Divine Appeal Reflection - 123
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 123: "I well know that you feel unworthy. Do not feel that. Never mind"
There are wounds no one sees because they are carried inside ordinary days: the same weakness repeated, the same prayer neglected, the same promise broken before evening. It is there many souls begin to feel unworthy before Our Adorable Jesus. Not because they hate Him, but because they are ashamed of how often they fail in things that seem small yet pierce conscience. A harsh word spoken to a child after Holy Communion. Returning to impurity after confession. Missing prayer after promising fidelity. Secret resentment while receiving the Eucharist. Laziness in vocation. The soul says inwardly: How can I approach Him again? Our Adorable Jesus answers this hidden cry not with rejection but with profound tenderness. He already knows every inconsistency. He saw the weakness before the soul fell. He knew the promise would fail before it was made. Yet He remains. This is the scandal of mercy. The Heart of Christ does not wait for the soul to become admirable. He waits for honesty. His gaze in the Eucharist often falls upon those most ashamed to look back. Peter wept after denying the One he loved (cf. Lk 22:54–62). The pain was not only sin but the collapse of self-image. He believed himself faithful until failure revealed his fragility. Many souls live this same hidden drama: the catechist wounded by recurring impatience, the priest quietly discouraged by dryness in prayer, the mother grieving her loss of gentleness, (cf. Rom 7:19–25) the young person trapped in secret sin and afraid to hope again . The deepest struggle is often not public failure, but interior discouragement. St. Margaret of Cortona understood that Christ often enters the soul not after dignity has been fully restored, (cf. Lk 7:36–50) but precisely while repentance is still trembling and tears are still falling . Our Adorable Jesus does not wait for perfect strength before drawing near; He meets souls in the very place where weakness finally becomes surrender. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that grace moves first, (CCC 1428, 2001) awakening conversion before the sinner completes repentance . Our Adorable Jesus already approaches the soul while it still feels least worthy .
The deepest suffering of many Christians is not public sin but private shame: the fear that if Christ looked fully into their interior life, He would be disappointed beyond love. This fear quietly destroys prayer. The person attends Mass but avoids adoration. Receives absolution but leaves immediately. Prays mechanically but avoids silence because silence exposes the heart. Yet Our Adorable Jesus speaks directly into that hidden fear: He already knows. The concealed memory, the old abortion, the broken vow, the betrayal, the addiction, the dishonest earnings, the abortion supported in silence, the bitterness toward parents, the loss of faith during grief—none are unknown to Him. His knowledge is complete, yet His tenderness remains. Woman at the Well (cf. Jn 4:5–30) encountered Christ where shame had shaped her life . He revealed what she hid, not to humiliate, but to restore dignity. The soul often expects condemnation when Christ intends liberation. Saint Mary of Egypt carried years of disordered life, yet Christ’s mercy entered where society had already judged her. Saint Benedict Joseph Labre endured misunderstanding and personal poverty, but discovered Christ’s gaze remains gentle when human judgment is severe. This is deeply human. The father ashamed of debt hides from family prayer. The student avoids confession because the same sin returns. The consecrated soul hides dryness behind duties. The married person receives Communion while carrying emotional betrayal. Our Adorable Jesus asks the soul not to flee. The worst suffering is not weakness but staying far from the One who heals.The Church teaches God’s mercy surpasses the human heart’s accusations (CCC 982). When conscience condemns, Christ still invites nearness. His love sees more clearly than self-judgment .
There is a sacred way of feeling unworthy, and there is a destructive one. Holy humility bows and says: Lord, heal me. False humility hides and says: I should not come. One opens to mercy; the other closes. The enemy often disguises withdrawal as reverence. A soul believes it honors Christ by staying away after sin. In reality, distance nourishes despair. Jonah fled not only mission but the divine gaze, thinking escape was possible (cf. Jon 1:1–3). Many Christians do the same spiritually. They stop speaking honestly to God. They reduce prayer to routine. They stop lingering after Mass. Yet the wound deepens because silence is no longer surrendered but defensive. Saint Camillus de Lellis struggled repeatedly before conversion, yet discovered that returning immediately to mercy changes everything. Saint John of God knew interior collapse and emotional turmoil, yet Christ drew sanctity from wounded humanity. Practically, the nurse overwhelmed by fatigue skips prayer and becomes harder toward patients. The father ashamed after shouting avoids family Rosary. The young adult trapped in impurity misses Sunday intentionally. The seminarian in dryness stops adoration. The elderly person thinks old failures disqualify them. These are dangerous thresholds. The church (CCC 1468, 2559) teaches reconciliation restores both grace and interior peace, while prayer remains necessary even in weakness . Our Adorable Jesus asks not perfect readiness but return. Stay after confession. Kneel after Mass. Enter the chapel even when ashamed. Grace often begins there.
The soul rarely overcomes unworthiness through one dramatic experience; it is healed slowly through repeated encounters where Christ remains faithful in ordinary life. A person kneels after a poor confession and still feels peace. Someone receives Communion after sincere repentance and senses quiet warmth. A mother praying while washing dishes suddenly feels accompanied. The worker enters church during lunch and leaves with tears. These small moments rebuild trust.Elijah (cf. 1 Kgs 19:11–13) expected God in force but encountered Him in gentle stillness . So too, Christ often heals through simple repetition: returning again, praying again, trying again. Saint Zélie Martin lived maternal burdens, illness, household demands, and hidden sorrow, yet discovered sanctity in daily surrender. Saint Frances of Rome transformed domestic interruptions into contemplative union. This is the path for many. Stay ten minutes after weekday Mass. Make one honest confession weekly. Visit the church while passing through town. Kneel before sleeping. Read one Gospel passage before work. Offer one Rosary while commuting. These small fidelities tell Christ: I am still coming. That movement itself becomes healing. The Church teaches ordinary duties united to grace become paths of holiness (CCC 901, 2013). Our Adorable Jesus does not ask dramatic proofs. He asks fidelity through ordinary humanity. The soul begins to trust: He knew everything, and He still remained near (cf. Jn 15:9; Mt 11:28).
A person truly healed by Our Adorable Jesus becomes gentle because they know what it means to approach Christ trembling. They stop humiliating weakness. They understand silence, relapse, tears, hesitation, and shame. Their apostolate becomes hospitality of heart. Barnabas welcomed those feared by others and saw grace where others saw only history (cf. Acts 9:26–27). Saint Damien of Molokai entered abandoned suffering without fear because Christ had first entered his own poverty. Saint Marianne Cope treated rejected people with maternal dignity. This happens quietly. The confessor listens patiently to repeated sins. The teacher notices the child who withdraws. The mother prays for the rebellious son instead of condemning. The youth invites a struggling friend to adoration. The manager chooses compassion over humiliation. The widow comforts someone else despite her grief. The CCC teaches all the faithful share in Christ’s mission through witness (CCC 897). Our Adorable Jesus sends those healed by mercy into places where many feel unworthy to return to God. Their tenderness becomes bridge.Thus, Christ says: I know your unworthiness. Do not remain imprisoned there. Our Adorable Jesus knows the missed prayers, repeated failures, hidden wounds, and secret shame carried silently within the heart (cf. Ps 139:1–3). Yet He does not withdraw. He remains waiting—in the tabernacle, in confession, in Scripture, and in the quiet places of prayer—patiently seeking the soul that fears it has wandered too far . Often, the soul that returns trembling becomes a quiet refuge for others. Having known weakness personally, it learns compassion instead of judgment and silently gives courage to those afraid to come back to God (cf. 2 Cor 1:3–4).
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, when shame makes us hide, keep calling us back. Teach us to remain near You after every failure, to trust Your gaze more than our self-condemnation, and to let ordinary fidelity heal our hearts. Make us gentle toward other wounded souls who fear they are unworthy of Your love , Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.