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Saved Through Suffering on the Cross

Divine Appeal Reflection - 146

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 146:  "I have saved the world through suffering on the cross. Pray and do penance for souls."

One of the greatest mysteries ever revealed to humanity is not simply that Jesus suffered, but that He freely chose suffering as the path through which He would save every human person. This completely overturns human thinking. If God wished merely to display His omnipotence, (cf. Ps 33:6-9) He could have spoken one word and sin would have disappeared forever . If He wished only to judge, every sinner could simply have received the consequences of justice (cf. Rom 3:23). If He wished only to prove His divinity,(cf. Jn 20:30-31) the miracles already performed during His public ministry had accomplished that abundantly . Yet none of these became the means of redemption. Instead, Jesus stretched out His hands upon rough wood, (cf. Phil 2:6-11) accepted humiliation rather than honor, silence rather than self-defense, wounds rather than comfort, and death rather than escape . Why? Because humanity's deepest wound was never merely guilt; it was the inability to love as God loves. Sin had distorted the human heart. Pride had replaced humility. Possession had replaced self-giving. Violence had replaced communion. Fear had replaced trust (cf. Gen 3:1-13). Only a love willing to descend into the darkest consequences of sin without ceasing to love could heal humanity from within . 

Jesus did more than just settle a debt at Calvary—he recreated what it is to be fully human. Every injury turned into an act of submission. Every insult became forgiveness. Every rejection became an invitation to reconciliation. Therefore, the Cross reveals not only what true love is but also how immeasurably God loves each one of us . We instinctively imagine love as something that gives when it is convenient, remains when it is appreciated, and serves when it is rewarded. Yet everything changes when we gaze upon the Crucified Christ. There we discover a love that remains when it is rejected, forgives when it is wounded, perseveres when it is abandoned, and gives itself completely without expecting anything in return . The Cross overturns every merely human understanding of love, revealing that authentic love is measured not by comfort or recognition, but by self-giving that seeks the good and salvation of the other, even at great personal cost (cf. 1 Jn 4:9–10; CCC 618). Jesus overturns every human definition. He loves when abandoned, (cf. Lk 23:34; Jn 13:1) remains faithful when betrayed, blesses when cursed, forgives while bleeding, and continues loving when no visible response is given . The Cross (cf. CCC 604-605) is therefore not simply the place where salvation happened; it is the definitive revelation of the Heart of God .

One of the most deeply human dimensions of the Cross is that Jesus did not redeem suffering by avoiding it but by entering every form of human pain from within. There is almost no sorrow that the human heart experiences which Christ did not personally embrace. He knew the pain (cf. Mk 3:21) of being misunderstood by His own relatives . He experienced betrayal (cf. Mt 26:47-50) from someone He had loved and trusted for years . He endured the loneliness of watching close friends fall asleep (cf. Mt 26:36-46) when His soul was overwhelmed with sorrow . He experienced false accusations, public humiliation, injustice, abandonment, physical exhaustion, emotional anguish, and the terrifying silence that accompanies suffering . Even His cry from the Cross (cf. Mt 27:46) reveals that He entered the darkness experienced by countless suffering souls . This changes everything for Christians. No grieving widow suffers alone. No father silently carrying financial burdens walks alone. No mother exhausted by caring for a child with special needs struggles alone. No seminarian battling discouragement, no religious enduring spiritual dryness, no young person rejected for living chastity, no elderly person forgotten in a nursing home, no patient lying awake through another night of chemotherapy, no prisoner regretting years of sin, no addict fighting for freedom, no missionary laboring where no one seems to respond—none suffer outside the experience already embraced by Christ . The saints understood this profoundly.  St. Elizabeth Ann Seton discovered the Heart of Christ not in comfort but through widowhood, financial hardship, and the painful uncertainty of beginning again, learning that God's providence remains faithful even when earthly securities disappear (cf. Rom 8:28; Phil 4:19). St. Josephine Bakhita came to recognize that the chains which had once humiliated and wounded her became, through grace, the path by which she encountered the liberating love of Christ, who alone heals every human dignity . God did not save humanity from a distance or merely offer sympathy from heaven. In the mystery of the Incarnation, He entered our suffering, carried our wounds, embraced our Cross, and transformed pain into the very place where love achieved its greatest victory (cf. Jn 1:14; Heb 4:15–16; Phil 2:6–8; CCC 457–460). He entered every room where tears are shed so that no human suffering would ever again be meaningless (cf. CCC 1505).

Another remarkable aspect of the Cross is that love is often most powerful when it appears weakest. On Calvary, Our Adorable Jesus seemed to possess nothing that the world associates with victory. His disciples had scattered, He commanded no army, held no political authority, exercised no earthly influence, and appeared to have failed completely (cf. Mt 26:56; Jn 19:14–30). Yet it was precisely in this apparent defeat that sin was conquered, death was overcome, and the gates of heaven were opened (cf. Col 2:14–15; Heb 2:14–15; CCC 634–635). The Cross reveals that divine love does not triumph through domination but through total self-giving. What looked like history's greatest weakness became the greatest victory ever accomplished, proving that God's power reaches its perfection through sacrificial love (cf. 2 Cor 12:9; Phil 2:8–11). Everything appeared to indicate failure. Yet at that very moment, heaven was accomplishing the greatest victory in history. This paradox runs throughout Scripture. Gideon's tiny army (cf. Judg 7:1-22) overcame overwhelming numbers because victory belonged to God rather than human strength . David defeated Goliath (cf. 1 Sam 17:45-50) not by superior force but through humble confidence in the Lord . The widow of Zarephath discovered that God's abundance often begins where human resources appear exhausted, offering her final handful of flour in trusting obedience and witnessing the Lord's unfailing providence (cf. 1 Kgs 17:8–16). Likewise, Isaac carrying the wood up Mount Moriah unknowingly became a prophetic image of Christ carrying the wood of the Cross to Calvary, where the beloved Son would freely offer Himself for the salvation of the world . What seemed to be moments of loss became revelations of God's faithful love and His eternal plan of redemption. 

God repeatedly chooses to work through apparent weakness (cf. 1 Sam 16:7; Rom 8:28) because His deepest purpose is not merely to change circumstances but to transform hearts . He often permits human strength to reach its limits so that His grace may become the true source of hope and renewal . In His providence, He is concerned not only with solving life's problems but with conforming souls to Christ, teaching them humility, trust, perseverance, and self-giving love . The same mystery unfolds quietly every day. A wife patiently caring for her husband through the slow loss of dementia may wonder whether anyone notices her quiet sacrifices, yet Christ treasures every act of faithful tenderness . A father (cf. Col 3:23–24) who works long hours with honesty rather than compromising his conscience offers a hidden witness that shapes his family more deeply than wealth ever could . A teacher (cf. Gal 6:9) who patiently encourages discouraged students may never witness the lives transformed by a single word of hope . A priest celebrating the Holy Mass each day, even before a small congregation, may never know the countless graces flowing from Christ's sacrifice into the Church and the world . While the world applauds what is visible, God delights in the hidden fidelity that quietly builds His Kingdom . Heaven treasures sacrifices that are hidden. St. Charles de Foucauld spent years apparently accomplishing very little outwardly, yet his hidden life continues inspiring countless souls. Blessed Solanus Casey quietly welcomed everyone who came to him, often through simple listening and prayer. The Cross (cf. Jn 12:24; CCC 2011) teaches that the greatest works of God usually grow in silence, humility, and unnoticed fidelity .

Finally, the appeal reveals perhaps its most demanding truth: Jesus continues saving the world through the Cross because He invites His disciples to make His sacrifice present within their own lives. Redemption (cf. Col 1:24; CCC 618) is complete in Christ, yet He lovingly permits His beloved sons and daughters to share in distributing its fruits . Every vocation contains its own Calvary. Marriage has the Cross of daily self-giving. Priesthood has the Cross of spiritual fatherhood and hidden loneliness. Religious life has the Cross of continual surrender. Parenthood has the Cross of sacrificial love without guarantees. Youth has the Cross of choosing holiness against powerful cultural pressures. Old age has the Cross of increasing dependence and hidden suffering. The Christian life is therefore not about searching for extraordinary sufferings but about transforming ordinary ones into extraordinary acts of love. Picture a mother waiting outside an operating room while silently praying. Consider a businessman refusing corruption even though it costs him promotion. Consider a university student choosing honesty rather than cheating despite academic pressure. Consider an elderly woman who can no longer leave her bed yet offers every painful hour for seminarians, missionaries, broken families, and dying sinners. Consider a parish volunteer serving faithfully for years without recognition. These people may never be remembered by the world, yet heaven sees them as quiet collaborators in Christ's saving work . St. Benedict Joseph Labre, poor and unnoticed, touched countless hearts simply by his hidden life of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. St. Frances Xavier Cabrini transformed ordinary acts of compassion into channels of God's mercy for immigrants, the sick, and the forgotten . Venerable Fulton Sheen believed that one Holy Hour united to the Cross could change the spiritual destiny of nations. This is the astonishing invitation hidden within the appeal: the Cross is not merely an event to admire but a life to embrace. Whenever suffering is accepted in faith, transformed by love, and offered with Christ for souls, Calvary is mystically prolonged in history, and the saving love of Jesus continues reaching hearts until the end of time .

Prayer

Oh , our Adorable Jesus, we bow before Your Holy Cross, the source of our redemption and hope. Transform our hearts with Your grace, teach us to embrace sacrifices with love, and guide us in bringing souls to You. May Your mercy and love reign in us now and forever, Amen

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

Divine Appeal 146

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Pray and do penance.”

“My daughter, listen to My crying voice. I come to seek shelter here. I am shedding tears of blood for all of mankind. The Chalice is filled. Be attentive to all that I tell you.

I have saved the world through suffering on the cross. Pray and do penance for souls. I am with you in all the tabernacles of the world.”

19th 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).

Jesus Sensitive to the Tenderness of Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection - 145

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 145: "Do not fear to tell Me the things that you know will bring Me harm in the Sacrament of My Love. I am here sensitive to your tenderness. I ask you to keep silence at the delicate way in which I give you My secret thoughts. I love you to the point of doing the good I want to do for the good of souls."

One of the most profound dimensions of this appeal is that Jesus reveals the Eucharist as the place where He continues to make Himself vulnerable to human freedom. The Incarnation did not end at Bethlehem, nor did His vulnerability end at Calvary. In the Eucharist, Christ still places Himself into human hands, allowing Himself to be approached with love or indifference, reverence or carelessness, faith or unbelief . When Jesus says, "Do not fear to tell Me the things that you know will bring Me harm in the Sacrament of My Love," He is inviting souls into a form of Eucharistic friendship that few understand. The prophet Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 8:4-9) heard God lament that Israel had rejected divine kingship . Nehemiah (cf. Neh 1:3-4) wept when he learned that Jerusalem lay neglected and broken . Likewise, Christ allows certain souls to perceive the wounds caused by modern neglect of His Eucharistic Presence.  Think about the Catholic who can't spend ten minutes in front of the Blessed Sacrament but spends hours scrolling through a phone. Think about the parish where the tabernacle is not the residence of the King of Kings, but rather is viewed more like furniture.Think of the church that becomes quiet during a football game but is still preoccupied during Mass. Consider the countless tabernacles throughout the world where Jesus remains physically present while few come to adore Him. These realities are not merely liturgical problems; they are signs of wounded love. St. Carlo Acutis spent countless hours drawing young people toward Eucharistic devotion.   St. Paschal Baylón often remained before the Blessed Sacrament long into the night. The appeal teaches that Jesus seeks souls who will not simply observe these wounds but will bring them lovingly into conversation with Him, allowing His sorrows to become their own .

Another deeply mystical dimension appears in the words, "I am here sensitive to your tenderness." This reveals a startling truth: the Heart of Christ remains attentive to even the smallest expressions of love. Throughout Scripture, God repeatedly notices gestures that others overlook. He noticed the oil poured by the widow (cf. 1 Kgs 17:12-16) during famine . He noticed the simple lunch (cf. Jn 6:8-13) offered by a boy before the multiplication of loaves . He noticed the widow's two small coins (cf. Mk 12:41-44) placed quietly into the treasury . Divine love sees differently from the world. In an age obsessed with achievements, influence, recognition, and visibility, Our Adorable Jesus reveals the immense value of hidden tenderness toward Him. The world often measures greatness by what is noticed, applauded, or celebrated, but the Heart of Christ delights in acts of love that may never be seen by anyone else . Consider the janitor who enters a church before work and quietly greets Jesus in the tabernacle, offering the first moments of the day to the One who waits in silence . Consider the teenager who kneels reverently before the Blessed Sacrament while others remain distracted or indifferent, choosing worship over self-consciousness . Consider the nurse who stops briefly at a chapel after an exhausting shift and entrusts suffering patients to the Sacred Heart, carrying before God those whose pain she cannot fully relieve . Consider the farmer who pauses in the middle of a field to pray the Angelus, sanctifying ordinary labor by remembering the mystery of the Incarnation . Such actions rarely attract attention, yet they delight the Heart of Christ, who sees what is hidden and treasures every act of love offered in secret . The saints understood this mystery. St. Joseph Cafasso spent hidden hours praying for prisoners whom society had forgotten, carrying their souls before God with quiet compassion. Tenderness is powerful because it is one of the purest forms of love: it seeks no recognition, asks for no reward, and remains faithful even when unnoticed . The Eucharistic Heart responds deeply to such love because tenderness mirrors the humility of Christ Himself, who remains hidden beneath the appearances of bread and wine, silently offering Himself for the life of the world .

A further dimension concerns Christ's request to keep silence regarding His secret thoughts. This stillness is an internal attitude that fosters the development of heavenly mysteries within the soul, not just an external one. Many of God's greatest works were first revealed in secret throughout Scripture.  Tobit (cf. Tob 2:1-14) spent years walking faithfully through suffering without understanding God's plan . Anna the prophetess served in quiet prayer and fasting for decades before witnessing the Messiah (cf. Lk 2:36-38). John the Baptist (cf. Lk 1:80) spent years in the wilderness before his public mission began . The spiritual life often unfolds in a similar manner. Many souls desire immediate clarity, immediate answers, and immediate spiritual certainty. God frequently works through gradual illumination. A person may receive an interior conviction during adoration but not fully understand it for years. A parent may carry a hidden burden of prayer for a child long before seeing any change. A priest may remain faithful through decades of ordinary ministry before discovering the fruit of his sacrifices.  Venerable Fulton Sheen attributed much of his apostolic fruitfulness to his daily Holy Hour, where many inspirations remained hidden before bearing fruit publicly. The appeal teaches that certain graces should first be contemplated before they are explained. Sacred silence protects divine seeds from being uprooted by pride, impatience, or human curiosity. It creates space for God to complete His work according to His timing rather than ours .

Another remarkable insight emerges from the words, “I love you to the point of doing the good I want to do for the good of souls.” Here, Our Adorable Jesus reveals that His providence is constantly at work beneath the visible surface of life, guiding events toward purposes often hidden from human sight . Human beings frequently become discouraged because they judge reality by immediate outcomes, visible success, or apparent failure . Yet Christ sees the entire journey, not merely the present moment. What appears fruitless may be preparing abundant grace; what seems delayed may be unfolding according to divine wisdom . The contemplative soul gradually learns that God is always accomplishing good beyond what can be seen, heard, or measured, working tirelessly for the salvation and sanctification of souls even when His action remains hidden . Yet Scripture repeatedly reveals God accomplishing salvation through unexpected pathways. The young slave girl (cf. 2 Kgs 5:1-14) in Naaman's household became the instrument of his healing . The pagan king Cyrus unknowingly fulfilled God's purposes for Israel (cf. Is 45:1-6). The imprisonment of Paul became an occasion for the spread of the Gospel (cf. Phil 1:12-14). In ordinary life, God continues to work this way. A delayed job opportunity prevents a person from entering a harmful environment. A painful disappointment redirects someone toward a deeper vocation. A season of loneliness becomes the birthplace of prayer. A family crisis leads relatives back to the sacraments. A young adult questioning faith encounters an unexpected witness whose example changes everything. The saints repeatedly testified that God's most important works often remain hidden for long periods. St. Josephine Bakhita eventually recognized grace operating through circumstances she once considered meaningless. St. André Bessette spent decades performing humble tasks while God quietly touched countless souls through his ministry. Divine love remains active even when human eyes perceive only confusion. Christ's Heart continues working for the salvation of souls long before visible fruits appear (cf. Is 55:8-11; Rom 8:28).

At the highest mystical level, this appeal reveals that Our Adorable Jesus desires souls who will become custodians of His Eucharistic concerns. Such souls gradually cease living primarily for their own needs and begin carrying within their hearts the desires, sorrows, and saving love of Christ for the world . United to His Eucharistic Heart, they learn to see souls as He sees them and to intercede as He continually intercedes before the Father . Sacred Scripture offers striking examples of this spiritual maturity. Queen Esther risked her safety and position for the salvation of her people, (cf. Est 4:16) placing their welfare above her own security . Judith carried concern for Israel when others were overwhelmed by fear and discouragement, becoming an instrument of God's deliverance through courageous faith . St. Catherine Labouré silently accepted a heavenly ministry in the Church's life without asking for acknowledgement, letting grace operate through covert obedience. A significant truth is revealed by these witnesses: holiness matures as the soul starts to care about the things that Christ cares about.  The contemplative heart no longer asks only, "Lord, help me," but increasingly prays, "Lord, let me help carry Your concern for souls" . In this way, the soul becomes a living extension of the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus, silently participating in His mission of love and redemption . In practical life, this vocation appears in countless hidden ways. A monk intercedes for young people she will never meet. A teacher offers daily frustrations for struggling students. A seminarian prays for future parishioners. A widow offers loneliness for priests. A businessman sacrifices personal gain to remain faithful to the Gospel. Such people become extensions of Christ's concern for humanity. They no longer ask merely how God can help them; they begin asking how they can console, accompany, and cooperate with Him. Their lives become places where the secret thoughts of Christ continue to bear fruit. This is the ultimate invitation of the appeal: to become so united with the Eucharistic Heart that His hidden desires, His sorrow for souls, His mercy toward sinners, and His longing for the Father's glory become the governing force of one's entire existence (cf. Col 3:1-4; CCC 521).

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, grant us tender hearts attentive to Your Eucharistic sorrows. Teach us to console You with reverence, guard Your confidences in sacred silence, and trust Your hidden work for souls. Make us faithful friends of Your Sacred Heart, living only for Your glory and the salvation of souls. Amen.

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

Many Flagellations in These Terrible Days

Divine Appeal Reflection - 145

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 145: "My Eternal Father’s anger is cast down on this world. These are terrible days. Do not be afraid of seeing many flagellations."

Flagellations signify trials, sufferings, and purifying chastisements that God, in His wisdom and mercy, permits for the conversion of hearts, the purification of His people, and the salvation of souls . They are not signs of divine abandonment but reminders that God continues to act within history, calling humanity back to Himself . One of the most profound and often overlooked dimensions of this appeal is that the worst flagellations are not necessarily wars, disasters, epidemics, economic collapses, or social upheavals. The most terrible flagellations often occur invisibly within the human soul. Scripture repeatedly reveals that one of God's severest judgments is permitting people to persist in their chosen blindness when they continually reject grace (cf. Rom 1:21-28). Before Jerusalem (cf. Jer 5:1-3) was destroyed externally, it had already become spiritually desolate internally . Before Samson lost his physical strength, he had already lost vigilance and intimacy with God (cf. Judg 16:20). Before Judas (cf. Jn 13:27) betrayed Christ outwardly, he had gradually permitted darkness to take root in his heart . This pattern remains visible today. A soul slowly abandons prayer, not through rebellion but through neglect. Daily Mass becomes occasional Mass. Occasional Mass becomes rare Mass. Confession disappears. Conscience becomes less sensitive. Sin gradually appears normal. Eventually, the person may retain religious language while losing spiritual life. This interior desolation is a hidden flagellation. 

Many modern people suffer from this condition without recognizing it. They may possess opportunities, comfort, education, success, relationships, and endless forms of entertainment, yet still carry a profound interior emptiness. The human heart was not created merely for achievement, pleasure, or self-fulfillment; it was created for communion with God . When God is no longer at the center of life, even good things gradually lose their ability to satisfy the deepest longings of the soul. What initially appears as fulfillment often gives way to restlessness, dissatisfaction, and an unspoken sense that something essential is missing . St. Augustine recognized this spiritual reality through his own experience. After pursuing knowledge, success, pleasure, and worldly ambitions, he discovered that the human heart remains restless when separated from its true source and final end, which is God (cf. Ps 42:1–2; CCC 30). This restlessness is not a defect but a divine sign. It is the soul's hidden memory of the One for whom it was created. Beneath many modern forms of anxiety, boredom, and dissatisfaction often lies a deeper spiritual hunger—a longing not merely for something more, but for Someone greater (cf. Jn 4:13–14; Jn 6:35). Thus, what appears to be emptiness may become an invitation of grace, calling the soul to return to the God who alone can satisfy its infinite desire for truth, beauty, love, and eternal life . Such spiritual blindness (cf. CCC 1865; CCC 2094) is more dangerous than physical suffering because it affects eternity itself .

Another deeply human dimension of flagellations is that they frequently emerge through the consequences of collective sin. Modern culture often separates personal morality from social realities. Scripture does not. When Israel abandoned God, the consequences eventually affected families, institutions, leadership, culture, and national stability (cf. Judg 2:11-19). The prophet Hosea (cf. Hos 4:1-3) described how widespread infidelity gradually corrupted every layer of society . The appeal invites us to recognize similar realities today. Consider families where several generations no longer pray together. Consider children raised without any knowledge of God.  Think about the normalisation of euthanasia, abortion, pornography, dishonesty, and disdain for the truth.Think about the millions of people who suffer from loneliness while having continual access to the internet.  Despite the remarkable advancements in technology, young people are seeing an increase in worry. These realities are not merely sociological problems; they reveal spiritual wounds affecting entire cultures . A society cannot reject divine order indefinitely without experiencing consequences. Yet the deepest tragedy is not that God punishes; it is that human beings often create their own suffering by separating themselves from the source of life . St. Catherine of Siena frequently taught that many afflictions arise because humanity resists the order established by divine wisdom. The appeal therefore calls souls not primarily to speculate about future punishments but to examine how present disorders already reveal the consequences of living without God .

A particularly striking mystical dimension appears in the words, "Do not be afraid of seeing many flagellations." Jesus does not say that difficult events will not occur. He says not to fear them. This distinction is crucial. Noah (cf. Gen 6:9) witnessed corruption on a scale rarely seen in history, yet he walked with God . Lot (cf. Gen 19:15-17) lived amid moral collapse in Sodom, yet divine providence remained active . The Apostles lived amid persecution, political instability, imprisonment, rejection, and the constant threat of martyrdom, yet they remained filled with supernatural hope because their confidence rested not in circumstances but in the risen Christ . Having witnessed the victory of the Resurrection, they understood that no earthly power could ultimately overcome God's plan . Their joy did not arise from security but from communion with Christ. Fear becomes spiritually dangerous when it eclipses trust in God and begins to dominate the imagination more than divine providence . Today many Christians are constantly exposed to news of crises, scandals, disasters, conflicts, economic uncertainty, moral decline, and social upheaval. Some become absorbed in predicting catastrophes, while others grow weary, discouraged, or paralyzed by anxiety . Yet Jesus consistently redirects attention away from fear and toward fidelity, vigilance, prayer, and perseverance . When plague devastated communities, St. Charles Borromeo increased his pastoral care and sacrificial service.   St. Marianne Cope embraced the same mission with heroic tenderness, seeing Christ where others saw only danger and suffering. Their response to crisis was not withdrawal into fear but deeper charity, stronger faith, and greater trust in divine providence . The Christian soul is called to become more prayerful, more Eucharistic, more sacramental, more trusting, and more charitable precisely when the world becomes more unstable . Throughout salvation history, God has often manifested His power most clearly during periods of apparent darkness . Therefore, the darkness of an age should not diminish confidence in God but intensify it. The darker the night, the more brightly the light of Christ shines for those who place their trust in Him (cf. Jn 1:5; Rom 5:3–5; Phil 4:6–7).

At the deepest mystical level, the appeal reveals that flagellations are ultimately ordered toward purification, not destruction. Divine love often permits painful awakenings when gentler invitations have been ignored . Consider the prodigal son (cf. Lk 15:14-17). He discovered the truth about himself not during prosperity but during famine . Consider Nebuchadnezzar (cf. Dan 4:28-37), whose humiliation eventually led him to acknowledge God's sovereignty . Consider Peter, (cf. Lk 22:61-62) who encountered profound conversion through the pain of his denial . Throughout history, periods of crisis have often produced extraordinary saints. St. Teresa of Avila emerged during widespread religious confusion.. St. Faustina received the message of Divine Mercy amid the shadows preceding global conflict. God frequently raises saints precisely when darkness increases . This appeal therefore calls souls not merely to fear chastisements but to become instruments of mercy within them. The proper response is deeper prayer, Eucharistic adoration, reparation, fasting, fidelity to one's vocation, devotion to the Sacred Heart, trust in Divine Mercy, and concern for the salvation of souls . The greatest flagellation is not suffering itself but remaining unconverted after receiving countless graces. The greatest protection is not escape from every trial but living so deeply within Christ that even the darkest events become occasions for greater faith, greater hope, and greater love . In the end, the tears of blood flowing from the Heart of Jesus reveal that mercy continues to seek humanity even in the midst of judgment, because His final desire is not condemnation but the salvation of souls .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, as the world passes through confusion, suffering, and uncertainty, keep our eyes fixed upon You. Let us never be overcome by fear, but grow more prayerful, more faithful, more Eucharistic, and more charitable. Strengthened by Your Presence and sustained by Your mercy, may we persevere with joyful hope, carrying our crosses in union with Yours until the day we behold You face to face in eternal glory. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 145

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I have nothing more precious than souls of mankind.”

“My daughter, listen to My words of tears. I am calling you to pray and to do penance and receive Me in atonement for all the offences and abuses against Me. For the great love of mankind I am above this world. Listen to Me. I have a very important message. It is only prayers that can save this world. My Eternal Father’s anger is cast down on this world. These are terrible days. Do not be afraid of seeing many flagellations. With My tears of blood I want to cover this corrupt world.

This earth is full of terror and the devil has taken possession of souls. What a pain! Mankind does not want to repent! Pray a great deal. Do not fear to tell Me the things that you know will bring Me harm in the Sacrament of My Love. I am here sensitive to your tenderness. I ask you to keep silence at the delicate way in which I give you My secret thoughts. I love you to the point of doing the good I want to do for the good of souls. I am in great need of saving souls. Keep silence. I have nothing more precious than souls of mankind. I beg you to be humble. Loosen yourself for the sake of souls.

Follow My voice for it will lead you to co-operate and hunt more souls for Me. Time is short. The devil already knows how short it is. From My Divine Mercy I speak and call back souls. Listen to My crying voice.”

“I bless you.”

3.30 a.m., 18th 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).