Divine Appeal Reflection - 137
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 137: "The devil is in all ways wounding you. Do not allow yourself to be in his possession."
There are Divine Appeals that console, and there are Divine Appeals that awaken souls with holy urgency. This appeal belongs to the second kind. Our Adorable Jesus speaks with startling seriousness because He unveils an invisible reality many modern souls forget: spiritual warfare is not symbolic language but daily reality. Yet Christ begins not with fear but compassion. He says, “The devil is in all ways wounding you.” Notice carefully: Jesus first reveals the wound before warning against possession. He knows many souls do not recognize how quietly spiritual injury occurs. The enemy rarely begins with dramatic destruction; his strategy is often subtle, gradual, and hidden . Spiritual wounds frequently enter through discouragement weakening hope, resentment settling into memory, distraction fragmenting prayer, pride resisting correction, or self-condemnation obscuring mercy . Our Adorable Jesus therefore watches tenderly over souls, knowing that unnoticed wounds may quietly deepen unless brought into the healing light of grace . Scripture shows evil moving through distortion rather than open rebellion—the serpent sowing doubt in Eden and Judas slowly drifting through compromise . Yet grace also works quietly: one act of repentance, humility, or prayer can begin restoration (cf. Lk 15:17–24; CCC 1776–1779).The serpent first confuses trust before provoking disobedience (cf. Gen 3:1–7). Judas (cf. Jn 12:4–6; 13:27) gradually permits attachment and interior compromise before betrayal emerges outwardly . Saint Peter (cf. 1 Pet 5:8–9; Eph 6:10–18) warns souls that spiritual vigilance is necessary because the enemy often seeks entry through weakness, confusion, or spiritual fatigue .
The Church (cf. CCC 391–409; Rom 7:19–25) teaches that humanity lives within a real spiritual struggle because human freedom remains wounded by original sin and exposed to temptation within a fallen world . Yet Our Adorable Jesus speaks to this condition not with condemnation, but with tender urgency. He reveals a profoundly human mystery: chains rarely appear suddenly; they are often forged quietly through repeated small permissions of the heart. What begins as disappointment may slowly harden into bitterness . What begins as exhaustion may become indifference to prayer (cf. Mt 26:40–41). What begins as comparison may quietly poison identity and peace (cf. Gal 6:4–5). Thus, vigilance becomes deeply contemplative: guarding the heart not through fear, but through recollection, confession, Eucharistic fidelity, humility, spiritual discipline, and remaining close to the One who sees wounds before the soul fully understands them (cf. Prov 4:23; Jn 15:4–5; CCC 2015).
The phrase “in all ways wounding you” deserves profound contemplation because evil rarely attacks where souls expect. The enemy often wounds quietly: relationships through misunderstanding, marriages through pride, vocations through discouragement, prayer through distraction, identity through shame, and hope through exhaustion . Spiritual wounds frequently disguise themselves as ordinary life. A caregiver slowly begins believing their sacrifices no longer matter. A young person repeatedly shaped by degrading influences gradually loses reverence for self and others. A consecrated soul carrying hidden loneliness begins questioning the meaning of fidelity. A spouse burdened by disappointment withdraws into silence rather than honest conversation (cf. Heb 12:15; 1 Pet 5:8). Our Adorable Jesus sees these hidden fractures long before they fully surface, approaching them not with condemnation, but healing mercy . Scripture reveals this gradual erosion repeatedly. Judas did not fall suddenly; compromise deepened through hidden interior disorder (cf. Jn 12:4–6; Lk 22:3–6). Elijah, (cf. 1 Kgs 19:1–18) though holy, experienced crushing discouragement after immense spiritual labor . Yet God approaches wounded souls not with condemnation, but restoration . Saint Ignatius of Loyola taught souls to discern the hidden movements of the heart, recognizing discouragement and confusion as common places of spiritual struggle where grace must be carefully protected. The Church teaches that vigilance, grace, and prayer strengthen believers against spiritual deception, enabling the soul to resist discouragement and remain rooted in hope . Our Adorable Jesus therefore invites souls not to despair over weakness, but to bring wounds honestly into His healing mercy. Jesus therefore asks souls not merely to resist dramatic evil but to notice hidden injuries before they deepen.
Yet perhaps the most striking phrase is this: “Do not allow yourself to be in his possession.” Jesus speaks of possession not merely in extraordinary terms but spiritually and morally. The enemy seeks gradual occupation of interior space. One rarely loses freedom instantly. Possession often begins through repeated surrender of territory: a bitterness repeatedly nourished, dishonesty justified, addiction normalized, prayer neglected, conscience silenced, forgiveness resisted, or despair embraced. Scripture repeatedly warns that the human heart slowly becomes shaped by what it repeatedly consents to (cf. Rom 6:12–16; Eph 4:26–27). Cain (cf. Gen 4:1–8) first entertained jealousy before violence emerged . King Saul (cf. 1 Sam 15–18) slowly surrendered interior freedom through fear, pride, and disobedience . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1865) reminds mankind that human freedom remains real, yet repeated sin can weaken spiritual clarity and interior liberty, slowly shaping the heart’s capacity to choose the good . In this light, many spiritual struggles appear deeply human and gradual: a worker may begin justifying dishonesty under the pressure of survival; a young person may quietly absorb destructive influences until hope and purity grow dim; a spouse may repeatedly rehearse resentment until tenderness fades; a lonely heart may turn to habits that numb rather than heal. Our Adorable Jesus speaks to these realities not to instill fear, but because He knows that captivity often disguises itself as relief . The enemy does not always destroy immediately; he occupies slowly, where grace has been neglected and vigilance has weakened. Yet Christ remains the One who restores interior freedom, gently calling the soul back to truth, clarity, and communion with His mercy .
This appeal also reveals a profoundly apostolic truth: spiritual struggle touches every vocation without exception. Priests may be wounded through discouragement, comparison, exhaustion, or isolation that quietly weakens zeal (cf. 2 Cor 4:8–10). Married couples may be tested through resentment, emotional distance, and unspoken disappointments that slowly erode tenderness . Young people through confusion about identity and worth. Consecrated souls through dryness or loneliness. Workers through dishonest pressure. Students through fear of failure. Elderly persons through forgottenness and grief. Yet Scripture never presents spiritual warfare without divine accompaniment. Christ Himself (cf. Mt 4:1–11) endured temptation in the desert not because He needed purification but to reveal victory through trust . Saint Catherine of Siena wrote profoundly about the interior battlefield where love must continually choose God amid temptation, while Saint John Vianney recognized that souls moving closer to God often encounter intensified resistance. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1129, 1391–1405, 1422–1498) teaches that sacramental life strengthens souls in spiritual combat through Eucharistic communion, confession, prayer, and grace . Jesus therefore calls souls toward vigilance not anxiety. The exhausted healthcare worker praying briefly between shifts, the university student choosing integrity during pressure to cheat, the parent apologizing after impatience, or the businessman refusing corruption despite financial risk—all participate in hidden spiritual victory.Our Adorable Jesus receives such choices as true participation in His own overcoming of evil, where love is preferred over convenience, truth over pressure, and conscience over fear (cf. Jn 16:33; CCC 1803).
Our Adorable Jesus reveals wounds because He desires healing, not shame. Divine warnings are never abandonment; they are invitations back to mercy before hidden struggles quietly become chains. Scripture repeatedly reveals God restoring fragile hearts. Elijah (cf. 1 Kgs 19:1–18)collapsed beneath exhaustion and discouragement, yet God nourished him gently and renewed his mission . Peter (cf. Lk 22:54–62; Jn 21:15–19) failed publicly through fear, yet Christ patiently restored him through love and trust . The hemorrhaging woman (cf. Mk 5:25–34) carried silent suffering unnoticed for years, yet trembling faith opened healing . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2010) teaches that no sin, wound, or interior struggle exceeds the reach of divine mercy when souls sincerely return to God with repentance and trust . Our Adorable Jesus therefore speaks with immense tenderness to deeply human struggles often hidden beneath ordinary appearances: the father lingering outside the house because financial pressure has quietly discouraged him; the mother silently crying after everyone sleeps from emotional exhaustion; the university student masking anxiety behind outward laughter; the seminarian discouraged by recurring weakness; the spouse still carrying wounds from words never fully healed; and the elderly person quietly wondering whether they have been forgotten . Christ sees the hidden ache beneath outward functioning. He understands the exhaustion concealed behind responsibility, the grief hidden beneath routine, and the shame silently carried in the heart . Divine mercy approaches such souls not through accusation, but through patient nearness, for Our Adorable Jesus often begins healing not by demanding strength, but by quietly restoring hope where it has begun to fade .Christ says gently: hidden wounds need not become identity. One honest confession (cf. CCC 1422–1498), one whispered prayer through tears (cf. Ps 34:17–19), one return to Eucharistic adoration , one sincere apology, or one refusal to surrender hope may quietly reopen the soul to grace. The heart belongs ultimately not to fear or failure, but to Jesus who never stops fighting for what He loves.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, protect our wounded hearts from hidden darkness. Teach us vigilance where temptation enters quietly and strengthen us where weakness feels overwhelming. Heal wounds before they deepen into chains, and keep our souls entirely in the possession of Your Sacred Heart. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.