitely patient. Our Adorable Jesus stands at the door of every human heart and knocks with gentle persistence . His solitude is not condemnation but invitation, the silent appeal of Love seeking companionship. When even one soul responds—however imperfectly—grace slowly reorders the entire interior life (cf Jn 6:56–57). Gradually the forgotten Christ becomes the most faithful companion of the journey. The once-silent tabernacle becomes the luminous center of existence, and in a mysterious reversal we discover that the One who seemed abandoned has quietly been sustaining us all along (cf Heb 13:5–6)

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, hidden and waiting in love, awaken our sleeping hearts. Forgive our indifference. Draw us faithfully to Your Eucharistic Presence. Make us consolers of Your loneliness and living witnesses in every vocation. May our daily visits kindle apostolic fire and transform our lives into abiding communion with You. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 73

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

 VOLUME 1


“My desire is that humanity be converted through prayer and the sacrament. Mankind, like Judas, betrays My Heart and drags souls to perdition.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. Pray a great deal and watch with Me. Humanity must be converted. With tears in My Heart I am calling everyone to pray. My desire is that humanity be converted through prayer and the sacrament. Mankind, like Judas, betrays My Heart  and drags souls to perdition. They chase blindly after their brutal  conceptions of life; this will constitute their own sentence. What  a pain to Me! In the front line is My own...; they tragically cut  the innocent into pieces and those who are faithful to Me. The  world is desolated because of iniquitous evil.

My daughter, I want sinners to be converted. In the Sacrament of My Love I am so lonely and afflicted without any visitors for many hours. In My tabernacles I am forgotten and rejected by very many souls. Give Me company and pray a great deal.

This is the only way to save the part of this world which has lost its senses. I love mankind and this is why I make Myself visible and assure this to you. Listen to My anguished Voice.

This work has to be a movement of continuous prayer for reparation and conversion of souls. Do not be afraid. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. In each face see My countenance as you must live in deep humility for love of souls. Do the will of My Eternal Father and completely surrender yourself. I enlighten you. Calm down in everything. This is what I want of you.”

“I bless you.”

20th January 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 Cry of Revenge to the Eternal Father

Divine Appeal Reflection - 72

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 72 :"With many sins, revenge cries out on My Eternal Father’s behalf."

Our Adorable Jesus lifts the veil and lets us hear a terrifying and tender sound: the echo of human sin rising before the Father like a wounded cry. It is the cry of Abel’s blood, of betrayed innocence, (cf Gen 4:10; Hos 11:1–4) of love refused . Yet when Christ reveals this, His voice trembles with sorrow more than anger. He stands within our daily lives—crowded buses, tense offices, quiet bedrooms where consciences wrestle at night—and shows how every hidden compromise participates in this cosmic drama. Through the light of the Bible, we see that sin is not merely rule-breaking but a rupture of communion . The Catechism (cf CCC 1849–1851, 1855)  explains that sin turns the heart away from living love . Like Adam hiding in fear (cf Gen 3:8–10), we often bury guilt beneath routine. Jesus, however, searches gently, asking us to step into truth. Practically, this begins in honest examinations of conscience amid ordinary tasks, in choosing integrity when shortcuts tempt us (cf Mt 7:13–14). One awakened conscience becomes a silent witness that challenges surrounding indifference.The soul perceives that acknowledging sin is already an encounter with mercy, where divine justice prepares not destruction but rebirth (cf Lam 3:22–23).

The human heart trembles because it recognizes itself in this appeal. Our Adorable Jesus does not speak to strangers but to friends who wound Him unknowingly each day. St. Augustine of Hippo confessed that the heart wanders restlessly until it returns to God, a truth visible in modern anxieties and compulsions. Peter’s collapse in the courtyard reveals how fear distorts love , yet Christ’s gaze restores him. In homes fractured by impatience, in workplaces marked by rivalry, (cf Jn 13:34–35) we relive this denial whenever we prefer comfort to charity . Jesus invites us to weep with hope, not despair. Practically, this means daring to apologize first, to repair reputations we have harmed, to renounce profitable injustices . We sit beneath His merciful gaze and allow defenses to fall. Such humility heals communities more powerfully than eloquent words (cf Jas 5:16). The soul discovers that divine “revenge” is the relentless pursuit of restoration. Each sincere act of repentance joins Christ’s redeeming work, transforming kitchens, classrooms, and offices into places of reconciliation where grace quietly overturns cycles of resentment .

Our Adorable Jesus widens our vision to the wounds of the world, where collective sins cry out through injustice and neglect. The prophets(cf Is 1:11–17; Am 5:21–24) saw societies corrode when worship separated from compassion . St. Teresa of Avila insisted that deep prayer must overflow into practical love. In crowded cities and forgotten villages alike,(cf Mt 25:31–46) Christ suffers in the poor, the excluded, and the misunderstood . Sin becomes social when indifference hardens into systems. In families, this appears as patient attention to the weakest member; in professions, as refusal to exploit. Contemplatively, the soul carries the world’s pain into silent union with Christ, interceding like Moses for a fragile people (cf Ex 32:11–14). Small faithful actions accumulate into cultures of mercy. Every work of justice consoles the Heart of Jesus and softens the cry of sin. Thus all vocations become channels through which divine compassion enters history, gradually reshaping structures through converted hearts (cf 2 Cor 5:17–20).

The path grows deeper as Jesus leads the soul into purifying darkness where hidden motives are exposed. John of the Cross describes this night as painful mercy, stripping illusions so love may mature. St. Paul learned that weakness unveils the power of grace (cf 2 Cor 12:9–10),(cf Job 42:1–6) and Job discovered God within bewildering suffering . In daily life, this purification surfaces when efforts fail, relationships strain, or spiritual dryness persists . Our Adorable Jesus invites perseverance rather than escape. Practically, we continue faithful duties, seek reconciliation,(cf Heb 12:11; Prov 3:11–12) and accept correction with humility . Silence before God becomes a furnace where ego is refined. Those purified by suffering accompany others with gentle understanding (cf 2 Cor 1:3–4). The soul senses that the cry of sin is being transfigured into a song of surrender. Every vocation becomes a crucible where divine justice heals by transforming desire, aligning human freedom with God’s loving will (cf Rom 8:28–29).

At the summit stands the Cross, where Our Adorable Jesus answers the cry of sin with a louder cry of forgiving love. He gathers humanity’s violence into His own flesh and offers obedient trust to the Father (cf Lk 23:34; Phil 2:8). Mary’s steadfast presence reveals how suffering united to Christ becomes redemptive (cf Jn 19:25–27). In ordinary existence—enduring illness, forgiving repeated injuries, fulfilling unnoticed responsibilities—we participate in this mystery (cf Col 1:24; Mt 16:24). The believer places every pain within Christ’s pierced Heart. Such hidden offerings release grace into families and societies, countering vengeance with mercy (cf Rom 5:20–21). Justice and compassion meet in the soul that consents to love amid wounds. The terrifying cry of sin is gradually silenced by the victorious hymn of resurrection . Thus every vocation becomes an extension of Calvary and Easter morning, where daily sacrifices acquire eternal weight. Jesus invites us to live as bridges between heaven and earth,(cf Jn 20:21) allowing His reconciling love to pulse through all human realities .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, awaken our hearts to the cry of sin and the greater cry of Your mercy. Grant us courage to repent, strength to repair, and love to offer our daily sufferings with Yours. Make our lives instruments of reconciliation, so the Father’s justice shines as healing grace. Amen.

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