ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL
VOLUME 1
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 136: "My Heart is bleeding for the marriages in which My Sacrament has been suppressed. Too many insults and abuses. I have no rest in the prison of My tabernacle yet I do not want anyone to perish"
There are words in the spiritual life that should make the soul tremble in holy silence, and this Divine Appeal belongs among them. Our Adorable Jesus does not merely say that He is saddened by wounded marriages; He says His Heart is bleeding. Such language reveals a sorrow profoundly mystical, deeply relational, and painfully intimate. Christ speaks not as distant Judge but as wounded Bridegroom. Marriage, from the beginning, was never simply social structure or emotional companionship; (cf. Gen 2:18–24) it was intended to become an earthly sanctuary where divine love could quietly dwell between two imperfect souls learning fidelity . Every sacramental marriage was designed to reveal something of Christ’s covenant with His Church (cf. Eph 5:25–32). Thus, when the sacrament is suppressed, heaven loses one of its visible signs in the world. The Catechism teaches that marriage participates in the covenant of salvation itself, possessing dignity rooted in God’s own faithful love (cf. CCC 1601–1617). Yet suppression often happens invisibly. Sometimes Jesus is removed not through rejection but through neglect. A couple once prayed together before sleep but now silently scrolls separate screens until exhaustion wins. A husband still provides materially yet no longer listens deeply to his wife’s hidden grief. A wife carries silent disappointments for years until affection becomes politeness. Some homes still display crucifixes while resentment quietly occupies the center. Christ bleeds because sacramental love has become survival instead of communion.
The phrase “My Sacrament has been suppressed” reveals a devastating spiritual tragedy hidden beneath ordinary appearances. Suppression does not always mean public abandonment; often it occurs through gradual displacement, where what is sacred slowly loses its living place within daily life. The sacrament remains legally intact while spiritually suffocated. Our Adorable Jesus remains mystically present, yet no longer consciously welcomed into the rhythms of the home or heart . Outwardly, life goes on—birthdays are celebrated, school fees are paid, meals are prepared, and obligations are met—but the covenant itself silently starves.What appears stable outwardly may conceal an interior famine, where love for God is not openly rejected but gradually displaced . Prayer becomes less regular, forgiveness is postponed, faith is seldom expressed, and God progressively takes a backseat to urgency, fatigue, or distraction. Sacred Scripture (cf. Mt 24:12) repeatedly warns that love may grow cold not only through rebellion, but through neglect . Thus, spiritual suppression often begins silently: not when Christ leaves the home, but when hearts slowly cease making room for Him (cf. CCC 1647, 1657). Scripture repeatedly reveals that great collapses begin with forgotten intimacy. Israel did not abandon God overnight; (cf. Deut 8:11–20; Jer 2:32) covenant erosion began through subtle forgetfulness . Likewise, marriages rarely break suddenly. Tiny unattended wounds accumulate. Pride becomes normal. Apologies become rare. Affection turns mechanical. Small acts of care disappear unnoticed. The husband once waited eagerly to hear his wife’s thoughts, but now responds distractedly while checking messages. The wife once admired her husband’s efforts, yet years of disappointment have quietly hardened gratitude into criticism.Beneath ordinary routines, the covenant may begin suffering silently, longing not merely for solutions, but for healing, patience, honest conversation, and grace . One couple remains outwardly peaceful, yet unresolved wounds from past betrayals are never spoken about, slowly creating quiet separation. Another couple endures financial difficulties, but with ongoing stress, they gradually lose their emotional softness. Saint Francis de Sales repeatedly warned that gentleness sustains charity inside ordinary relationships, while Saint John Chrysostom described family life as a small church entrusted with holiness. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1641–1642) teaches that sacramental grace strengthens spouses precisely amid weakness, sacrifice, and daily burdens . Jesus bleeds because many marriages carry invisible starvation of grace while outwardly appearing fine.
The words “Too many insults and abuses” penetrate even deeper because Christ unveils wounds hidden behind closed doors—wounds often invisible even to parish communities. Abuse does not begin only with violence; often it begins with the slow erosion of reverence. In sacramental marriage, spouses become entrusted mysteries, sacred persons meant to reveal God’s tenderness to one another. Thus, every humiliation wounds not merely affection but something holy. Scripture (cf. Prov 15:1–4; Jas 3:5–10) warns repeatedly about the destructive force of speech . Yet modern suffering often hides beneath ordinary routines. Jesus bleeds for the wife who carefully measures every sentence because she fears ridicule at dinner. He suffers when pornography quietly steals emotional intimacy, when financial secrecy erodes trust, when emotional withdrawal becomes silent punishment, and when bitterness turns ordinary conversation into relational conflict. Beneath these fractures, love is not always destroyed at once, but slowly weakened through secrecy, avoidance, and hardened hearts . Saint Monica turned familial suffering into patient intercession through protracted grief and constant prayer. Their witness reveals that even in prolonged wounds, fidelity and prayer can quietly become instruments of healing and restoration in God’s time . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2204–2206) calls family life a school of mutual self-giving where forgiveness, patience, and communion must be learned daily . Jesus especially bleeds for children who silently absorb fear, learning distorted images of love before they possess words to describe pain.
This appeal also unveils an apostolic wound reaching beyond individual homes into the entire Body of Christ. Marriage is not private reality alone; every wounded covenant weakens communal witness. Contemporary culture increasingly trains hearts to fear permanence, prize self-protection, and mistake emotional intensity for enduring love. Digital distractions steal presence. Exhaustion replaces attentiveness. Comparison poisons gratitude. Some spouses, without intending open betrayal, begin to look for emotional refuge outside the marriage in quiet, hidden ways: long online conversations that feel easier than difficult dialogue at home, work becoming an escape from silence in the relationship, private fantasies that replace honest intimacy, or addictions that numb what has not been spoken aloud . Sometimes it is not another person, but distance itself that becomes the refuge—staying busy, staying distracted, staying emotionally unavailable . In such moments, the heart is not always trying to destroy love, but to survive what it feels unable to carry. These patterns rarely begin with clear decisions; they grow slowly in places where pain is not named and vulnerability feels unsafe . Yet what is hidden eventually affects what is shared. Trust thins. Conversation shortens. Presence becomes physical but not interior. And still, beneath all of it, grace continues to call both hearts back—not through accusation, but through truth that heals and love that patiently rebuilds what silence has strained .
Yet holiness in marriage was never meant to resemble perfection. Consider the Holy Family: (cf. Mt 2:13–23; Lk 2:41–52) uncertainty, displacement, hidden sacrifice, misunderstood suffering, and economic hardship formed part of their ordinary life . Saint Joseph protected family life through quiet faithfulness rather than dramatic speeches, (cf. Lk 2:19, 51) while Mary remained faithful through mysteries she could not fully understand . The Catechism describes the Christian family as a domestic church where faith becomes visible through ordinary acts of love . In this light, Our Adorable Jesus carries the hidden suffering of families with deep tenderness: migrant spouses separated by continents, elderly couples walking slowly through the trials of memory loss, young parents exhausted by sleepless nights, spouses grieving miscarriage in silent sorrow, and faithful husbands or wives praying alone because the other no longer believes . In each of these unseen burdens, Christ is not distant but profoundly present, sustaining love where it is stretched, wounded, or reduced to quiet endurance.
Beneath this sorrow, one hears a deeper mystery: Christ “bleeds,” so to speak, because He has not ceased loving wounded marriages (cf. Lk 19:41; Heb 4:15). Divine sorrow is never hopeless; it is always redemptive, always oriented toward restoration. Cana (cf. Jn 2:1–11) remains eternally relevant because Jesus entered a wedding precisely at the moment when hidden insufficiency became visible . He still enters homes where wine is running out—where tenderness, patience, trust, affection, or hope seem depleted. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1648–1651) teaches that sacramental grace continually sustains and renews marriage whenever spouses return humbly to divine mercy . In this light, no marriage lies beyond the reach of grace so long as even one heart remains open to prayer, forgiveness, and patient love . Our Adorable Jesus does not abandon the depleted home; He remains quietly present within it, sustaining what appears weakened and gently calling it back toward communion. Even where love feels diminished, His mercy continues to work unseen, inviting renewal through patience, humility, and persevering fidelity . Jesus stands beside the husband quietly relearning tenderness after years of emotional distance. He remains near the wife courageously risking vulnerability again after betrayal. He strengthens the spouse praying alone in adoration for restoration no one else believes possible. He consoles widows grieving faithful love and abandoned spouses carrying unbearable loneliness with dignity. One day, souls may discover that Christ had been kneeling silently inside their hardest marital years—gathering tears unnoticed, preserving fragile acts of forgiveness, strengthening invisible sacrifices, and transforming ordinary endurance into hidden holiness. The Heart bleeding for marriages is the very Heart still capable of resurrecting them.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, Your Heart bleeds for wounded marriages forgotten by tenderness and grace. Enter homes burdened by resentment, silence, betrayal, exhaustion, and hidden sorrow. Restore reverence where dignity has been wounded. Teach families sacrificial love so every covenant may reflect Your faithful Heart. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 135: "I want you to use your smile so that those who will come near you may come near Me. Who can bring Me closer to souls if not Me hidden in a soul like yours."
One of the quiet tragedies of modern life is not only suffering itself, but the growing conviction among many souls that they must carry suffering alone. Beneath ordinary routines, countless people move through homes, workplaces, schools, convents, hospitals, and parishes silently exhausted—appearing composed while inwardly burdened by disappointment, hidden grief, anxiety, spiritual fatigue, rejection, failure, or an ache no one notices . Many have learned to function while quietly forgetting how to hope. Into this hidden loneliness, Our Adorable Jesus offers a response so gentle it risks being underestimated: “Use your smile.” Yet divine tenderness often enters where grand solutions cannot. In Scripture, God frequently works through what seems small—a widow’s oil, a child’s offering, a word of encouragement, a simple act of mercy . A sincere smile, born of charity, can become a quiet refuge for a discouraged soul, a sign that someone still sees their humanity. What appears ordinary may carry invisible grace, because love often heals first through presence before explanation . Christ does not ask first for eloquent theology, public influence, or extraordinary holiness. He asks for something profoundly human because Incarnation itself is divine tenderness translated into approachable form . God entered humanity not through force but nearness. Scripture repeatedly reveals that hearts often opened because divine kindness became visible through ordinary encounter. Boaz noticed Ruth’s vulnerability before redemption unfolded (cf. Ruth 2:8–12). Barnabas restored courage to frightened believers through encouragement (cf. Acts 9:26–28). The Catechism teaches that every baptized soul participates in Christ’s mission to sanctify the world (cf. CCC 897–913). Jesus therefore longs to evangelize through faces transformed by grace. A receptionist quietly smiling at someone receiving devastating medical results, a bus conductor greeting passengers respectfully after humiliation at home, or a lecturer kindly encouraging a failing student may unknowingly interrupt despair. Some souls approach God first because someone’s gentleness made heaven feel possible again.
Hidden within this appeal lies a breathtaking theological mystery: Our Adorable Jesus desires to become humanly approachable through His people (cf. 2 Cor 3:2–3). The Incarnation did not end at Bethlehem; Christ continues making His tenderness visible through hearts transformed by grace . He chooses to console through human presence, encourage through patient listening, and restore hope through faces marked by mercy. Many people secretly thirst for tenderness while pretending strength. Some adults carry childhood wounds nobody ever noticed. Others stopped praying because suffering convinced them God had withdrawn. Jesus therefore says something astonishing: “Who can bring Me closer to souls if not Me hidden in a soul like yours?” This reveals mystical indwelling. Christ does not merely accompany holy souls externally; He desires to continue His earthly ministry through surrendered humanity . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1997; 260) teaches that sanctifying grace makes the human person a living dwelling place of the Trinity . This means that when charity flows through a soul, Christ Himself is mysteriously acting. St. Giuseppe Moscati made holiness visible through compassionate attention to the forgotten sick, revealing that charity often heals through presence before words. Likewise, St. Jeanne Jugan restored dignity to abandoned elderly persons through quiet tenderness, seeing Christ hidden in those society overlooked .The deepest evangelization often unfolds through profoundly human moments: the teacher quietly encouraging a student hiding discouragement, the ticketing agent greeting a weary passenger with unexpected kindness, the neighbor checking on someone grieving in silence, the shopkeeper treating a struggling customer with dignity instead of impatience, or the young person pausing to listen to someone everyone else ignores. Our Adorable Jesus often reaches wounded souls through ordinary gestures that quietly restore forgotten dignity .
Yet Jesus specifically speaks of a smile, and this deserves contemplation because not all smiles are equal. Some smiles are social habits; others become Eucharistic offerings carrying hidden sacrifice. Christian joy is not denial of pain but love refusing to surrender tenderness amid suffering (cf. Phil 4:4–9). There are souls whose smiles cost them something immense. Scripture (cf. 1 Sam 1:9–20) reveals hidden joy arising amid profound trials. Hannah prayed through deep sorrow before consolation arrived. Paul (cf. Acts 16:22–34) encouraged communities despite imprisonment and hardship . Saint Gianna Beretta Molla radiated serenity while embracing sacrificial love amid suffering, while Saint Josephine Bakhita transformed memories of brutal suffering into extraordinary gentleness. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1505, 1521) reminds souls that suffering united with Christ mysteriously participates in redemption . Thus, Jesus may ask for a smile precisely from wounded souls. The father anxiously waiting outside intensive care but still comforting younger siblings, the teacher quietly grieving miscarriage while remaining patient with noisy children, the university student struggling financially yet encouraging discouraged classmates, or the religious brother silently battling critical illness while welcoming retreatants warmly—all reveal hidden apostolic beauty. Heaven often enters the world through weary souls who still choose gentleness .
This appeal also dismantles a dangerous illusion: many souls believe evangelization belongs only to preachers, theologians, missionaries, or visible leaders. Yet Christ speaks to ordinary humanity. He suggests that hidden holiness itself becomes apostolic mission. Scripture repeatedly reveals God using ordinary people carrying interior availability. Joseph in Egypt preserved lives through faithful wisdom amid betrayal (cf. Gen 37–50). The servant girl of Naaman (cf. 2 Kgs 5:1–14) quietly pointed suffering toward healing . Lydia (cf. Acts 16:11–15) welcomed the Gospel through hospitality that nurtured early Christian community . Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati attracted many toward faith through joyful friendship, while Saint Katharine Drexel quietly transformed lives through generous compassion. The Catechism (cf. CCC 898–900) insists that lay faithful sanctify the world through ordinary responsibilities lived in grace . Therefore, Our Adorable Jesus desires to pass through farms, hospitals, courtrooms, banks, transport stages, classrooms, kitchens, seminaries, orphanages, workshops, and university hostels—hidden within willing souls (cf. Gal 2:20). He makes Himself present not only in sacred places, but in hearts that consent to love becoming concrete in ordinary life. The employee who welcomes newcomers with patience, the grandmother praying while preparing meals, the business owner who refuses corruption under pressure, or the stranger who notices someone silently crying at a bus stop can become unexpected thresholds of grace . Our Adorable Jesus often passes into hidden wounds through these quiet acts of fidelity clothed in ordinary life. Even a single moment of authentic kindness, offered in Christ, can open interior doors that words alone cannot reach . In such moments, grace works silently yet profoundly, quietly participating in the renewal of another soul and revealing that holiness is often transmitted through simple, faithful love.
Beneath this appeal rests a profoundly humbling mystery: Our Adorable Jesus entrusts a portion of His nearness to the world through His people . He chooses to make His compassion tangible through human hearts that consent to be formed by grace, so that His presence is not only believed, but quietly encountered in lived charity. This means the Lord continues to draw near through patience, mercy, and hidden fidelity offered in daily life . In this way, the soul united to Him becomes a living sign of His approach—so that others, often without realizing it, touch something of Christ’s nearness through simple human love. Divine humility appears almost vulnerable here. Christ who could reveal Himself in overwhelming glory chooses instead to approach many souls hidden within human tenderness. Some people will never open Scripture initially, attend retreats, or seek priests. Yet they may encounter Christ unexpectedly through a soul carrying hidden light. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1822–1829) teaches that charity manifests God’s life in visible ways and becomes witness stronger than words . Jesus therefore desires souls whose lives become gentle reflections of His Sacred Heart . Often in eternity, hidden meanings will be revealed: someone may approach and say, I was close to despair after grief, failure, addiction, loneliness, or humiliation—but your patience, your kindness, your simple attentiveness made me wonder whether God had not abandoned me after all. In that light, many will discover that Our Adorable Jesus was quietly passing through them all along, using ordinary tenderness transfigured by grace to draw wounded souls back toward hope . What seemed like small human gestures were, in truth, silent participations in His own merciful love, gently leading others home.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, live within us so completely that our thoughts reflect Your wisdom, our words echo Your gentleness, and our actions manifest Your mercy . When we feel weak or unnoticed, remind us that You often save souls through hidden sacrifices. Let our lives become silent invitations drawing hearts into communion with You. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 135: "In the Sacrament of My Love I collect miseries and make glorious things out of them."
The mystery does not end with Our Adorable Jesus gathering human misery; rather, the deepest wonder begins in how He mysteriously transforms it. To say that He “makes glorious things” reveals not simply improvement but divine transfiguration. In Catholic understanding, glory means participation in divine life itself—a process through which weakness becomes radiant with grace. The first mystery here is the mystery of Eucharistic alchemy, where Christ changes not circumstances alone but the interior substance of the soul. Just as bread and wine become His Body and Blood through divine action (cf. Lk 22:19–20; 1 Cor 10:16–17), surrendered human misery enters a hidden sacramental process. The Catechism teaches that through grace the human person becomes participant in divine life (cf. CCC 1996–2000, 460). A father burdened by repeated financial humiliation may not suddenly become prosperous, yet Christ slowly forms courage, tenderness, and dependence upon Providence within him. A young woman carrying emotional wounds may discover deeper compassion for suffering persons. A religious crushed by dryness may unexpectedly become guide for struggling souls. St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort contemplated how surrendered weakness offered to God becomes mysteriously reshaped into instruments of sanctity. Thus, glory often begins invisibly; Christ transforms misery first at the roots of identity. Shame slowly becomes humility, fear becomes surrender, loneliness becomes communion, and wounds become hidden openings through which divine tenderness enters the soul.
The second mystery is the mystery of Christified suffering, whereby misery ceases being meaningless and becomes united to the redemptive work of Christ. Human suffering alone often wounds, confuses, and isolates; yet suffering placed within the Eucharistic Heart becomes mysteriously fruitful. Scripture reveals repeatedly that God transforms affliction into participation in His saving purposes. Joseph passed through betrayal and imprisonment before becoming source of preservation for nations (cf. Gen 37; 50:20). Hosea transformed personal sorrow into prophetic witness of divine fidelity (cf. Hos 1–3). The Catechism (cf. CCC 618, 1508) teaches that suffering united to Christ mysteriously participates in redemption and intercession for others . What glorious things emerge? A mother grieving miscarriage may become refuge for other grieving women. A recovering addict becomes compassionate mentor for struggling souls. A priest wounded by past rejection develops unusual tenderness toward forgotten parishioners. A businessman surviving failure becomes unexpectedly detached from pride and more attentive to the poor. St. Gemma Galgani perceived suffering united to Christ not as abandonment, but as a hidden participation in divine love and redemptive grace . Glory, therefore, is not the absence of wounds, but their mysterious transformation. In the hands of Our Adorable Jesus, suffering may slowly become mercy instead of resentment, wisdom instead of despair, and apostolic fruitfulness flowing from places once marked only by pain .
The third mystery is the mystery of hidden resurrection, because Our Adorable Jesus often glorifies misery gradually, silently, and invisibly. Modern minds expect dramatic miracles, yet divine transformation frequently unfolds beneath ordinary life. Seeds (cf. Jn 12:24; Mk 4:26–29) disappear underground before bearing fruit . The Cross appeared like defeat before Resurrection unveiled hidden victory (cf. Lk 24:13–35). Likewise, Christ often transforms misery through unnoticed processes of purification. A student repeatedly failing yet persevering in trust slowly acquires resilience, humility, and wisdom. A spouse enduring years of misunderstanding may gradually become extraordinarily patient. A caregiver exhausted by caring for a sick relative discovers deep interior strength born from sacrifice. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2015, 1435, 2847) teaches that holiness grows through conversion, purification, perseverance, and grace . St. Jane Frances de Chantal endured profound grief, yet sorrow gradually expanded her heart into deep maternal compassion for suffering souls . Thus, the glorious works of Christ often remain hidden from worldly eyes. Our Adorable Jesus may not immediately remove suffering, but He quietly transforms the one carrying it, until mercy begins radiating from wounds once feared unbearable (cf. 2 Cor 4:7–11). Hidden glory often appears as gentleness replacing bitterness, hope surviving disappointment, purity emerging through struggle, and fidelity quietly maturing through silence .
The fourth mystery is the mystery of apostolic multiplication, because Christ never glorifies misery for the individual alone. What is surrendered in the Eucharist mysteriously blesses others. Scripture repeatedly reveals God multiplying surrendered poverty into communal blessing. The Boy with the Loaves and Fishes (cf. Jn 6:1–14) offered little, yet Christ multiplied it for multitudes . Job emerged from suffering with deeper intercessory authority (cf. Job 42:7–10). The Catechism teaches that every Christian participates in Christ’s priestly mission through offering life spiritually to God (cf. CCC 901, 1368). A father silently carrying worries while remaining gentle shapes emotionally secure children. A widow offering grief for priests invisibly strengthens vocations. A nurse bringing emotional exhaustion into Eucharistic prayer develops extraordinary tenderness toward suffering patients. A youth resisting impurity silently witnesses holiness to friends. St. Damien of Molokai transformed suffering and fear into radical service among the abandoned. Glory emerges because Christ multiplies surrendered pain into healing, courage, holiness, and salvation beyond what the soul itself understands. No hidden suffering offered in love remains spiritually barren.
At the highest contemplative level lies the mystery of glorification through union. Ultimately, Our Adorable Jesus makes glorious things not merely by changing situations but by drawing souls into deeper participation in His own divine life. The Eucharist becomes the furnace where misery slowly loses isolation and enters communion with Christ. Scripture reveals this supreme mystery repeatedly: weakness becomes strength through grace (cf. 2 Cor 12:7–10), dying becomes living (cf. Rom 6:3–11), surrender becomes fruitfulness (cf. Jn 15:1–8). The Catechism (cf. CCC 460, 2014, 2028) teaches that the Christian vocation culminates in participation in divine glory through union with Christ . St. Elizabeth of Hungary transformed personal sorrow into profound charity because union with Christ enlarged love beyond suffering and self-concern (cf. Rom 8:28; Gal 5:6). Thus, the glorious works of God often remain hidden from worldly eyes, appearing instead as quiet sanctity, purified love, patient endurance, courageous mercy, Eucharistic joy, and apostolic fruit unseen on earth . A tired laborer who continues trusting, a mother persevering through hidden tears, a priest remaining faithful through discouragement, or a young couple courageously beginning again after failure may become luminous souls, not because suffering disappeared, but because Christ quietly transformed misery into grace (cf. 2 Cor 4:16–17). In the Sacrament of His Love, nothing surrendered remains ordinary; everything entrusted to His Eucharistic Heart is mysteriously touched by eternity .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, present in the Holy Eucharist , receive all our misery—loneliness, fear, and brokenness. Purify and transform them into compassion and holiness. May our suffering become silent prayer, and our poverty become love offered for souls in Your merciful presence. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.