Divine Appeal Reflection - 142
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 142: "Pray and atone so as to appease this wrath before it is too late. Participate in the sacrifice of the Holy Mass for atonement."
One of the most neglected dimensions of atonement in the Holy Mass is that it becomes an act of love offered on behalf of those who do not love God in return. Every human heart can understand this mystery. A mother stays awake beside a sick child who cannot thank her, and a spouse continues loving through seasons of misunderstanding and distance. Genuine love does not wait to be repaid; it continues seeking the good of the beloved even when no response is received . This is precisely what Jesus does for humanity. He continues to love, seek, forgive, and offer Himself even when ignored, forgotten, or rejected . When a soul participates in the Holy Mass for atonement, it enters into this love of Christ and says, “Lord, let me love You for those who do not love You, adore You for those who neglect You, and thank You for those who never thank You.” In this way, the soul shares in the self-giving love of Christ, who offered Himself for the salvation of all, even those who did not yet recognize His love . This is precisely what Jesus does in every Mass. He continually offers Himself to the Father for souls who ignore Him, reject Him, blaspheme Him, or live as though He does not exist . Atonement means entering into this very Heart of Christ. As the soul grows in love, it begins to think less about itself and more about the Heart of Jesus. It quietly says, “Lord, I want to love You for those who do not love You, thank You for those who do not thank You, and remember You for those who have forgotten You” (cf Lk 17:15–18; Ps 116:12–14). This spirit of loving reparation animated saints such as Margaret Mary Alacoque and Claude de la Colombière, who understood that Christ desires friendship and love in return for His love (cf Jn 15:13–15). Consider the many tabernacles where Our Adorable Jesus waits in silence, the churches rarely visited for adoration, and the homes where prayer has gradually disappeared (cf Rev 3:20; Mt 26:40–41). A soul participating in Mass for atonement stands spiritually before all this neglect and simply says, “Jesus, I am here. I remember You. I love You.” Such love consoles the Heart of Christ because it freely responds to His forgotten and often unreturned love (cf Jn 19:25–27; Jn 15:9).
Another deeply human aspect of atonement is that it speaks directly to the burden of regret that many people carry for years, often in silence. A parent looks back and grieves time lost in pursuit of success, an elderly person remembers reconciliations never made, a mother carries sorrow over decisions that shaped her children, and a priest may recall souls he feels he did not serve as faithfully as he should have . These memories cannot be changed, and this is what makes them so heavy for the human heart. Yet in the mystery of the Holy Eucharist, Christ does not erase the past but enters it with mercy that heals what guilt cannot repair . In atonement,(cf Rom 8:28; Rev 21:5) these regrets are placed before Him, and what cannot be undone is offered to the One who can redeem even broken history . In this way, the soul learns that regret is not the final word—mercy is. These memories can become heavy because human beings cannot return to the past. The words spoken, opportunities missed, and wounds inflicted remain part of history . Yet the mystery of the Holy Mass reveals that while we cannot change the past, Christ can enter it with His redeeming mercy. What human hands cannot undo, divine love can heal, purify, and transform . Through atonement, the soul places its regrets into the wounds of Christ, trusting that His sacrifice is greater than every failure and that His mercy reaches places where human efforts can no longer go . The Mass becomes a place where sorrow is no longer imprisoned in the past but is offered to the One who can bring grace even from what was lost, teaching the soul to live not in guilt but in hope .
Yet at Mass, time itself touches eternity. The sacrifice of Calvary(cf. Heb 9:24-28; CCC 1366-1367) transcends every age because Christ's self-offering remains eternally present before the Father . This gives profound meaning to atonement. The soul brings its irreparable failures to the altar and places them into the wounds of Christ. Consider King David after his sin with Bathsheba . He could not undo the consequences of his actions, yet repentance opened a path for grace that reached deeper than the damage itself . In Scripture, even when the temporal effects of sin remain, God restores the soul that turns back to Him, as seen in David after his fall, where forgiveness did not erase history but renewed communion with God .Repentance, therefore, does not rewrite the past; it allows divine mercy to enter it, heal what guilt cannot fix, and transform sorrow into a place where grace can begin anew . Many people today suffer from hidden guilt. They attend Mass but carry silent burdens known only to God. Atonement allows those wounds to become places where mercy enters. The altar becomes the meeting place between human regret and divine redemption.
A particularly profound dimension of atonement is that it restores the forgotten art of carrying other souls before God in love. Modern culture often teaches self-focus, personal peace, and avoidance of burden, yet the Gospel reveals a different way of living—one where love becomes responsibility for others in charity . Yet the Gospel reveals that holiness grows through spiritual solidarity. Christ carried humanity upon His shoulders like the Good Shepherd (cf. Lk 15:4-7) carrying the lost sheep . At Mass, the Christian learns to carry others with Him. Consider a grandmother attending daily Mass for a grandson trapped in drugs. She cannot enter rehabilitation in his place. She cannot make his choices. Yet she can stand at the altar and offer him to Christ. Consider parents praying for a daughter who has abandoned the faith. Consider a seminarian carrying concern for future parishioners he has never met. Consider a nurse offering Mass for terminally ill patients. Consider a teacher praying for students growing up in spiritual confusion. This hidden apostolate is beautifully reflected in the lives of saints such as Monica, whose years of prayer, tears, and sacrifice helped obtain the conversion of Augustine of Hippo (cf Lk 18:1–8; Jas 5:16), and Veronica Giuliani, who continually offered her sufferings for sinners she would never meet (cf Col 1:24; 2 Cor 1:6). Their lives reveal that the most fruitful apostolates are often hidden, known only to God, yet powerful in their effects upon souls. Heaven alone will reveal how many conversions, reconciliations, vocations, and final graces were obtained because someone faithfully attended Holy Mass and spiritually carried another person to the altar of Christ . In this way, atonement becomes a form of spiritual motherhood and fatherhood. It allows ordinary believers to share in the Heart of Jesus, who desires that no soul be lost (cf Jn 10:14–16; 2 Pt 3:9). United to His sacrifice, they learn to carry others before God with patience, hope, and love, becoming hidden co-workers in Christ's mission of salvation (cf Gal 4:19; 1 Cor 3:9; Rom 8:29).
A dimension rarely considered today is that atonement transforms the ordinary frustrations of life into offerings of extraordinary value. Most people imagine sacrifice in dramatic terms, yet much of Christian atonement occurs through hidden fidelity. The saints consistently emphasized this. St. Frances of Rome discovered holiness amid household responsibilities. St. Gianna Beretta Molla united professional duties, motherhood, and sacrifice. Blessed Charles of Austria offered political humiliations and exile for his people. The same possibility exists today. A mother caring for an autistic child may unite her exhaustion to the offertory. A father working night shifts to support his family may offer fatigue at Mass. A young adult resisting temptations amid a culture hostile to purity may place that struggle upon the altar. A religious experiencing years of spiritual dryness may unite interior suffering to Christ at Mass. A widower facing an empty home may transform loneliness into intercession. These realities seem small when viewed through worldly eyes, yet when united to the Eucharistic sacrifice they become participation in Christ's redemptive love (cf. Col 1:24). The Mass teaches that nothing offered with love is wasted. Hidden sacrifices become channels of grace flowing toward countless souls.
At the highest mystical level, atonement in the Holy Mass is participation in the love and sorrow of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. The saints who entered most deeply into this mystery spoke less about punishment and more about love that remains unreturned. They understood that the greatest suffering of Christ was not physical pain alone, but the rejection of a love offered without measure (cf Jn 1:10–11; Jn 19:34; Lk 19:41–42).St. Gemma Galgani frequently contemplated the Passion because she perceived the pain caused by humanity's indifference to Christ's love. St. Catherine of Siena saw the Precious Blood as the bridge restoring communion between humanity and the Father . St. Peter Julian Eymard recognized Our Adorable Jesus in the Holy Eucharist as a "Prisoner of Love," remaining among His people, waiting patiently for hearts willing to receive Him . Thus, atonement in the Mass becomes far more than seeking forgiveness for sin; it becomes a loving response to Love Himself. The soul stands before Christ and, in quiet surrender, says: “Lord, I do not want Your love to remain unanswered” (cf 1 Jn 4:10,19; Rom 5:8).
In this movement, the Mass is no longer only about what the soul needs, but about what Christ has given and continues to give in His Eucharistic self-offering (cf Holy Eucharist; Lk 22:19–20; Heb 9:14). The heart learns to respond to divine love with love—faithfully, simply, and without delay (cf Jn 15:9–13; 2 Cor 5:14–15). United with His Eucharistic Heart, it offers adoration for indifference, gratitude for ingratitude, and love for those who do not yet know how deeply they are loved (cf Jn 15:9–13; Rev 3:20; 1 Jn 4:19). In this way, the Mass becomes a meeting of hearts, where human love is united to the infinite love of Christ for the salvation of the world. The deepest purpose of atonement is therefore not merely to repair the effects of sin but to enter the dispositions of Christ Himself. The soul begins to grieve over what grieves Him and rejoice in what glorifies Him. It stands with Mary at Calvary , remains awake in Gethsemane when others sleep (cf. Mt 26:36-46), and keeps watch before the Eucharist when the world rushes elsewhere. Eventually, the soul realizes that atonement is not something added to Christian life; it is mature love. It is the love that says, "Jesus, I desire that Your sacrifice not remain unanswered. I offer my prayers, sufferings, work, joys, disappointments, and entire life in union with Your Mass so that souls may be saved and Your Heart may be loved." This is the hidden vocation of every Christian who truly participates in the sacrifice of the Holy Mass.
Prayer
O Adorable Jesus, teach us to participate deeply in the sacrifice of the Holy Mass. May we unite our prayers, sufferings, labors, and sacrifices to Your perfect offering. Transform our hearts into living oblations of love, obtain mercy for sinners, and draw the whole world into Your redeeming sacrifice. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.