Translate

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.

Uniting All Our Ways to Jesus

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 85

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 85: "My Heart is all Love and it embraces all souls. I desire souls to unite themselves to Me in all their ways." 

Before this Appeal, the soul does not stand as a student before a lesson, but almost like a tired person who has finally found someone willing to listen without rushing them. It is the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus—not distant, not cold, but alive in a deeply human way: attentive, quietly waiting, never distracted by our distractions. This is a Heart that has known what it is to be left alone in a crowd, to give and not be understood, to grow tired in body and yet continue loving (cf. Jn 1:11; Jn 4:6; Mt 26:40–41; Heb 4:15). There is something disarming in this—God has not remained above our experience; He has entered into it. So when He says His Heart is “all Love,” it is not something polished or distant—it is a Love that has passed through real moments: the simplicity of a poor home, the repetition of ordinary days, the quiet ache of being overlooked, and the weight of suffering that was carried without being shared (cf. Lk 2:7; Mk 6:3; Is 53:3; CCC 516). There is no hesitation in Christ toward these souls. Like Peter, who could not hold together his promises yet still found himself met with a gaze that did not withdraw (cf. Lk 22:61–62), we begin to sense something almost unsettling in its tenderness: we are not avoided in our weakness—we are met there. And not in a general way.

 Christ’s love seems to notice details we ourselves overlook—the small habits we cannot break, the fears we do not explain to others,(cf. Ps 139:1–3; CCC 2560) the quiet patterns of our days that feel too ordinary to matter. It is as if nothing in us is too small to be seen, and nothing too fragile to be held. What makes this Appeal so deeply human is that it does not demand that we first fix ourselves. It gently interrupts that instinct we have—to clean up, to organize our thoughts, to become “better” before turning toward God. Instead, it meets us in the middle of unfinished thoughts, inconsistent efforts, and even silent avoidance. Like the father who ran toward his son before hearing a full explanation (cf. Lk 15:20), Christ’s Heart moves first. And this changes something quietly but profoundly: the soul realizes it does not have to perform to be received. It only has to stop running. In that moment—simple, unprepared, honest—union begins, not as something dramatic, but as something real.

To “unite in all their ways” reaches into one of the most quietly painful realities of being human: how easily we split our lives into compartments—one version of ourselves that prays, another that works, another that struggles silently where no one sees. We move through the day in fragments, offering God our “good” moments while keeping the rest to ourselves, almost as if He would not understand them. Yet Christ does not stand outside this fragmentation—He steps directly into it and gently gathers it. He does not begin by asking for perfection—He quietly looks for something more real: wholeness. He wants the part of you that feels steady and the part that quietly feels like it’s falling apart, the part that is attentive and the part that keeps drifting . Nothing in you is too inconsistent for Him to receive. In fact, these are not obstacles to union—they are the very places He chooses to enter and remain (cf. 2 Cor 12:9; Jn 1:14).This becomes very concrete in ordinary life. The student trying to focus but losing track again and again, the person navigating relationships that feel complicated and unresolved, the one carrying an inner tension they cannot easily explain—these are not moments where God steps back . They are the moments where He quietly draws closer. He does not wait for clarity or control; He meets us right in the middle of the unfinished. Like Martha, whose love was real but burdened with anxiety, we are not asked to abandon our responsibilities, but to let them become places where Christ is quietly present . And like Mary, we discover that even in the middle of activity, something within us can remain turned toward Him—not perfectly, but sincerely. It is a very human kind of union: imperfect, interrupted, but real.Slowly, this changes how we live ordinary moments. Beginning a task with a simple, interior offering, pausing for a brief and almost wordless prayer in the middle of work, choosing patience when irritation quietly rises, returning to God after suddenly realizing we have forgotten Him—these are small, (cf. Col 3:17; Ps 16:8; CCC 2697) nearly invisible movements of the heart . They often pass unnoticed even by ourselves, hidden within the flow of ordinary responsibilities. 

Yet within them lies a depth the world cannot measure. These are not empty gestures; they are real acts of love. And love, even when expressed in the smallest and most fragile ways, carries a true weight before God, who sees what is done in secret .  It is not the outward size or recognition of an action that matters, but the measure of love and intention placed within it . When life is lived in this way, something begins to shift quietly but profoundly. The day itself does not change externally—tasks remain, routines continue, interruptions still come—but their meaning deepens from within. Nothing remains merely routine or empty, because everything becomes capable of relationship with God . There is a hidden transformation taking place, often without feeling or visible sign.  What once felt disconnected now becomes part of a continuous offering, woven together by intention and love. Within this, there is something deeply Eucharistic, though often unnoticed. Just as simple bread and wine—ordinary elements of daily life—are taken, offered, and transformed into the living presence of Christ,(cf. Mt 26:26–28; Jn 6:56; CCC 1324, 1392). so too the unnoticed details of our lives can be drawn into Him. A routine task, a hidden effort, a moment of patience—when quietly offered—begins to carry His presence from within. And so union with Him does not occur outside the reality of life, but precisely within it: in what is unfinished, imperfect, and deeply human. It is there, in those very places, that love becomes real and God becomes near.

Yet this kind of love is not as easy as it sounds—it quietly asks more of us than we expect. If Christ’s Heart truly holds even those who ignore Him or cause pain, then being close to Him begins to change how we respond to people too (cf. Mt 5:44–45; Lk 6:36; CCC 1825). And this is where it becomes very real. It’s in those moments when you feel misunderstood and want to explain yourself, but choose silence instead—not out of weakness, but out of a quiet trust that God sees what others do not . It is there, in that restrained response, that love begins to take a deeper, more hidden form.When someone is distant, yet you still show kindness. When you feel hurt,(cf. Rom 12:17–21; CCC 2842) but decide not to pass that hurt on . These moments are small, but they are not easy. They touch something deep inside—the instinct to react, to protect, to withdraw. Yet slowly, like Joseph who remained steady without making noise about it, the heart learns a different kind of strength: a quiet, patient love that does not depend on how others respond . It doesn’t feel dramatic. Sometimes it even feels unnoticed. But it is real. And this is where something hidden begins to grow. A gentle response, a decision to stay kind, even a silent prayer for someone difficult—these carry more weight than they seem (cf. Jas 5:16; CCC 2635). They are simple, almost invisible ways that Christ’s own Love begins to move through us. And without realizing it, that Love starts reaching others too.

At the same time, the Appeal enters the hidden struggles within the soul—the places of inconsistency, weakness, and interior conflict. To unite ourselves “in all our ways” includes bringing even our failures into relationship with Him . Many souls unconsciously withdraw from God when they feel unworthy, yet this is precisely where His Heart draws closest. Like the prodigal son, who returned not with strength but with honesty , the soul discovers that union is deepened not by perfection but by trust. There is something profoundly human here: trying again after failing, turning back after distraction, choosing God even when it feels dry. These repeated returns are not insignificant—they are acts of love. The Cross reveals that Christ’s Love remains faithful even when we are not . In everyday life, this can be very simple and very human: offering one’s weakness to God instead of hiding it, quietly resisting small temptations, or choosing to pray even when nothing is felt and everything seems dry (cf. Ps 51:17; Lk 22:32; Jas 4:7–8; CCC 1428, 2728). These moments may seem insignificant, but they are real movements of the heart toward Him. From a Eucharistic perspective, this becomes a place of quiet healing—where one approaches Christ not as strong or put-together, but as needy and open, allowing His presence to slowly, patiently transform the heart from within .  The Appeal gently teaches that union grows through perseverance, not perfection.

Ultimately, this Divine Appeal leads the soul into a deeply personal friendship—a quiet, steady awareness that Christ is present in everything. This is not constant emotional intensity, but a simple, real closeness that grows over time . Like the disciples walking with Jesus on the road, often not fully aware yet gradually understanding , the soul begins to recognize Him in daily life: in moments of peace, in challenges, in unexpected graces. This transforms how life is lived. Nothing is wasted—not a struggle, not a small act, not even a moment of weakness when offered to Him. Like the Blessed Virgin, who lived ordinary days with extraordinary union , the soul learns to carry Christ within every situation. Practically, this means returning to Him often—short prayers, silent recollection, faithful reception of the sacraments, and a desire to remain with Him even in simplicity . Over time, this union becomes almost like a second nature—a quiet companionship. The Heart of Jesus is no longer distant; it becomes home. And the soul, living in that Love, begins to reflect it naturally to others, fulfilling the Appeal not in extraordinary ways, but in a life quietly transformed by Love.

Prayer 

O Heart of Our Adorable Jesus, so near to us in every moment, draw us into simple, faithful union with You. In our work, struggles, and hidden efforts, teach us to love as You love. Remain with us, transform us gently, and make our lives a quiet reflection of Your Heart. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 85

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“Love can no longer contain its devouring flame. For the love of souls I gave out My Divine Sacrament of Penance whereby in this Divine Sacrament of Penance I am only longing to forgive souls.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. Implore mercy for sinners.

I want to make your heart an altar. When you are in pain I rest and I rejoice to converse with you. My visits will never harm you. I want you to surrender yourself to be ready to undergo torments of the evil one indifferently. Do not fear. My Heart is all Love and it embraces all souls. I desire souls to unite themselves to Me in all their ways. I am thirsting for souls. I love souls so dearly that I have sacrificed Myself. Love can no longer contain its devouring flame. For the love of souls I gave out My Divine Sacrament of Penance whereby in this Divine Sacrament of Penance I am only longing to forgive souls. I remain here calling sinners to come back to My sheepfold. I want to pardon and reign over souls. I love those who after going astray come back to My forgiveness.

My peace must be extended over the entire universe. My appeal is to all. To each one of them I came to say if they desire they will find It in Me. It is My will to reign through reparation made by souls. My words are light and life for an incalculable number of souls. I will impart special graces by which souls may be enlightened and transformed.

I want them to form a league of love in order to teach and publish My Love and Mercy and how urgent it is. I want and need reparation to be told and grow among the faithful souls. For the world is full of sin and at this present moment nations are arousing the wrath of the Eternal Father.

Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart.”

“I give My blessing.”

3.00 a.m., 14th 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.