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Praying Through Events and for Unknown Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection - 144

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 144:  "Pray a great deal for the souls unknown to you... Everyday I call you to pray through events."

One of the most hidden sufferings in the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus is that countless souls pass through life carrying burdens that remain unseen by the world and unremembered in prayer. While many are surrounded by family, friends, and communities, others walk through decisive spiritual battles in profound loneliness. Christ, who knows every heart and every hidden wound , sees the souls that no one else notices. He sees the businessman sitting alone in a hotel room contemplating suicide, the teenager quietly being drawn into addiction through influences no parent fully understands, the widow eating another meal in silence after the loss of her spouse, the prisoner consumed by resentment, the priest carrying discouragement behind a faithful exterior, the frightened mother considering abortion, and the dying patient whose bedside remains empty . Jesus sees them all simultaneously . This appeal unveils a divine perspective that transcends human relationships. Christ does not ask merely for prayer for those we know but for those who have never entered our lives. This is the mystery of His universal love. St. Thérèse of Lisieux offered sacrifices for an unknown condemned criminal and later discovered signs of his conversion before execution. Abraham interceded for Sodom despite having no personal connection to most of its inhabitants (cf. Gen 18:22–33). The Catechism teaches that all the faithful form one communion in Christ (cf. CCC 946–953). Therefore, no soul is truly a stranger. Every Christian is mysteriously connected to every other person through the redeeming Blood of Christ. Jesus invites us to expand our hearts beyond natural affection until they begin to resemble His own Heart, which ceaselessly carries the concerns of every soul from the beginning to the end of time. 

The appeal becomes even more astonishing when Jesus says, “Everyday I call you to pray through events.” Instead of receiving events spiritually, the majority of people spend their life responding to them emotionally. Instinctively, they evaluate situations based on their immediate emotions—pleasure, disappointment, success, fear, frustration, or loss. A promotion brings excitement, criticism causes discouragement, unexpected suffering produces anxiety, and uncertainty generates restlessness. Yet the contemplative soul gradually discovers that events are rarely mere events. Beneath visible circumstances lies a deeper invitation from God, who works through all things for the sanctification of His children . This spiritual vision transforms the way reality is perceived. What appears as an interruption may be an invitation to patience (cf. Jas 1:2–4). A disappointment may become a summons to deeper trust . A closed door may redirect the soul toward a greater good not yet visible (cf. Acts 16:6–10). Even suffering, though never desired for its own sake, can become a place of profound encounter with Christ and participation in His redemptive love (cf. Rom 5:3–5; Col 1:24; CCC 618). Consider how frequently daily circumstances pass through our hands unnoticed. A news report about a war may not simply be information; it may be Christ asking for prayers for a frightened child hiding in a basement somewhere. A funeral announcement may be an invitation to pray for grieving relatives and for the deceased soul standing before divine judgment (cf. Heb 9:27). Hearing a siren in the distance may be Heaven's request for intercession for someone whose eternity could be approaching. St. Faustina frequently understood ordinary encounters as opportunities for hidden apostolic prayer. The Blessed Virgin (cf. Lk 2:19, 51) treasured events in silence, contemplating their spiritual meaning before responding . The Catechism (cf. CCC 302–314) teaches that divine providence mysteriously guides creation toward its ultimate purpose . Therefore, events are never spiritually neutral. The soul that is focused on God starts to see that Christ communicates through situations as well as Scripture, sacraments, and prayer.  What appears accidental often becomes an invitation into His own concern for humanity. The contemplative Christian learns to ask, not merely “Why did this happen?” but “For whom am I being asked to pray?”

A profoundly mystical dimension of this appeal is the realization that God sometimes permits souls to encounter small fragments of the burdens carried by others so that they may secretly participate in His work of redemption (cf. Gal 6:2; Col 1:24; CCC 618). As the soul becomes more united to Christ, it gradually becomes more sensitive to the movements of His Heart, which eternally intercedes before the Father for the salvation of the world . In this mystery, prayer is no longer limited to personal needs; it becomes participation in the compassionate love of Christ Himself . Many people occasionally experience unexplained heaviness, sudden urges to pray, unusual interior sorrow, or a persistent concern that seems disconnected from their own circumstances. Discernment is always necessary, since not every interior movement comes from God . Yet the great spiritual writers recognized that the Holy Spirit can quietly invite souls into hidden intercession for needs known fully only to God (cf. Rom 8:26–27). St. Gemma Galgani often found herself drawn into intense prayer for persons she had never met, while St. Maria Faustina Kowalska experienced urgent impulses to pray, later discovering that souls were in particular need of mercy . Sacred Scripture reveals similar mysteries of hidden cooperation with divine providence. Abraham's servant was guided toward Rebekah through ordinary events that concealed extraordinary divine action (cf. Gen 24:12–27). Ananias received an unexpected call to seek out Saul, (cf. Acts 9:10–17) becoming a crucial instrument in a moment that would shape the future of the Church . Neither fully understood the significance of their obedience when they acted. Most Christians assume that prayer begins with their own intentions. Yet at a deeper level, prayer often begins in the Heart of Jesus before it reaches the human heart . A sudden remembrance of someone, a passing image that returns repeatedly, an unexpected concern, a news story that refuses to leave the mind, or a burden carried without obvious explanation may sometimes be an invitation into Christ's own intercessory love . The contemplative soul gradually learns not to dismiss these movements too quickly. Instead of asking, "Why am I thinking about this?" it begins asking, "Jesus, who are You inviting me to carry before the Father?" In this way, the Christian becomes a living instrument through which the hidden desires, mercies, and saving concerns of the Sacred Heart quietly flow into the world (cf. Jn 15:5, 9–13; CCC 2565).

At its highest mystical summit, this appeal reveals that Jesus desires to transform the Christian into a spiritual echo of His own Heart. The Eternal Son constantly stands before the Father carrying every soul, every need, every wound, and every possibility of grace (cf. Heb 7:25; Jn 17:9–26). The more deeply a person enters contemplation, the less prayer remains centered on personal needs, anxieties, and concerns, and the more it becomes participation in the universal love of Christ, who desires the salvation of all . As the soul draws nearer to the Heart of Jesus, its horizons expand beyond itself, gradually embracing the joys, wounds, struggles, and eternal destiny of others . This helps explain why the greatest saints often carried immense spiritual burdens for souls they would never meet on earth. St. Catherine of Siena wept and offered sacrifices for sinners unknown to her because her heart had become united to Christ's thirst for souls (cf. Jn 19:28; Ezek 22:30). St. Silouan the Athonite taught that the closer a soul comes to God, the more it grieves, intercedes, and prays for the entire world, reflecting the compassion of Christ who wept over Jerusalem and carried humanity within His Heart . St. Thérèse of Lisieux, though enclosed within a cloister, spiritually embraced missionaries, unbelievers, sinners, priests, and distant nations, demonstrating that love united to God transcends every geographical boundary (cf. Col 3:14; CCC 953). In contemplation, the soul gradually ceases asking merely, “Lord, help me,” and begins praying, “Lord, save them,” entering the priestly and redemptive love of Christ Himself . Such souls begin to share something of Christ's own thirst for humanity . They understand that history itself is a vast battlefield of grace where countless eternal destinies are being decided every moment. Consequently, every event becomes spiritually charged. A drought becomes prayer for farmers. A public scandal becomes prayer for repentance. A natural disaster becomes prayer for the dying and grieving. A chance encounter becomes prayer for generations yet unborn. The soul no longer moves through life observing events from the outside but enters them through love. This is the hidden apostolate of the contemplative: to stand with Christ at the heart of the world, silently receiving its joys and sorrows and returning them to the Father as ceaseless intercession. In this way, the Christian gradually becomes what St. Elizabeth of the Trinity called a living praise of glory, allowing Christ's own prayer to continue within the depths of the soul until eternity.

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, enlarge our hearts to love the souls we do not know. Teach us to recognize Your call hidden within daily events. May every joy, sorrow, interruption, and encounter become prayer united to Your Heart. Make us faithful intercessors, participating in Your saving love for countless souls. Amen.

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

Understanding Self-Annihilation in Christ

Divine Appeal Reflection - 144

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 144:  "I want you to understand and  annihilate yourself so that My Eternal Father may reign not only in you but to many more souls which you bring to Me."

The word “annihilate” in the spiritual life is often misunderstood. Jesus is not calling the soul to self-hatred, loss of dignity, or destruction of personality, for each person is created in God’s image and loved eternally . Rather, He calls for the death of the false self—the inner kingdom of pride, self-will, vanity, ego, and self-exaltation that seeks to replace God at the center. Since the fall of Adam and Eve , humanity has carried this hidden inclination toward self-rule and independence from God. This inner struggle appears in daily life: irritation when ignored, pain when unrecognized, defensiveness when corrected, or anxiety when control is lost. These moments reveal the ego quietly resisting God’s reign. Scripture shows that sin is often this exchange of God’s truth for self-glory (cf. Rom 1:21–25). Jesus therefore invites a deep interior dying so that He may live within the soul (cf. Gal 2:20). This “annihilation” is not destruction but liberation—the fading of the false self so that the true self, rooted in God, may arise in humility, freedom, and peace . A husband becomes angry because his opinion is ignored. A wife becomes discouraged because her sacrifices go unnoticed. A worker seeks praise more than service. A student desires success more than truth. Even spiritual people can subtly seek themselves through ministry, leadership, or apostolic works. Yet throughout Scripture, God consistently exalts those who allow self to decrease. John the Baptist (cf. Jn 3:30) accepted obscurity so that Christ might increase . Gideon learned that victory belonged to God and not human strength (cf. Judg 7:1-8). The Blessed Virgin Mary, through her humble fiat and canticle of praise (cf. Lk 1:38; 1:46–49), chose the lowest place before God and was raised by Him above all creatures as Queen of Heaven (cf. Rev 12:1). Her life reveals a fundamental spiritual law found throughout Scripture: those who humble themselves before God are exalted by Him . The saints teach that sanctity begins when the soul relinquishes its claim to self-sovereignty and allows God to occupy the throne of the heart that belongs to Him alone . This interior dying is often painful because fallen human nature clings to recognition, control, and self-will . Yet this self-emptying becomes the doorway to true liberty, for the soul is freed from the restless burden of self-occupation and enters the peace of living entirely for God’s glory (cf. Phil 2:5–11; Mt 11:28–30). As seen in Mary, the more the creature disappears into God's will, the more divine life shines through it, transforming surrender into fruitfulness, obscurity into greatness, and humility into a participation in the very life of heaven (cf. Jn 3:30; Lk 14:11; CCC 521).

A second profound dimension of this appeal lies in the words, "I want you to understand." Before God transforms a soul, He often illuminates it. Spiritual growth begins with truth. Many people spend years fighting external battles while remaining blind to the deeper attachments governing their lives. The rich young man (cf. Mk 10:17-22) sincerely desired eternal life, yet he failed to recognize how deeply attached he was to possessions . Martha loved Jesus, (cf. Lk 10:38-42) yet she needed to discover the primacy of His presence over activity . Jonah (cf. Jon 4:1-11) preached conversion but struggled to understand God's mercy toward sinners . Many Christians know their obvious faults but remain unaware of the deeper movements of the heart—quiet pride, hidden resentment, need for control, self-reliance, or the desire for recognition. Scripture  shows that the human heart can mislead even its owner . For this reason, God permits moments that quietly pierce our self-image—being misunderstood when we meant well, corrected when we felt sure, overlooked when we expected recognition, or left in long seasons of interior dryness.  A denied opportunity can reveal how deeply we are attached to status (cf. Mk 8:36); a conflict can expose how fragile our patience and humility truly are (cf. Jas 1:19–20); and silence in prayer can uncover how easily faith leans on feelings rather than pure trust in God . The saints recognized this as mercy. St. Ignatius of Loyola saw ambition purified through suffering. St. Francis of Assisi found freedom when stripped of security. St. Elizabeth of the Trinity taught that truth about oneself before God is the beginning of union with Him. Though painful, such light is healing. God does not reveal the heart to destroy it, but to free it. When truth enters, illusion falls away, and the soul becomes available for grace and real transformation .

A third dimension concerns the astonishing goal of this annihilation: "that My Eternal Father may reign in you." Christianity is not merely about avoiding sin; it is about establishing the reign of the Father within the soul. Jesus (cf. Jn 5:19; Jn 6:38) constantly directed attention toward the Father throughout His earthly life . Every aspect of His mission flowed from filial surrender. The Christian vocation is therefore participation in the Son's relationship with the Father . Yet the Father's reign is often resisted by subtle forms of self-rule. We want God's will when it agrees with our plans. We trust His providence until it contradicts our preferences. We surrender until surrender becomes costly.  Abraham (cf. Gen 12:1-4) left familiar securities because God called him . Joseph (cf. Gen 37-50) accepted years of hidden suffering and misunderstanding while trusting divine providence . Mary (cf. Lk 1:26-38)  consented to a mission she could not fully understand . Their greatness consisted not in extraordinary talents but in allowing God's will to reign. In practical life, the Father's reign appears in countless hidden choices. A spouse forgives rather than retaliates. A worker chooses integrity rather than dishonesty. A priest remains faithful amid discouragement. A young adult follows conscience rather than cultural pressure. An elderly person accepts physical limitations with trust. Each act becomes a declaration that God's kingdom matters more than personal preference. The Father's reign is not established through dramatic experiences but through daily surrender (cf. Mt 6:10; CCC 2816-2821).

A fourth and often overlooked dimension of the appeal is that self-annihilation is never merely personal. Jesus says that the Father's reign must extend "to many more souls which you bring to Me." This reveals the apostolic purpose of holiness. God does not purify souls simply for their own sanctification. He purifies them so they may become instruments of grace for others. Throughout Scripture, every deep encounter with God leads to mission. Moses encountered God in the burning bush and was sent to Israel (cf. Ex 3:1-10). Isaiah's (cf. Is 6:1-8) purification led to prophetic service . Paul  encountered Christ and immediately became an apostle .  Though genuine Christian contemplation never stays contained within the self, modern culture frequently views spirituality as something private, introspective, and self-contained. The heart is enlarged, not closed in on itself, and starts to bear the burden of others before God when it actually comes into contact with Him. Scripture shows that love of God and love of neighbour cannot be separated (cf. Mt 22:37–39), and that genuine abiding in Christ naturally bears fruit outwardly . The saints consistently show this movement: deep prayer leads not to isolation, but to mission, intercession, and concern for the salvation of others . In this way, contemplation becomes fruitful charity, where the soul, having been touched by divine love, begins to desire that others also be drawn into that same life. Parents who live holy lives evangelize children. Employers who act justly influence workers. Teachers who embody truth shape future generations. Religious who pray faithfully obtain graces for countless souls. A person truly surrendered to God becomes a channel through which divine life reaches others. The Father's reign within one soul becomes the seed of His reign in many souls (cf. Mt 13:31-33; CCC 863).

At the highest mystical level, this appeal reveals that self-annihilation is ultimately participation in the life of Christ Himself. The Son eternally receives everything from the Father and returns everything to Him in perfect love (cf. Jn 17:1-5). Jesus' earthly life manifested this eternal reality. From Bethlehem to Calvary , He continually emptied Himself in obedience and love .  St. John of the Cross describes a purification in which self-seeking gradually disappears.  St. Elizabeth of the Trinity longed to become a living praise of God's glory through complete surrender. This is the final meaning of the appeal. The goal is not self-destruction but self-transformation. The false kingdom of ego must diminish so that the Kingdom of the Father may expand. The soul slowly undergoes a quiet reordering of its deepest questions. It no longer lives under the pressure of the restless inquiry, “What do I want?” but begins to ask with growing simplicity and truth, “What gives glory to the Father?” This shift is not merely moral improvement, but interior conversion—a turning of the centre of gravity from self to God (cf. Mt 6:33; Rom 12:2). Scripture shows this as the renewal of the mind that discerns God’s will rather than the impulses of ego and desire (cf. Rom 12:2; Phil 2:13).  Scripture shows this reordering of desire as a conversion of the heart, where human intention is purified and aligned with God’s will (cf. Mt 6:33; Rom 12:2). The saints describe this as the slow death of self-centered living and the birth of a life ordered toward divine charity, where even ordinary actions become offerings when done for God . In this way, the soul learns to measure reality not by what it gains, but by how faithfully it loves in each moment . Then the Father's reign becomes visible. Christ lives more fully within the soul (cf. Gal 2:20). The Holy Spirit (cf. Rom 8:26-27) acts with greater freedom . Souls are drawn toward God through hidden witness. The person becomes transparent to divine life. Such souls are rare, yet they become some of the most powerful instruments in the history of salvation because they no longer seek their own kingdom but the eternal Kingdom of the Father .

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, teach us to understand ourselves in Your light and surrender every trace of pride, self-will, and self-seeking. May the Eternal Father reign completely within us. Empty us of all that hinders grace and make our lives instruments through which many souls are drawn into Your Kingdom. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 144

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“My Love is not a global love. Bring me souls.”

“My daughter, listen to My cry for souls. I thirst for the souls of mankind that I love so much. I want you to understand and annihilate yourself so that My Eternal Father may reign not only in you but to many more souls which you bring to Me. Pray a great deal for the souls unknown to you. I come here to seek shelter. I beg you to devote this day in adoring My Divine Sacrament outraged by the torments of wounds received from the consecrated souls. I ask for your adoration and reparation every minute. For the love of mankind I keep Myself a prisoner in the tabernacle. Consider how much I suffer from loneliness! My own have abandoned Me. Come and penetrate Me deeply.

Speak out My words to the very souls who have wondered away from Me. They are on the way to perdition. This is the only time for mankind to be saved. I address My appeal to all. Souls must know Me. The world has lost its senses. Keep Me in silence and light. In the Sacrament of My Love I am a stranger.”

Everyday I call you to pray through events. Pray for those I entrusted souls. Listen to My words of mercy to mankind. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. I come here to seek shelter. Give Me your company. In the prison of My tabernacle I feel as an abandoned child left out in the cold. This is why I give you pleasure in which you know Me better. Bring Me souls. I love you and understand you. My Love is not a global love. For the sake of souls I ask you to pray. The souls I love so much do not understand to what extent. I beg you to listen to Me always.”

“I bless you.”

12th May 1988

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

Hunting Souls for Christ

Divine Appeal Reflection - 143

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 143:  "My thirst for souls is ever new. Hunt souls for Me. My Love is always the same."

One of the deepest mystical dimensions of the command "Hunt souls for Me" is that Jesus is inviting souls not merely into an apostolate but into participation in the very movements of His Sacred Heart. Before creation itself, the Son eternally loved every soul that would one day exist. His thirst for souls did not begin at Calvary; Calvary revealed outwardly what had existed eternally within the Heart of God (cf. Eph 1:3-5). Every soul was desired before it was created, loved before it existed, (cf. Jer 1:5; Rom 8:29-30) and called before it responded . When Jesus says, "Hunt souls for Me," He is inviting be souls into this eternal divine longing. Most Christians desire holiness for themselves. Few desire holiness for others with the same intensity Christ desires it. The saints eventually reached this point. Their greatest sorrow was not personal suffering but seeing souls drift from God. Moses was willing to stand between Israel and divine justice (cf. Ex 32:30-32). Jeremiah (cf. Jer 9:1) wept over a people who refused conversion . St. Catherine of Siena offered sacrifices for the renewal of the Church. Such souls had entered the interior concerns of Jesus Himself. They were no longer living only their own lives; (cf. Gal 2:20) they were living something of Christ's life within them . The tragedy of modern spirituality is that many seek peace, blessings, and consolation while remaining indifferent to the eternal destiny of others. Yet the closer a soul approaches the Heart of Jesus, the more it begins to ache for souls. The proof of deep union with Christ is often not extraordinary experiences but an increasing participation in His thirst for the salvation of humanity (cf. Jn 17:20-24).

Another profound mystical dimension is that hunting souls begins in hidden communion before it manifests in visible mission. The apostles (cf. Mk 3:13-15) first lived with Jesus before they preached Jesus . Mary Magdalene first encountered the Risen Lord before announcing Him (cf. Jn 20:11-18). The Samaritan woman (cf. Jn 4:28-30) first allowed Christ to reveal her wounds before she became an evangelizer . Modern culture frequently emphasizes activity, productivity, and visible results. Christ often begins in silence. Souls are won first in prayer before they are won in action. The hidden hours spent before the Blessed Sacrament may obtain more conversions than countless public efforts (cf. CCC 2711). This is why the greatest missionaries have almost always been great contemplatives. Before carrying souls across nations, they first carried them before God. St. Francis Xavier drew strength from prayer because he understood that conversion is ultimately the work of grace, not merely human effort . Consider a grandmother faithfully praying the Rosary for grandchildren who no longer attend Mass, a priest making a Holy Hour for parishioners who rarely pray, a religious sister interceding for young people trapped in addiction, or an elderly man offering physical suffering for those dying without the sacraments. The world may see little happening, but Heaven sees souls being sought, touched, and surrounded by grace through these hidden acts of love (cf. Col 1:24; Jas 5:16; 1 Tim 2:1–4). This is the mystery of "hunting souls" for Christ. It begins on one's knees before it reaches the streets, classrooms, hospitals, missions, or families. Without prayer, apostolic action quickly turns into a human endeavour that depends on human strength and output. Eternity will show how many souls were reached because someone continued to pray faithfully, even though the hidden intercessor may never see the results.  

A particularly striking mystical aspect of this appeal is that Jesus asks us to hunt souls not merely because they are lost but because they are infinitely valuable. Heaven evaluates a soul very differently from the world. The world values productivity, beauty, influence, wealth, intelligence, and status. Christ evaluates every person according to the price paid for redemption: His Precious Blood . Consider the shepherd (cf. Lk 15:4-7) who leaves ninety-nine sheep for one lost sheep . Human calculations would consider this unreasonable. Divine love does not calculate according to efficiency but according to love. The same mystery appears in the woman who searches relentlessly for one lost coin (cf. Lk 15:8-10) and in the father (cf. Lk 15:20) who watches constantly for one prodigal son . Every soul carries an eternal destiny. Every person encountered today will exist forever either in eternal communion with God or in eternal separation from Him . This realization transformed the saints. St. John Bosco looked at troubled boys and saw future saints.  St. Damien of Molokai chose to live among the lepers because he recognized in those rejected by society the very face of Christ, seeing beloved children of God where others saw only disease, isolation, and hopelessness . His love emanated from a spiritual vision that saw each soul's everlasting destiny and dignity beyond external circumstances.  In practical life, hunting souls means learning to see beyond appearances. The difficult colleague may be carrying wounds no one knows about, the hostile atheist may be secretly searching for truth, the rebellious teenager may be longing for guidance, and the elderly neighbor living alone may be waiting for a simple sign that they are loved and remembered . What appears as resistance is often hidden suffering; what appears as indifference may conceal a deep hunger for God. This is a profoundly mystical vision. It sees eternity hidden within ordinary encounters and recognizes that every person is more than their behavior, failures, or circumstances. Every soul becomes sacred ground because it is loved by God, redeemed by Christ, and continually sought by divine mercy . To look at others in this way is already to participate in the Heart of Jesus, who never stops seeing what grace can accomplish in a soul. 

Another deeply contemplative dimension is that hunting souls often requires participation in the sufferings of Christ. The Sacred Heart does not thirst for souls without pain. Every rejection of grace wounds divine love. Jesus wept (cf. Lk 19:41-44) over Jerusalem because it resisted the day of visitation . He lamented the hardness of hearts (cf. Mk 3:5). He endured Gethsemane (cf. Mt 26:36-46) while carrying humanity within His Heart . The saints who entered most deeply into Christ's love also entered deeply into His concern for souls. St. Faustina Kowalska willingly offered prayers and sufferings for sinners, understanding that divine mercy continually seeks those furthest from God (cf Lk 15:4–7; Col 1:24). St. Padre Pio spent countless hours in the confessional because he carried within his heart a profound desire that no soul be lost, laboring tirelessly to reconcile people with God . This remains true today. A mother praying for a son trapped in addiction participates in Christ's sorrow. Parents grieving children who have abandoned the faith participate in Christ's sorrow. Priests who remain faithful despite indifference participate in Christ's sorrow. Missionaries laboring in difficult conditions participate in Christ's sorrow. Such suffering is not wasted. Every tear offered for souls enters mysteriously into the redemptive mission of Jesus (cf. Col 1:24). Some souls will only return to God because someone loved them enough to suffer for them. Hunting souls therefore demands more than enthusiasm. It requires carrying something of Christ's own burden for humanity. The hunter of souls learns that love often costs, but every sacrifice united to Christ becomes fruitful in ways hidden from human eyes (cf. Jn 12:24).

At the highest mystical level, "Hunt souls for Me" is an invitation to become a living extension of the Sacred Heart in the world. The saints teach that the final stages of holiness consist in profound conformity to Christ. The soul gradually desires what He desires, (cf. Phil 2:5; CCC 521) grieves over what grieves Him, and rejoices in what glorifies the Father . Such a soul begins to view every moment through the lens of eternity. Conversations are no longer random. Relationships are no longer accidental. Sufferings are no longer meaningless. Work is no longer merely employment. Everything becomes part of Christ's search for souls. The teacher enters a classroom carrying Christ's concern for students. The doctor sees patients through the eyes of divine mercy. The parent views children as souls entrusted by God. The religious carries humanity before the Eucharistic Lord. The elderly person confined to a room becomes a hidden missionary through prayer. This is the spirituality of the Sacred Heart. Jesus thirsts because His love is infinite. He hunts because every soul matters. He invites mankind into this mission because He desires to continue seeking humanity through them . Ultimately, the greatest hunters of souls are not necessarily those who accomplish spectacular works but those who allow Christ to love through them. Their hearts become united with His Eucharistic Heart, their prayers become extensions of His intercession before the Father , and their lives become living instruments through which His mercy reaches the world. One day in heaven, countless souls may reveal that their conversion began because someone quietly accepted Christ's invitation and spent a lifetime hunting souls for Him .

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, Your love for souls is infinite and Your mercy never ceases to seek the lost. Fill our hearts with zeal for holiness, that we may lead others to You by prayer, sacrifice, and example . Strengthen us in virtue, guide us by Your mercy, and make us faithful witnesses of Your saving love. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 143

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I am so lonely and wounded in the Sacrament of My Love.”

“Never before has the world needed prayers like in these tragic times.”

“My daughter, listen to My words of mercy towards mankind. I am thirsty. Bring Me souls in your prayers. Pray a great deal and atone. I come for shelter here. I am so lonely and wounded in the Sacrament of My Love. I cannot stand to see the souls that have cost My life to be eternally lost. What a pain to Me! The souls I love so much I draw you strongly to pray for. I want your prayers and sacrifices to draw souls to Me. Reflect on how the world treats Me in the prison of My tabernacle by consecrated souls. I am wounded pitilessly. I live in the midst of souls with all My Love. I remain day and night that all may come to the fountain of love and mercy. My grief is that many of the consecrated souls leave Me so much blasphemed and abused in the tabernacle. I pour tears of blood to see My own... labouring hard to abolish the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. I so much want them to know that I love them. I do not wish anyone to perish. I suffered all the pain that I could have suffered for mankind. It is high time for My Divine Mercy which will be followed by Divine Justice. Pray a great deal to appease the wrath of My Eternal Father. Do not fear to suffer. Never before has the world needed prayers like in these tragic times. 

Time is short for saving souls. I beg you to take care of Me in the Sacrament of My Love. My thirst for souls is ever new. Hunt souls for Me. My Love is always the same. I need the world to know that time is approaching when I will stand with My Judge’s Voice. It will be a voice of Divine Justice after Divine Mercy. Immersed in a chain of scandals the world is a swampland of muck and mire. Make reparation; I have nowhere to rest.”

“I bless you.”

11th May 1988

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