Translate

Divine Appeal 88

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I am Love and Mercy.”

“My daughter, pray and bring Me souls. My appeal is addressed to all those living in the world: the good, sinners and those consecrated to Me. To those who obey and to those in authority I say: ‘I AM LOVE AND MERCY.’

To My consecrated ones I want the need and desire for reparation to be re-awakened and grow among the faithful souls for the world is full of sin. More than ever I am very much abused and blasphemed
in the Sacrament of My Love. The world is full of sin and at present nations are arousing the wrath of My Eternal Father. I want souls back to My sheepfold and peace to prevail. I am agonizing over
souls.

Pray and watch with Me. Do not leave Me! I am like a terrified child begging not to be left alone.

In My Divine Sacrament I am only poor, full of distress even though I remain there day and night. No one will ever understand the depth of My desolation. Adore My love and My hunger for souls.

Adore the supremely delicate manner in which I share My secret thoughts and reveal my desires to you. I desire you to be simple as I am for you. It is My joy to offer gifts in silence.

I am thirsting for souls that I love so much. For the love of souls I remain a prisoner in the tabernacle. I never weary of sinners. I want to rest in souls. What a pain for Me to see so many souls on the way
to perdition. Pray a great deal and share My bitterness. I come here seeking shade and consolation. In My Divine Sacrament I am so lonely in empty churches.

Many entertain Me only when they receive Me in Holy Communion. Share My anguish and the loneliness of My Heart.

Pray a great deal. Do not lose any of these precious times.”

“I leave you prey to anguish. I want you to be ready to console Me with your pains.”

3.00 a.m., 17th February 1988

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

Relieving the Sorrow of Jesus’ Heart

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 87

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 87: "My own... cannot realise how greatly they relieve the sorrow of My  Heart by giving Me a place in their own hearts."

There is a quiet, almost unbearable mystery at the center of the Gospel that many souls pass over too quickly: the Eternal Word, through whom all things came into being (cf. Jn 1:3; Col 1:16–17), does not force His way into the human heart, but stands and waits . He who fills heaven and earth (cf. Jer 23:24), before whom angels veil their faces (cf. Is 6:2), freely chooses to remain at the door of His own creature, desiring to be received. This is not poetic exaggeration—it is the lived reality of divine humility revealed in the Incarnation .Our Adorable Jesus, in taking a human Heart, embraced not only the mission to give—grace, truth, redemption—but also the mystery of receiving. He receives attention or neglect, love or indifference, fidelity or forgetfulness. This does not diminish His divinity, for He remains eternally self-sufficient (cf. CCC 202), yet in the order of love, He has willed a real reciprocity . He has made Himself, in a profound sense, “awaited,” so that the relationship between God and the soul is not mechanical but personal, not imposed but freely embraced . The Gospel scenes reveal this with striking realism. He marvels at the faith of a centurion (cf. Mt 8:10), showing that He receives and is moved by trust. He weeps over Jerusalem , revealing a Heart that truly suffers rejection. In Gethsemane, He seeks even the smallest human companionship (cf. Mt 26:38–40), not because He lacks strength, but because love desires presence. Even on the Cross, He expresses thirst—not only physical, but a deeper longing for souls . These are not symbolic gestures; they are real expressions of a Heart that has chosen to be open, vulnerable, and able to receive within the mystery of the Incarnation (cf. Jn 1:14; Heb 2:17).

 Our Adorable Jesus allows Himself to be touched not only outwardly (cf. Mk 5:30), but interiorly—by faith (cf. Lk 7:9), repentance (cf. Lk 7:37–38), and love offered in silence . He remains fully God (cf. CCC 202), yet wills a true reciprocity of love . When this truth enters daily life, everything changes. No action is isolated or insignificant. Each moment is received by Him: delays in grace (cf. 2 Cor 6:1–2), distractions in prayer (cf. Mt 15:8), or refusals to love . Yet equally, every hidden fidelity—trust (cf. Prov 3:5), perseverance (cf. Col 3:23), or quiet sacrifice (cf. Mt 6:6)—becomes something He truly receives and treasures. Every postponed prayer (cf. Eph 5:15–16), every distracted moment in His presence (cf. Mk 14:37–38), every refusal to love concretely  is not merely a personal weakness—it is something encountered by Him. And yet, just as real, every small act of recollection (cf. Ps 46:10), every interior turning toward Him, every quiet “yes” in the midst of duty or suffering (cf. Lk 22:42), becomes something He receives with tenderness. The widow’s offering , the hidden fidelity of the just (cf. Mt 6:4), the persevering prayer of the humble (cf. Lk 18:1–8)—all these reveal that what He receives is not measured by size, but by love. Thus, the soul stands before a truth both humbling and immense: the Infinite does not overwhelm the finite but waits upon it. The Heart of God, revealed in Christ , allows itself to be consoled or saddened within this mystery of freedom. To “give Him a place” is not a poetic idea; it is a concrete act lived in time—through attention, through surrender, through love made real in daily choices. And in this hidden exchange, the smallest fidelity becomes eternally significant, because it is received by Him who is Love .

In the Eucharistic mystery, this reversal reaches an abyss of tenderness: the One whom we receive becomes the One who receives us. Truly present in the sacrament , Our Adorable Jesus enters the communicant not as a passive object but as a living Person who perceives, discerns, and receives. He receives the atmosphere of the soul—its reverence or routine, its love or distraction. As in the house of Martha and Mary , He does not merely give Himself; He also receives the quality of our attention. Without this, the encounter remains sacramental but not fully relational. Consider the contrast in Scripture: He is received with joy by Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:6), but endured with coldness by others who remain unchanged . In practical terms, this demands a Eucharistic asceticism—preparation before Mass , attentive reception, and prolonged thanksgiving. A hurried Communion gives little for Christ to receive; a loving pause becomes a banquet for His Heart. Even a brief interior act—“Remain in me, Lord”—is gathered by Him. Thus, the Eucharist is not only the gift of Christ to the soul, but the sacred moment where the soul becomes a gift that Christ receives, treasures, and transforms.

At the summit of theological reflection lies a paradox luminous and demanding:(cf. CCC 202) God, in His divine nature, is impassible and lacks nothing , yet in the Incarnate Word, He freely wills to receive from the creature. This is not contradiction but condescension—the kenosis of love . Christ’s receptivity is not born of need but of generosity; He creates a space where human freedom can truly respond and thus participate in divine life (cf. 2 Pt 1:4). His sorrow, then, is not imposed suffering but the chosen vulnerability of love encountering refusal. Scripture abounds with this dynamic: He delights in the obedience of Abraham (cf. Gen 22:12), receives the contrition of David (cf. Ps 51), and treasures the fiat of the Virgin . Each act is not merely observed—it is received. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2001) affirms that grace invites cooperation , and in that cooperation, something real is offered to God. In a modern context marked by autonomy and self-reference, this truth strikes deeply: our lives are not closed systems. Every moral decision, every interior movement is received by Christ and enters into a relational exchange. A hidden act of integrity in the workplace, a silent refusal of sin, a persevering prayer in dryness—these are not lost; they are received by the living Christ. Thus, human freedom becomes sacramental in a broad sense: a visible expression of an invisible offering received by God.

To grasp that Jesus receives is to ignite apostolic life with a new intensity. The question is no longer merely what we do for Him, but what we place into His Heart. The baptized are truly configured to Christ and share in His mission (cf. CCC 1268, 901; Rom 6:3–5), yet this mission does not begin in external activity but in the interior offering that He Himself receives (cf. Heb 13:15; 1 Pet 2:5). Before any visible fruit, there is a hidden exchange: the heart becomes the first altar, where love is consciously given and received. In this light, every vocation is transfigured into a living liturgy . The altar is no longer only external—it is the depth of the soul—and the offering is the concrete reality of daily love, lived in fidelity. Thus, a mother who embraces unnoticed sacrifices (cf. Is 49:15), a priest who celebrates with reverence and interior recollection , a young person who guards purity in a culture of compromise (cf. 1 Thess 4:3–4), a worker who chooses integrity over personal gain (cf. Lk 16:10)—each places before Christ something real, something living, something He receives. These are not abstract virtues but offerings shaped in time, received by Him who sees in secret (cf. Mt 6:4) and who treasures the hidden fidelity of love . This transforms the ordinary into the apostolic. The sorrow of Christ over the loss of souls (cf. Lk 15:4–7) is alleviated when even one life becomes a living offering. The saints insisted that the smallest act, when done in love, carries immense redemptive weight (cf. 1 Cor 13:1–3). In practical terms, this calls for intentionality: beginning the day with an offering (cf. Rom 12:1), renewing it throughout the day, and uniting sufferings to His Cross . When one repents, even failures are received as humility. Thus, apostolic fruitfulness originates from the depth of what Christ receives from the soul rather than from outward success.

At the highest mystical horizon, the soul lives in a state of continual oblation, where everything becomes something Jesus receives. “Abide in Me” (cf. Jn 15:4) becomes a reciprocal indwelling: the soul remains in Him, and He receives the soul’s every movement. This is the spirituality of interior hosthood—the soul as a living host united to the Eucharistic Host. The sorrow of Christ is most deeply linked to forgetfulness (cf. Ps 78:11), while His consolation flows from loving awareness. Thus, the practice of recollection becomes essential: brief glances toward Him, silent invocations, and habitual offering of actions . In daily life, this is profoundly practical: studying with intention, speaking with charity, enduring trials with patience—each becomes a gift placed in His Heart. Over time, the soul itself becomes the gift. No longer offering merely actions, it offers its being—its desires, its will, its love. And Christ receives. He receives not as a distant judge, but as a Bridegroom who delights in the love of the beloved . Thus, the Christian life reaches its summit and deepest simplicity: to live in such a way that every moment becomes an offering Christ can truly receive (cf. Rom 12:1; 2 Cor 2:15). Nothing is wasted, nothing neutral—each thought, word, and action is placed before Him in love, whether in joy or in suffering . And in this mysterious exchange, something greater unfolds: as He receives the soul’s poor but sincere gift, He does not remain only the Receiver—He becomes the Transforming Presence within it (cf. Gal 2:20; 2 Pet 1:4). The soul is gradually conformed to what it offers, shaped into His likeness, drawn into His own Heart (cf. CCC 460). Thus, in giving Him everything, the soul is quietly remade into Him whom it gives.

Prayer

O Our Adorable Jesus, Eternal Receiver of love, awaken in us a living awareness that You await our hearts. May every moment become an offering You can receive—pure, faithful, and hidden. Draw us into this sacred exchange, where nothing is withheld, and all is given to console and delight Your Heart. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 87

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“My heart is wounded by sin and torn by grief.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. Bring Me souls. I want to forgive. I want souls to know that My heart is overflowing with love and mercy.

My own... cannot realise how greatly they relieve the sorrow of My Heart by giving Me a place in their own hearts. Many accept when I visit them in Holy Communion but few welcome Me when I visit them with My Cross.

What a pain to Me that the world is full of perils. Many souls are dragged towards sin and constantly they need visible or invisible help. Many do not know how much they can do to draw near to Me. My Heart is so much wounded by sin and torn by grief.

I am thirsting for souls. It was My great love for mankind that made Me suffer the most ignominious contempt and horrible tortures.

In the Sacrament of My Love I remain day and night as a prisoner in the tabernacle for love of repentant sinners. Pray a great deal. Do not complain about your sufferings. I desire you to suffer silently. Let Me work in you and save souls silently. Forget everything and above all forget yourself for the sake of saving souls. Many abuse and spit on Me in My Divine and Living Sacrament.

Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart.

I am thirsting for souls.”

“I give My blessings.”

16th February 1988

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

The Wound of Divine Nearness Unreceived

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 86

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 86: "I am very near to souls but they reject Me and prefer their own ways. These are grave moments. What grieves Me most is... Many doubt Me even though they have given Me their lives but their hearts remain closed. I call them all back to My sheepfold."

At the summit of revealed Love and within the trembling silence of divine condescension, the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus discloses a mystery both luminous and piercing: infinite nearness rejected by finite freedom. This nearness is not metaphorical but ontological, sustained in being through Christ who upholds all things (cf. Col 1:17; Heb 1:3), and sacramentally intensified in the Holy Eucharist, where He is truly, substantially, and personally present . The tragedy of the Appeal is not divine distance but human indifference within divine intimacy. Philosophically, this is the drama of participated being resisting its Source: the creature sustained by Love yet refusing its final cause (cf. CCC 27–30). St. Augustine’s profound insight into the restless heart reaches its deepest intensity here—the soul remains mysteriously near to God, yet inwardly divided by disordered loves and competing allegiances (cf. Ps 42:1–2; CCC 27, 2541). In daily existence, this fracture becomes visible when believers outwardly profess Christ, yet interiorly organize life around self-fashioned meaning, digital distraction, emotional autonomy, or subtle forms of moral relativism (cf. Rom 12:2; CCC 1730–1733). Even sacramental proximity can coexist with existential estrangement when the interior assent of the heart is fragmented, and grace remains uncooperated with . St. Thomas Aquinas(cf. ST I–II q.110 a.2) teaches that grace perfects nature without coercing it , revealing why rejection remains possible even in nearness. Thus, Christ’s lament is not absence of power but revelation of vulnerable omnipresence—He is near enough to be ignored, loved, or rejected. The Appeal unveils a metaphysical sorrow: Love fully given, yet not fully received, standing at the threshold of the human will.

The Appeal’s second depth discloses the wound of cognitive-spiritual division: “Many doubt Me even though they have given Me their lives.” This is not mere intellectual skepticism but the fracture between consecration and communion. Scripture reveals this interior contradiction in the disciples who walked with Christ yet failed to recognize Him in the breaking of bread (cf. Lk 24:30–32), and in Peter who confessed Him yet feared surrender (cf. Mt 16:16–23). The Catechism affirms that faith is both assent and entrustment of the whole person (cf. CCC 150–153), yet the will may remain partially closed even when the intellect assents. St. John of the Cross describes this as attachment to self-generated lights that obscure divine obscurity. In Eucharistic theology, this becomes especially grave:(cf. CCC 1391–1397) the soul receives the Lord sacramentally yet resists His transformative claim over life . In contemporary practice, this appears in selective discipleship—accepting Christ as comfort but resisting Him as Lord in ethics, sexuality, vocation, or truth. Philosophically, it is the division between “truth known” and “truth lived,” a rupture of the integral act of faith. St. Teresa of Avila warns that prayer without surrender becomes self-referential interiority rather than divine encounter. Thus, Christ’s grief is not over ignorance alone but over divided love. The nearness of Jesus intensifies accountability: to doubt Him while living within His sacramental embrace is to stand within light while refusing vision.

Within the sacred interiority of consecrated souls, the Appeal intensifies into a mystical lament: hearts that have “given Me their lives” yet remain closed. This paradox touches the highest regions of spiritual theology, where vocation does not guarantee union, and function does not ensure communion. St. Catherine of Siena speaks of the “cell of self-knowledge,” where failure to enter results in fragmented devotion. The Catechism teaches that grace may be resisted not through its absence but through the soul’s failure to freely cooperate with its transforming action . Thus, even within religious life, priesthood, or committed lay apostolate, a soul may outwardly belong to Christ while interiorly withholding trust, safeguarding hidden spaces of self-possession where grace is not fully welcomed . This is not formal apostasy but a quiet interior contraction, where love is limited by fear or control. St. Faustina Kowalska’s mystical witness reveals that Divine Mercy desires total openness of the heart, (cf. Ps 81:10; CCC 2091) not a partial or measured reception . In lived reality, this tension emerges when ministry becomes mechanical, prayer reduced to obligation, and spiritual identity shaped more by function than by living communion. Philosophically, it reflects the grave risk of instrumentalizing the sacred—treating divine realities as means to an end rather than as personal encounter with the Living God . St. Ignatius of Loyola cautions that disordered attachments can persist even within structured religious discipline, subtly resisting the full freedom of surrender to God’s will. Yet Christ remains “very near,” sustaining even those who forget Him. His nearness is both consolation and confrontation: He cannot be escaped, only either embraced or resisted. The Appeal therefore reveals a sorrow not of abandonment but of unresponded intimacy, where the Beloved remains present but not fully received in the depths of the heart.

The ecclesial cry—“I call them all back to My sheepfold”—opens the horizon of salvation history itself, where Christ as Good Shepherd gathers fractured humanity into one sacramental and mystical communion (cf. Jn 10:14–16; CCC 754–757). The sheepfold is not merely institutional belonging but ontological integration into the Body of Christ, where unity is both visible and invisible (cf. 1 Cor 12:12–27). St. Cyprian’s ancient insight that the Church is inseparable from Christ finds renewed urgency here: separation from the fold is not simply external wandering but interior dislocation from unity of truth and charity. In philosophical terms, the sheepfold signifies the restoration of unity within multiplicity, where the fragmented self is gathered into ordered participation in divine life, healed and elevated by grace (cf. Eph 1:9–10; CCC 760). In daily life, this call resounds concretely—in reconciliation within wounded families, integrity within workplaces marked by corruption, and steadfast fidelity within parishes burdened by indifference . The saints affirm that entry into the sheepfold is inseparable from humility: St. Ignatius of Antioch’s ardent desire for union with Christ through visible ecclesial communion, even unto martyrdom, reveals that belonging is not abstract but existential and embodied (cf. Jn 17:21; CCC 815–816). Thus, the Appeal takes on an urgently pastoral and sacramental depth: Christ does not gather souls into isolated spiritual experiences but into one visible communion of truth and charity,(cf. 1 Cor 12:12–13; CCC 775) where unity becomes the living sign of divine presence in the world . To reject the sheepfold is to accept fragmentation; to enter is to recover unity of being. The sorrow of Christ is therefore shepherdly—the anguish of Love watching scattered sheep resist the very gathering that restores them.

At its deepest metaphysical level, this Appeal unveils the anthropology of divine indwelling: the soul is structured as a temple of presence , yet retains the tragic capacity to veil that presence through interior resistance. The Catechism affirms that God is closer to us than we are to ourselves , establishing nearness as constitutive of human existence. Yet freedom introduces the mystery of refusal within intimacy. St. Thomas Aquinas articulates that God moves the will without destroying it, (cf. ST I q.105)preserving the dignity of love that can be rejected . Thus, rejection is not spatial withdrawal but relational closure within presence. In mystical theology, this is the hidden sorrow of Love unreceived. Within the great mystical tradition, this interior transformation is illuminated by other luminous witnesses of the Church. St. Catherine of Siena teaches that the soul must pass through the “cell of self-knowledge,” where illusions of self-sufficiency are stripped away and the will is gradually conformed to divine charity . Likewise, St. Francis de Sales emphasizes that true holiness is not found in extraordinary experiences but in gentle,(cf. Mic 6:8; CCC 2013–2014) persevering fidelity to God’s will in the ordinary rhythm of life . This purification is not harsh imposition but the quiet work of grace inviting the soul from resistance into loving consent . In practical terms, every decision—speech, work, silence, digital consumption, forgiveness—becomes a micro-response to divine nearness, where the hidden choices of the day either open the heart more deeply to Christ or subtly close it against His indwelling presence . Christ’s appeal is therefore continuous, not episodic. He is the Shepherd who does not cease calling, even when unheard. The philosophical depth of the Appeal culminates here: Being itself desires communion with its rational creature. Yet this desire is not coercive but invitational love. The sorrow of Jesus is thus the sorrow of infinite patience, waiting within the very heart that resists Him. And yet, this sorrow is already mercy, for He remains near enough to transform every return into resurrection.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, eternally near and infinitely patient, soften every hidden resistance within us. Draw us into full communion with Your Eucharistic Heart. May we never doubt Your presence, nor close our hearts to Your call. Gather us into Your sheepfold, where love is unity, truth, and eternal peace. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 86

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“Let the callous and indifferent know that I am thirsting for them. I am the source from which water flows inexhaustibly in abundance.”

“My daughter, pray and spend these dark hours with Me.

Help Me by praying and loving. I am thirsting for souls. Bring Me souls. Speak in your own words as they come into your mind.

Give Me your company – I am so lonely in the empty churches. It is My great love for mankind that keeps Me day and night in the tabernacles. I am in agony over souls. Pray a great deal and do not lose a single minute. Time is short for saving souls. Take My pains to help them in your prayers.

Never shall I weary of repentant sinners. In the Sacrament of My love, greater is the welcome. This is why I wish all to know that. 

I speak to My... I want him to let the callous and indifferent know that I am thirsting for them. I want to forgive. What pains for Me to see the world buried in sensuality! No longer is its sweetness known.

Pray a great deal and atone; bring Me souls. Offer yourself in union with Me. In the Sacrament of My Love offer Me at each moment to My Eternal Father for the purpose of saving souls. I am waiting for souls as I remain a prisoner in the tabernacle. I am the source from which water flows inexhaustibly in abundance. In your prayers bring souls. I wish them to know that life eternal is at hand if they would accept it.

Here is My mercy. Time is short. I am very near to souls but they reject Me and prefer their own ways. These are grave moments. What grieves Me most is... Many doubt Me even though they have given Me their lives but their hearts remain closed. I call them all back to My sheepfold.

My desire is that souls be saved. As I am exposed I will pour My infinite Mercy in the human souls. These are grave moments. Pray without ceasing. Never before has the world needed prayers than
at this present time. The Chalice is filled. These times demand accelerated action. My pain is immense. I speak to you amid tears. With love I am calling and I would not like anyone to perish. 

Pray and cloister souls in your heart.”

“I give My blessings.”

2.00 a.m., 15th February 1988

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