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Overflowing Mercy and Approaching Justice

Divine Appeal Reflection -78

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 78: "I have two measures  for every soul. First is of Mercy and it has overflowed. The second  is of Justice, it is approaching. Pray for more souls, watch and atone." 

In the mysterious pedagogy of God, mercy always precedes justice. Our Adorable Jesus reveals that the Father’s first movement toward humanity is not condemnation but compassionate invitation. Throughout salvation history, divine mercy appears as the first response to human weakness. Before the waters of the flood came, (cf. Gen 6–7) the world was given time to repent through the preaching of Noah . Before Jerusalem fell,(cf. Jer 7:23–26) prophets tirelessly warned the people, calling them back to fidelity . This pattern reaches its fullness in Christ, who comes not primarily as judge but as savior, offering reconciliation before the day of final judgment (cf. Jn 3:16–17). The Church (cf. CCC 210, 1846) teaches that God’s mercy flows from His very being and precedes His acts of justice . This truth becomes deeply practical in everyday life. A parent who patiently corrects a child before discipline mirrors God’s merciful approach. A teacher who offers a struggling student another opportunity reflects the divine heart. A spouse who forgives repeatedly rather than retaliating participates in the logic of mercy. Saints often recognized this divine patience. Many spiritual masters described God as tirelessly pursuing the soul long before allowing consequences to fall. Our Adorable Jesus silently repeats this same appeal today in the Eucharistic presence: “Return while mercy is still extended.” The quiet light of Eucharistic adoration becomes a living sign that divine patience continues to wait. The Lord does not rush to judgment; (cf. Rev 3:20) rather He patiently knocks at the door of the human heart . Mercy is always the first to arrive, like dawn before the full day. Only when kindness is continuously neglected does justice begin to restore truth and order.

Our Adorable Jesus uses His appeal about mercy to show mankind that God's grace extended to humanity surpasses their deserving capacity. The complete history of salvation demonstrates how God has given more than enough to humanity throughout time. The Gospel reveals that from Christ’s fullness humanity receives grace upon grace (cf. Jn 1:16). The Catechism (cf. CCC 457–460) teaches that the Incarnation itself is the greatest expression of divine mercy offered to a fallen world . Consider how this overflowing mercy manifests in daily life. Each sunrise is a new invitation to conversion. Every sacrament becomes a channel of renewed grace. The Eucharist offers Christ Himself again and again to nourish souls who often approach with weakness. The sacrament of reconciliation repeatedly restores those who fall. Even trials and sufferings can become instruments of purification through which God gently calls souls back to Him (cf. Heb 12:6–11). The saints frequently contemplated this ocean of mercy. Many spiritual writers observed that a soul may fall countless times yet still be welcomed back through sincere repentance. The prodigal son (cf. Lk 15:11–24) represents every human person who discovers that the Father’s compassion is far greater than human failure .In ordinary circumstances, this overflowing mercy appears in quiet opportunities: a moment of conscience before speaking harsh words, an interior call to forgive someone who has offended us, a sudden desire to pray during a busy day. These gentle invitations are touches of divine mercy upon the heart . 

Our Adorable Jesus often calls the soul through quiet movements of conscience—an urge to forgive, to pray, or to turn away from wrongdoing. Yet a tragedy of the modern world is spiritual indifference . When mercy is ignored or taken for granted, its abundance can quietly become a danger to the soul, for grace left unheeded may fail to bear fruit .  If the soul turns away from these invitations, even unconsciously, the seed remains dormant. Days pass, opportunities slip by, and the heart risks becoming numb to God’s tender movements . Yet when the soul responds—pausing to pray amidst busyness, forgiving a hurt, choosing integrity in small decisions—it nurtures the seed, allowing it to blossom into patience, humility, and love .Our Adorable Jesus meets each soul where it is, gently beckoning to accept mercy in ordinary life: in family struggles, work challenges, or quiet moments before the Blessed Sacrament . The call is simple yet profound: welcome mercy, cultivate it daily, and let it transform the heart into a dwelling place for God’s holiness.  The overflowing measure of grace is meant to awaken gratitude and conversion, not complacency . 

There is a general assumption that justice from heaven is diametrically opposite to mercy and that one of the two must replace the other. Justice and mercy are two harmonious expressions of God’s holiness, not conflicting forces . Mercy cures the sinner, whereas justice restores the order that sin has disrupted. Our Adorable Jesus demonstrates that justice is not retribution, but the restoration of truth and goodness.  The Catechism affirms that God’s justice flows from His wisdom and goodness, (cf. CCC 2008–2010) ensuring that creation ultimately reflects His righteousness . Sacred Scripture repeatedly reveals this harmony. At the final judgment described in the Gospel, (cf. Mt 25:31–46) Christ separates the just from those who rejected love . Yet this judgment does not arise suddenly or arbitrarily. It confirms the choices each soul has freely made. Justice simply reveals what the heart has become. This mystery can be seen in ordinary human experiences. A community cannot flourish without moral truth.  In a similar but infinitely deeper way, divine justice safeguards the moral structure of the universe. St. Augustine of Hippo reflected on how God restores order where sin has wounded it, while St. Thomas Aquinas described justice as giving to each what truth requires within God’s perfect wisdom. Many spiritual writers envisioned the day when every hidden act—both injustice and compassion—will be brought into the light before God . For those who have lived in fidelity, divine justice becomes a moment of immense consolation. Thus, mercy invites conversion while justice confirms truth. Both proceed from the same divine heart. 

The declaration that justice is approaching carries a profound spiritual gravity, reminding humanity that divine patience, though immense, is purposeful and directed toward conversion. Our Adorable Jesus continually calls souls to return to Him, yet the time for responding to grace belongs to the present moment entrusted to each person (cf. 2 Cor 6:2). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1427–1431) teaches that conversion is a lifelong turning of the heart toward God, involving sincere repentance and renewed fidelity . Divine mercy therefore grants time so that the soul may awaken before the final encounter with truth .Sacred Scripture expresses this urgency through prophetic voices. The mission of John the Baptist called Israel to repentance because the kingdom of God was drawing near . His message sought to awaken consciences that had grown comfortable with spiritual mediocrity. Likewise the prophets urged the people to seek the Lord while He could still be found .In modern life complacency often appears quietly. A professional may postpone prayer because of career ambitions, a student may delay moral decisions assuming time is endless, and a believer may maintain routine religious practice without deeper conversion (cf. Rev 2:4–5). Yet divine patience remains a gift: (cf. Col 3:12–14; CCC 1810) each day invites charity, humility, and renewed fidelity . Justice approaching therefore reveals the precious urgency of responding to mercy now.

The message that these two measures exist for every soul reveals the deeply personal nature of salvation. God does not deal with humanity merely as a collective reality; He addresses each individual heart with unique attention and love. The Catechism teaches that every person possesses an immortal soul called to communion with God and accountable for personal choices (cf. CCC 1703–1705).Mercy appears first in each life through countless invitations. From earliest years, the seed of holiness is nurtured: a youngster learns the value of prayer and devotion through the witness of faithful parents (cf. Dt 6:6–7; CCC 2226). As moral choices arise, the conscience begins to stir, guided by God’s whisper and forming the character of the soul (cf. Rom 2:14–15; CCC 1777). Adults, too, encounter grace in profound ways—through moments of suffering that deepen patience, acts of reconciliation that restore hearts, or unexpected generosity that reveals the presence of God’s love .  

Biblical figures illustrate these personal encounters with mercy. King David (cf. Ps 51; 2 Sam 12) experienced profound forgiveness after repentance for his sins . The apostle Peter  wept after denying Christ but was restored through divine compassion . Their lives demonstrate how mercy patiently calls individuals back to fidelity. Yet justice also belongs to each soul. All souls will face the truth about how they handled the grace offered them through this earthly pilgrimage. No action, choice, or thought remains hidden; the eternal measure of mercy and justice reveals itself in the light of divine holiness. The Gospel (cf. Mt 25:14–30) teaches that souls are accountable for how they used the gifts entrusted to them . Justice therefore confirms the spiritual direction freely chosen during life. This perspective transforms daily living. Every small decision carries eternal significance: choosing honesty in daily tasks, offering forgiveness to those who have wronged us, caring for the vulnerable, and dedicating time to prayer all shape the soul’s ultimate orientation toward God . Mercy continually stands at the threshold, inviting the heart to enter, yet each person freely chooses whether to respond. The persistent call of Our Adorable Jesus reminds us that even the most ordinary acts, when offered in love, participate in the work of salvation and deepen communion with the Divine . Thus the two measures are not abstract doctrines. They are living realities unfolding quietly within every human heart.

Mystical revelations of divine mercy and justice resound as tender invitations of love, never as instruments of fear or intimidation . Their ultimate goal is to arouse the depths of the human conscience, awakening the soul to the need for transformation, and to guide each individual down the path of holiness. Our Adorable Jesus speaks of justice not to frighten, but to enlighten the precious freedom of the human choice, indicating that love must be chosen and embraced wholeheartedly. Our Adorable Jesus speaks of justice not to instill fear but to illumine the necessity of freely chosen love, the very foundation of holiness . God’s ineffable desire is that all souls be saved and come to the knowledge of truth . The saints affirm that genuine conversion flows from trust in God’s mercy, not from dread. When the soul acknowledges both its frailty and divine compassion, it discovers the path to transformation . Mystics such as St. Teresa of Avila and St. Faustina Kowalska teach that sincere repentance opens the soul to profound intimacy with Christ . Conversion often begins through hidden acts suffused with grace: a laborer pausing before the Blessed Sacrament, a family humbly reconciling , a student choosing integrity amidst social pressure. These small gestures cultivate a heart attuned to divine will. The Eucharist manifests the sublime union of mercy and justice. In silent adoration, the soul apprehends both the infinite tenderness of mercy (cf. Ps 103:8; CCC 1846–1847) and the purifying rigor of justice . Mercy draws the wandering heart; justice sanctifies it; together they reveal the weight of human freedom. The call is urgent and loving: receive the overflowing mercy now,(cf. Rom 12:2; CCC 1432, 1810) and allow it to transform every dimension of life toward eternal communion with the Divine .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, Ocean of Mercy and Just Judge of every soul, awaken our hearts before the hour of justice arrives. Help us never presume upon Your patience but respond with sincere conversion. May every moment become a return to Your Heart, so that our lives reflect repentance, charity, and faithful love in all vocations. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 78

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I have two measures for every soul. First is of Mercy and it has overflowed. The second is of Justice, it is approaching.”

“My daughter, I speak to you amid tears. Save My pains. The pain is almost forcing My justice to act. The sins of mankind wound me deeply but not nearly so much as those of... I have two measures for every soul. First is of Mercy and it has overflowed. The second is of Justice, it is approaching. Pray for more souls, watch and atone.

You shall be the victim of My Presence in the Divine Sacrament. Through a bitter dislike for all that is not of Me I want to use you to save many souls. They have cost Me so dear. For the sake of souls do not refuse Me anything. I beg you not to desert Me. When I leave you prey to anguish your suffering wards off Divine Justice when it  is about to strike many sinners.

I have come to reveal to you the feeling of My Heart. Draw near to Me. When you see Me submerged in grief, rise and go with Me. Give Me company. Contemplate Me in the prison of My tabernacle. I endure cold, sleeplessness, hunger, thirst, pain and desertion. Pray for the soul that receives Me. How many days and nights should I spend longing for souls to come back? Shout out and assure them that I am thirsty for them. I love them all. I am calling them all into My sheepfold. These are grave moments. I am in the state of ignominy. What a pain from... blow after blow is discharged by the blasphemers. The Freemasons with whips and fretted cords strike me with such violence that My very bones are shaken and I am torn with innumerable wounds.

Pray and console Me. Implore mercy for souls. Let yourself be guided by grace and by the desire to console Me. My grace will help you to do whatever I ask of you. Do not fear. Give Me all the freedom over you. See the pains that I receive from My own...

Pray and cloister them in your heart. Put yourself in the high spirit of contemplation. I love mankind.”

“I give My blessing.”

2.30 a.m., 6th 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.

Eucharistic Exposition

Divine Appeal Reflection -77

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 77: "As I am exposed, I will pour My infinite mercy into human souls." 

There are moments in the life of the Church when heaven seems to quietly lean toward the earth. One of the most profound of these moments is Eucharistic exposition. The consecrated Host, already the true Body of our Adorable Jesus, is placed reverently within the monstrance so that the faithful may contemplate Him who remains hidden yet living among His people. This sacred act flows directly from the mystery instituted during the Last Supper, when Christ entrusted His Body and Blood to the Church as an everlasting memorial of His love . What appears outwardly simple is in reality an encounter with the living God who once walked the roads of Galilee(cf. Jn 6:51–58)and now remains sacramentally present for the salvation of souls . The Church(cf. CCC 1324) teaches that the Eucharist is the “source and summit” of the entire Christian life . Therefore, when the Host is exposed, the faithful do not merely observe a devotion; they stand before the mystery of divine humility. The posture of the body is usually kneeling, yet the deeper posture is interior adoration. The soul approaches with reverence, silence, and a certain trembling love ,(cf. Ex 3:5) much like Moses before the burning bush when he realized he stood on holy ground . In practical life this mystery becomes intensely personal. A worker burdened by responsibilities, a young person seeking direction, a parent carrying quiet anxieties may kneel before the exposed Host and realize that Christ Himself waits there.  The soul gradually discovers that Eucharistic exposition is not merely time spent in prayer but a living encounter where the gaze of our Adorable Jesus meets the fragile longing of the human heart .

Throughout the Church the practice of Eucharistic exposition takes many forms, yet all share the same purpose: to invite souls into deeper communion with Christ. In some parishes the Blessed Sacrament is exposed once each week, often recalling the night when the mystery began during the Last Supper . Other churches maintain perpetual adoration chapels where the Eucharist remains exposed day and night,(cf. Mt 26:38–40) allowing believers to keep spiritual watch with the Lord just as the disciples were invited to remain awake with Him in Gethsemane . In still other places the faithful participate in Eucharistic retreats where time is set aside for prolonged silence before Christ. Each of these practices reflects the Church’s unwavering belief that Jesus is truly present in the sacrament, not symbolically but substantially . St. John Vianney used to indicate the tabernacle while he declared that Christ resides there to await souls. He described the process by which a believer experiences a hidden transformation when they meditate in silence before the Eucharist because God observes their soul and the soul gradually learns to perceive God. This quiet exchange is profoundly transformative in daily life. A teacher seeking wisdom, a doctor burdened by difficult decisions, or a seminarian overwhelmed by uncertainty may find clarity simply by remaining before Christ. Like Mary, mother of Jesus, who pondered divine mysteries in her heart , the soul learns that silence before God often reveals truths that noise cannot uncover. Gradually Eucharistic exposition becomes a spiritual refuge where the heart regains perspective and the presence of Christ quietly reorders the priorities of life.

To approach Eucharistic exposition fruitfully requires not complicated techniques but a sincere disposition of heart. One begins with recollection—entering the chapel slowly, acknowledging that the Lord Himself is present . A simple prostration expresses faith in the real presence of Christ, (cf. Mt 2:11)echoing the humility of the Magi who knelt before the infant Savior . After kneeling, the soul may begin with gratitude, remembering the countless ways God has acted in one’s life. Then the heart may gently present its needs and struggles to our Adorable Jesus. Saints such as Teresa of Avila taught that prayer is essentially a loving conversation with God who loves us. Yet within Eucharistic exposition that conversation often deepens into silent contemplation. Words gradually diminish as the heart becomes attentive. This posture reflects the closeness of John the Apostle,(cf. Jn 13:23) who rested near Christ during the Last Supper . The soul discovers that it is sufficient to be in loving awareness of the Lord's presence without having to speak much. Many people find that including Sacred Scripture into Eucharistic adoration strengthens recollection and softly grounds their prayer.

Gazing upon the exposed Lord, they ponder His abiding promise to remain with His disciples until the end of the age (cf. Mt 28:20), realizing that this assurance is not distant but sacramentally fulfilled before their eyes . Others meditate upon His call to abide in Him as branches united to the vine (cf. Jn 15:4–5), understanding that adoration is the living expression of that communion. The Word once proclaimed along Galilean shores (cf. Mk 4:1–2) now resounds silently in the chapel, illuminating minds and steadying restless hearts . Through this contemplative rhythm, souls gradually learn to listen rather than speak, to receive rather than strive. The Catechism teaches that meditation engages thought, imagination,(cf. CCC 2705–2708) and desire in order to deepen faith and conversion . In the stillness where distractions slowly yield, Christ Himself begins to cultivate the interior garden. He gently reorders priorities, heals concealed wounds (cf. Ps 147:3), and inspires quiet resolutions aligned with the Father’s will . Over time, this hidden formation becomes visible in daily conduct: patience matures, forgiveness becomes freer (cf. Col 3:13), and trust replaces anxious self-reliance . Thus, in sacred silence, souls are shaped into living reflections of the One they adore.

The Church, faithful to her Lord, dares to proclaim that the Eucharist is the source and summit of everything we attempt to live (cf. CCC 1324; Lk 22:19–20; 1 Cor 10:16–17), not as poetry but as survival. When Our Adorable Jesus says, “Do this in memory of Me,” He entrusts to fragile hearts the very rhythm of His self-giving . St. John Paul II saw adoration as a hidden school where the soul slowly learns to remain in Him (cf. Jn 15:4–5), while Pope Benedict XVI contemplated the Eucharist as love that draws us inward before sending us outward . In this appeal, the promise that mercy pours forth as He is exposed becomes intensely personal: the same mercy that lifted blind Bartimaeus , defended the repentant woman (cf. Lk 7:44–50), and restored Peter’s wounded fidelity  now seeks our impatience, our secret fears, our hidden compromises. The Eucharist makes present the one sacrifice of Calvary , so that in ordinary weeks—crowded commutes, strained conversations, silent disappointments—grace quietly reshapes us. Before the Host, resentment bends toward mercy (cf. Mt 5:7), anxiety surrenders into trust (cf. Ps 56:3), and vocational confusion opens to wisdom (cf. Jas 1:5). A father softens his tone (cf. Col 3:21), a student studies with purity of intention (cf. Col 3:23), a friend carries another’s burden (cf. Gal 6:2). Exposition thus becomes profoundly human: Christ remains, waiting, so that our scattered lives may be gathered into His merciful Heart and returned to the world as living witnesses .

Every soul, regardless of its state in life, is summoned to a deeper intimacy with Christ through Eucharistic exposition . The call is universal: the religious cloistered in prayer (cf. 1 Cor 7:32–34), the seminarian burdened with study and self-discovery (cf. Prov 3:5–6), the parent laboring in tireless care (cf. Col 3:23–24), the worker navigating ethical and material challenges (cf. Eph 6:5–8)—all are invited to linger before the exposed Lord. This encounter is not reserved for a select few but is the shared privilege of every believer , a grace that transcends circumstance. In the silent gaze upon the Eucharist, the soul experiences both consolation and challenge, mercy and renewal , learning to carry the presence of Christ into every vocation, action, and relationship.  The Gospel portrays Mary of Bethany sitting attentively at the feet of Christ, choosing contemplation over distraction . Her posture illustrates the attitude required before the Eucharist. The Church(cf. CCC 1418; Jn 6:56; Lk 24:30–32) teaches that Eucharistic adoration extends and intensifies the grace first received in Holy Communion, allowing union with Christ to mature beyond the moment of reception . 

What begins at the altar continues in silence before the tabernacle, where love lingers and deepens. These small, hidden pauses—five minutes before work, a quiet stop after school, a whispered prayer during a lunch break—become seeds planted in grace . In such moments, distractions gradually lose their tyranny, resentments soften (cf. Eph 4:31–32), and the heart rediscovers its true center in Christ . What seems brief in time can bear eternal fruit . Even a short visit, offered in faith and humility, draws the soul closer to Jesus . Pausing before the tabernacle may bring patience to a parent (cf. Col 3:21), clarity to a student (cf. Jas 1:5), or integrity to a worker (cf. Col 3:23–24), turning ordinary days into living acts of love. A superior who entrusts convent concerns to Christ in adoration may find renewed strength to love generously. A young person kneeling before the exposed Host, uncertain about the future yet restless with desire for meaning, may begin to perceive the gentle but persistent whisper of God’s call .  The encounter of Paul the Apostle on the road to Damascus(cf. Acts 9:3–6; Gal 1:15–16) reveals how a true meeting with Christ overturns human calculations and redirects destiny . Blinded outwardly yet illumined within, Paul discovered that grace does not erase personality but purifies and sends it (cf. Phil 3:7–8). So too, before the Eucharistic Lord, ambitions are not crushed but transformed; fear yields to mission (cf. Jer 1:6–8), and uncertainty becomes availability . In that sacred stillness, Christ who calls each by name (cf. Jn 10:3–4) shapes a response that can quietly alter the entire course of a life. In the gentle radiance of the monstrance, our Adorable Jesus continues to form saints quietly. The soul that frequently returns to His presence gradually discovers that the Eucharist is not only a sacrament but a living friendship with the Lord who walks with His people until the end of time .

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, exposed in sacramental humility, expose our hearts to Your infinite mercy. Teach us to watch, to trust, to love in hidden fidelity. Pour grace into our families, workplaces, and vocations. Make us living monstrances of Your presence, faithful until we adore You eternally. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 77

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“In My vigil for sinners I never sleep.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. I want you to be little and humble. Suffer with great love and never cease to bring Me souls through your prayers. Pray hard that they may allow grace to penetrate them. If souls knew the excess of My love they would not disregard it. This is why I go seeking them and spare nothing to get them back.

Contemplate Me in the prison where I spend days and nights loving and waiting for mankind. In the prison of My tabernacle I am enduring solitude and desertion. I lack the shelter of love. How often should I wait for souls to visit Me in the Divine Sacrament and receive Me in their hearts. They would comfort Me in my sorrow by their repentance. I exult in forgiving sins. I ask you to bring Me souls. I forgive them. It was My love for mankind that made Me to suffer the most ignominious contempt and horrible tortures.

I want souls to know Me and desire My chosen souls to make Me known to those I place in their care. Instead... mistreat and abuse Me.

In My vigil for sinners I never sleep.

What a pain to Me! Satan has been able to enter... provoking great
confusion.

Pray a great deal. I am agonizing for many. Souls are falling into
perdition.

I plead with you to stay awake and hold mankind in your heart. Keep Me company in these dark and terrible hours. Pray to appease the wrath of My Eternal Father.

I need your obedience and humility. I make myself visible to you in order to call back many lost souls to My sheepfold with love. I do not want anyone to perish.

As I am exposed, I will pour My infinite mercy into human souls. I came into the world to give the life of grace to mankind but many have rejected and abused it. What more could I have suffered for mankind! Pray and atone. Do not lose this short and precious time. Days are approaching when I will speak with My Judge’s Voice. I call all in the stream of My mercy.”

“I give My blessing.”

2.30 a.m., 2nd 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.

When Holy Communion Meets the Cross

 Divine Appeal Reflection - 76

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 76: "Many receive Me with joy in Holy Communion but very few receive Me when I visit them with My Cross.” 

When divine love prepares to suffer, it first chooses to remain. This is the hidden law inscribed into the final hours before the Passion. Our Adorable Jesus does not rush toward the Cross as one seized by fate; He pauses to establish a Presence that will outlast every wound. In the stillness of the Upper Room, He gathers time itself into a single offering, placing eternity into human hands . Yet the gift is already marked by sacrifice. The Body given sacramentally is the same Body soon surrendered historically;(cf Jn 19:16–37; Heb 9:12–14) the Blood adored in the chalice is the same Blood poured out upon the earth . Thus communion is born beneath the shadow of crucifixion. The heart that receives Him is drawn into the movement of His self-offering, (cf CCC 618; Rom 12:1) for love that enters the soul seeks expression through surrender . This mystery unfolds wherever fidelity costs something real: when patience is chosen over anger (cf Col 3:12–14), when obedience persists without understanding (cf Gen 22:1–12), when prayer continues in interior darkness . In such moments the Eucharistic Presence extends beyond the altar into lived existence. Our Adorable Jesus remains not only to be adored, but to be encountered in the transforming weight of the Cross, where communion reaches its deepest truth. Here suffering is no longer interruption but revelation,(cf 2 Cor 4:10–11; CCC 1367) unveiling how divine love conforms the believer to Christ until life itself becomes a living offering joined to His redeeming sacrifice .

After the sacred intimacy of the Upper Room, the Gospel suddenly moves toward Gethsemane where the loneliness of divine love is revealed. Our Adorable Jesus falls to the ground in agony while the weight of humanity’s sin presses upon His sacred humanity (cf. Mt 26:36–39; Lk 22:41–44; Heb 5:7–9). Scripture (cf. Mt 26:40–45; Mk 14:37–41)shows that He longs for companionship, asking His closest friends to remain awake with Him, yet they succumb to sleep . This scene echoes painfully through the centuries. Many believers kneel in adoration, yet fewer remain faithful when the spiritual life becomes demanding . The Catechism(cf. CCC 618; CCC 1508; Lk 9:23; Mt 16:24) teaches that Christ invites each disciple to participate in His redemptive suffering and to take up the cross daily in imitation of Him . This invitation unfolds not only in dramatic trials but in the ordinary fabric of daily life . A mother silently enduring exhaustion to nurture her children, a young student persevering through discouragement, a civil servant choosing integrity in a corrupt environment—each carries a hidden participation in Christ’s Passion . Saints consistently recognized these quiet sacrifices as privileged encounters with God. Saint Thérèse of Lisieux called them her “little martyrdoms of love,” hidden offerings that console the Heart of Jesus . The Cross therefore enters the small corners of life: unanswered prayers, misunderstandings, delays, disappointments . In these circumstances Our Adorable Jesus comes disguised, asking not admiration but companionship (cf. Mt 25:40). The soul that remains with Him in these hidden gardens begins to taste the profound intimacy reserved for those who walk beside Him through the night of suffering .

The drama of Judas illuminates a chilling dimension of human response to divine intimacy: proximity does not guarantee receptivity. He reclined at the sacred table, listened to Christ’s words, witnessed miracles, yet his heart recoiled when sacrificial love demanded total surrender . The tragedy is not merely betrayal but refusal to trust mercy after failure, a subtle apostasy of the will . Our Adorable Jesus, in His infinite wisdom, allowed even the kiss of treachery to be woven into the redemptive tapestry, transforming human malice into instruments of salvation . Daily, countless souls replicate this drama, joyfully receiving Christ in consolation but shying away when He comes disguised in purification. The Catechism teaches that suffering, united to Christ’s Passion, attains redemptive meaning and draws the soul into His saving work (cf. CCC 1505, 1521; Col 1:24). 

The saints illuminate this paradox in lives of extraordinary fidelity.St. Josephine Bakhita, enslaved and scarred, discovered that Christ’s hidden presence suffused every wound, turning oppression into sanctuary of divine tenderness . St. Maria Goretti, confronted with violence, responded with mercy, demonstrating that fidelity in suffering becomes participation in Christ’s crucified love . St. Teresa of Calcutta offered herself to the poorest and the dying, embracing spiritual desolation as hidden union with the Lord, revealing that love is perfected in self-emptying (cf. 2 Cor 12:7–10; CCC 2015). St. Faustina Kowalska taught that mercy is encountered most intimately in the midst of trials, as every small suffering, consciously united with Christ, channels grace to the world . Scripture(cf. Ex 24:15–18) unveils the same paradox: Moses beholds God within the cloud, not the blaze ; Elijah hears Him not in the storm but in the whisper ; Paul discovers that divine power shines most brightly in human weakness . The Cross transforms humiliation, obscurity, and rejection into secret altars of participation. Interior darkness purifies love from self-interest . Daily life offers countless invitations: the ignored kindness, the invisible effort, the enduring patience. In these, Christ hides, shaping hearts into humility and compassion . The Cross becomes not merely burden but sacramental altar where personal suffering becomes co-redemptive, elevating even the smallest acts into participation in the salvation of souls.

The luminous figure of the Blessed Virgin Mary standing beneath the Cross reveals the highest form of this communion. Mary had already received the Word with perfect faith at the Annunciation, yet the deepest expression of her union with Our Adorable Jesus unfolded at Calvary (cf. Lk 1:38; Lk 2:34–35; Jn 19:25–27). The Catechism describes her as uniquely united with her Son’s sacrifice,(cf. CCC 964–968; CCC 494) cooperating through her obedience and suffering in the work of redemption . Her silent presence teaches the Church how to receive Christ when His love appears clothed in sorrow . Mary does not flee from the Cross, nor does she demand explanations; she remains in faithful surrender (cf. Rom 8:28). This Marian fidelity becomes a model for every vocation. A priest persevering through hidden loneliness, a married couple navigating trials with patience, a young person resisting the pressures of a confused culture, a caregiver accompanying the suffering—all mirror something of Mary’s steadfast love . Saints repeatedly testified that holiness grows more through perseverance than through extraordinary experiences. Saint Teresa of Calcutta encountered profound interior darkness for many years, yet continued serving the poorest with radiant charity . Like Mary she remained faithful even when consolation disappeared . In the same way Our Adorable Jesus invites each believer to remain near Him when life becomes difficult. In those moments the Cross ceases to be merely suffering; it becomes a place of profound union where the heart learns to love without conditions .

Yet the mystery of the Cross ultimately opens into resurrection. The same disciples(cf. Jn 20:19–22; Lk 24:36–49) who fled in fear during the Passion encounter the risen Lord who breathes peace upon them . Our Adorable Jesus reveals that every cross accepted in love becomes fertile soil for new life . The Catechism teaches that Christian holiness is inseparable from the path of the Cross, for through it souls are gradually transformed into the likeness of Christ . This transformation unfolds quietly within daily life (cf. Gal 2:19–20). A professional who remains faithful to ethical principles despite pressure, a family that perseveres through illness with trust in God, a young person discerning vocation amid uncertainty—all participate in the mysterious fruitfulness of the Cross .  Saint Maximilian Kolbe entered martyrdom singing hymns because he believed that love stronger than death had already triumphed in Christ (cf. Rom 8:35–39). Likewise the apostles,(cf. Acts 4:18–20; Acts 5:41) once fearful, proclaimed the Gospel with boldness after encountering the risen Lord . Their courage was born from the discovery that the Cross is not defeat but divine victory hidden beneath suffering . Our Adorable Jesus therefore continues to speak to the depths of every soul: do not receive Me only in moments of sweetness. Receive Me also when I come through sacrifice, purification, and trials. For the Cross is My most intimate visitation (cf. Rev 3:19–20). Those who welcome Me there will discover a love deeper than consolation and a joy that no suffering can destroy .

Prayer 

Adorable Redeemer, when Your Cross enters our ordinary paths, awaken reverence within us. May we never flee the places where You wait disguised in suffering. Gather our weakness into Your strength and turn our small offerings into grace that blesses hearts seeking light in darkness always gently faithfully patiently Amen.

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