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DIVINE APPEAL 83

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Help Me in the undertaking of Love. I am in search of Love. I love souls. I am looking for a response. Look at Me in the Sacrament of My Love. Where shall I find relief for My pains?”

“My daughter, pray, spend these dark hours with Me. Give Me your company in the Sacrament of My Love.

Many entertain Me and when I visit them in Holy Communion, few pray. Help me in the undertaking of Love. I am in search of love. I love souls. I am looking for a response. Look at Me in the Sacrament of My Love. Where shall I find relief for My pains?

I come here seeking shade and consolation in order to forget all the pains I receive from mankind, especially My own... Prostate yourself to the very ground and adore My Divine Sacrament in order to console Me. I let you spend these hours united with My feelings. I want to forgive souls and yet they only seek to offend Me.

My great love for mankind keeps Me day and night a prisoner in My tabernacle. I live in the midst of sinners that I may be their life and in return they forsake Me. I am now calling them back to my
sheepfold.

Assure them that I will not reproach them if they repent. I will not cast their sins in their face but I will wash them in My Blood that I poured out for them. They need have no fear because the power of the evil one is not greater than mine. My Heart is filled with Love and Mercy.

My great pain is that which I received from My own... In the Sacrament of My Love I only receive abuses and insults. I am in the midst of outrages and infamous treatment, alone, and in great pain. I am agonizing over souls that I love so much. I allow Myself to be treated this way in order to save souls. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. Contemplate Me in My sorrows. I am thirsting for souls. Give me souls. In your prayers, keep this precious treasure and pray for more souls. I desire all souls for my own. I love them. These are grave moments. I long for them before it is too late.”

“I give My blessing.”

11th 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.

Obtaining Grace for Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection - 82

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 82: "My love for mankind is so great that I am consumed with desire to help all but what a pain for Me to see many lost. Many need someone to obtain grace."

A cry rises from the Heart of Jesus—piercing, hidden, and filled with a sorrow that burns with redeeming love: multitudes are in need, yet grace stands at the threshold, awaiting a soul willing to mediate it. This unveils a profound mystery at the core of salvation—that God, though infinitely sufficient, (cf. CCC 2008, 307) has freely willed to involve human cooperation in the distribution of His graces . It is not divine limitation but divine condescension, an elevation of the creature into real participation in His saving work. As in the Incarnation, where the Eternal Word awaited the fiat of the Virgin , so now grace seeks entry through surrendered hearts. Scripture reveals this pattern:  Moses intercedes and wrath is stayed ,  Abraham pleads and judgment is delayed . Thus, the sorrow of Christ unveils a hidden loss—graces already merited yet left unreceived, mercies ready to descend yet delayed by human indifference . In daily life, this mystery unfolds in hidden omissions: a prayer not offered, a sacrifice avoided, (cf. Jas 4:17) a prompting ignored . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2738) teaches that prayer participates in God’s providence, making us collaborators in His plan . Therefore, the greatest loss is not merely sin, but the absence of intercession. This Divine Appeal summons every soul—across all vocations—to stand in the breach , becoming a conduit through which divine mercy reaches a world silently longing for redemption.

To “obtain grace” for another is to enter, trembling yet transformed, into the priestly Heart of Jesus, who lives forever to intercede before the Father (cf. Heb 7:25; CCC 2634). This is no mere image, but a real mystical participation: the soul is drawn into His one mediation, not as a substitute, but as a living extension of His redeeming love (cf. 1 Tim 2:1–5; CCC 618). In this light, intercession becomes an interior sharing in Christ’s own offering—a hidden priesthood exercised in love. Moses prefigures this mystery, standing between God and a rebellious people, pleading with boldness that borders on holy audacity, and obtaining mercy where justice loomed . This same drama unfolds now, most profoundly within the Eucharistic sacrifice. At every Mass, the faithful are not spectators but participants, invited to unite their intentions, sufferings, and hidden acts to Christ’s oblation . Here, “many need someone” ceases to be abstract—it becomes intensely personal and immediate. The student offering mental fatigue for another’s perseverance (cf. Col 1:24), the worker bearing injustice in silence for a colleague’s conversion (cf. 1 Pet 2:19), the unnoticed soul embracing suffering for those far from God—these become living offerings. Such acts, though unseen, are not insignificant; they are Eucharistic in nature, extensions of the Lamb’s sacrifice into the fabric of daily life (cf. Jn 1:29). The saints grasped this mystery in its depth: they became, as it were, hidden hosts—lives offered, broken, and given so that grace might reach where resistance is strongest (cf. Lk 22:19; Jn 12:24; CCC 901). To love, then, is to stand in the breach (cf. Ez 22:30), allowing divine mercy to pass through one’s very life into the wounded places of the world (cf. 2 Cor 5:20; CCC 2635).

There is, within this appeal of Jesus, a striking philosophical humility that both elevates and unsettles the soul: God reverences human freedom so profoundly that He often binds the outpouring of grace to human cooperation. This is not impotence, but a love so pure it refuses to coerce, choosing instead to invite, to await, to involve (cf. CCC 2001–2002). Grace is always first, always gratuitous, yet its visible fruit in the world is frequently conditioned by the mysterious participation of interceding souls. Thus emerges a hidden and sobering economy—when prayer is neglected, it is not only the self that suffers, but others who remain deprived of graces that might have been obtained through love. When Jesus reveals that many need someone, He unveils a silent drama: the negligence of one may delay the healing of another, the absence of intercession may leave a soul longer in darkness (cf. Jas 4:2). This truth does not instill fear, but responsibility infused with dignity. Even the smallest act of charity becomes charged with eternal consequence. The witness of St. Monica stands luminous here—her persistent tears and prayers became instruments through which grace reached her son, St. Augustine of Hippo . In contemporary life, this reshapes everything. A quiet prayer whispered in a crowded bus, a distracted yet faithful Rosary, a hidden fast borne without recognition—these are not passing gestures lost in time, but living threads woven into the mystery of redemption. What appears small before the world becomes immense before God, for love gives weight to every act .The Mystical Body is not an image but a living reality (cf. 1 Cor 12:26–27; CCC 953): within it, grace truly circulates, passing from soul to soul through love, sacrifice, and intercession. Thus, no act offered in Christ is ever isolated; each becomes mysteriously fruitful, reaching beyond what is seen. In this hidden exchange, the unnoticed becomes powerful, and the ordinary is transfigured into channels of eternal grace .

Eucharistically, the words of Jesus descend into an even deeper abyss of love and mystery. In the Blessed Sacrament, Christ remains in perpetual self-offering—silent, hidden,(cf. Heb 7:25; CCC 1368) yet ceaselessly interceding before the Father for humanity . His love continually pours forth, yet He invites souls to enter, unite, and remain with Him. Many need someone—not only to pray, but to adore, repair, and console. In Eucharistic adoration, the soul crosses into this hidden participation. Kneeling in silence, it appears inactive, yet in truth it stands at the heart of the world’s redemption . The contemplative gaze becomes profoundly apostolic: to look upon Christ is already to love, and to love in Him is to intercede for all. Here, time is transfigured;(cf. Rev 8:3–4) a single hour offered in fidelity may release torrents of grace unseen . This reveals the paradox of divine charity—that what is most hidden is often most fecund. Their lives testify that conversions are often born not only from preaching, but from unseen sacrifices united to Christ . The hidden soul, the victim offering,(cf. 1 Cor 3:9) the faithful laity embracing daily crosses—all become co-workers in redemption . In practical terms, this Eucharistic participation extends into the fabric of ordinary life. Delays become offerings (cf. Rom 12:1), misunderstandings become acts of reparation (cf. 1 Pet 2:23), fatigue becomes intercession, and even joy becomes a gift returned to God for others (cf. Phil 4:4–6). Nothing is ever wasted when united to the altar; every moment becomes a channel for grace (cf. Col 3:17; CCC 1368, 1410). The Eucharist overflows beyond the tabernacle into streets, homes, and workplaces, transforming ordinary life into a continuous liturgy of love . Gradually, the soul is shaped and conformed to the pattern it contemplates in Christ . No longer living for itself, it begins to exist as a living host—broken, offered, and given for many . In this hidden immolation, united to the Lamb (cf. Rev 5:6), the soul becomes a silent plea before the Father, a channel through which grace descends upon a world still waiting for someone to love in this way.

Then the words of Jesus fall upon the soul with both urgency and tenderness: many need someone—will you be that someone? This is not a summons reserved for the extraordinary, but a call addressed to every baptized soul, drawn into Christ’s priestly mission (cf. CCC 901, 2635; 1 Pet 2:9). The vocation of intercession is universal, yet profoundly personal; each soul carries a hidden responsibility, a silent mission known fully only to God . To ignore this call is not mere omission—it is to leave graces unclaimed, to allow souls to wander without the help God desired to give through our cooperation (cf. Jas 4:17). Yet to embrace it is to enter a life of deep and luminous meaning, where even suffering becomes fruitful, united to Christ’s redeeming love (cf. Col 1:24; Rom 8:17; CCC 618). What once seemed burdensome is transfigured into offering (cf. Rom 12:1); what seemed insignificant becomes eternally efficacious . This Divine Appeal reshapes the vision of the heart. Others are no longer seen as interruptions or adversaries, but as souls mysteriously entrusted to one’s prayer. The impatient neighbor, the distant relative, the fallen-away believer— (cf. Jn 4:35) all become fields awaiting grace . Intercession transforms relationships into sacred encounters, where love acts invisibly yet powerfully. The response required is not perfection, but fidelity; not prominence, (cf. Lk 16:10) but perseverance . It is the quiet constancy of a heart that remains with Christ—offering, loving, interceding in all circumstances. In this hidden life, the soul becomes deeply apostolic, mystically united to the saving work of Jesus. And in the secret economy of grace, beyond time and human recognition, countless souls may one day give thanks for an unknown intercessor—one who, in silence and faith, obtained for them the light needed to return to God .

Prayer 

O Adorable Jesus, enkindle in us hearts that intercede without ceasing. Make our lives hidden offerings for souls in need. Teach us to obtain grace through love, sacrifice, and union with You. May no moment be wasted, but transformed into channels of mercy for others. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 82

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I hunger for souls. I come down to them with joy, stretching My
Hands to embrace them.”

“My daughter, pray and spend these dark and terrible hours with Me. Take part in My previous pains. Do not fear. I will make you share My bitterness. Pray a great deal and implore mercy for souls. What a pain to me that in the Sacrament of My Love My own... wound Me bitterly. Offer all you do for them. Give Me rest in your heart. If souls knew the excess of My love they would not disregard it. For this I am seeking them. Suffer with grief.

My love for mankind is so great that I am consumed with desire to help all but what a pain for Me to see many lost. Many need someone to obtain grace. I hunger for souls. I come down to them with joy stretching My hands to embrace them.

My Heart is full of pain to see the world rushing headlong to ruin. I am consumed with desire to pardon. Understand My grief. Come near and comfort Me, repair and obtain mercy for many souls.  

In the Sacrament of My Love I am abused, insulted and abandoned. They seek to deal out death to Me. Why do My own do this to me thus? What more could I have suffered for them? When I called them many of them responded but now they trample Me underfoot and ridicule Me, frustrating the designs of My Love on them. Give  Me rest. So many souls are led to perdition. I love them with a boundless love.

As I am exposed I will pour My infinite mercy into human souls. I will make known that the measure of My Love and great mercy for fallen souls is limitless. I am ever here waiting with boundless love to  forgive them.

In the prison of My tabernacle I spend days and nights longing for souls to come back to My sheepfold. In the tabernacle it is those who call Me Lord that abuse and treat Me... I am in a state of ignominy. Keep Me before you. I am agonizing over souls.

My own... cause Me intense grief. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. Great is the coldness of souls. Do not fear for that which you feel. I share the anguish because I come to comfort. Souls greatly wound Me. Pray and atone.”

“I give My blessing.”

3.00 a.m., 10th 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.

Love for Jesus Beyond Words

Divine Appeal Reflection - 81

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 81: "Many souls think that love consists in saying ‘Lord I love you’. Not this way. Love is good and it begets because I love. Keep My love in pain, in rest, in prayer, in comfort, as in distress. If souls would really understand My love they would be able to follow My path of truth and justice."

 The cry that rises from the Heart of Jesus Christ penetrates beyond devotional surface and confronts the soul at its deepest center, where illusion and truth are separated. It exposes a subtle danger: to reduce love to expression rather than transformation. Divine love is not measured by what is said but by what is surrendered, for it proceeds from the inner life of God Himself,(cf 1 Jn 4:8,16; Jn 3:16) whose very being is an eternal act of self-gift . To enter this love is to be drawn into a participation in the Paschal Mystery—where dying to self becomes the condition for authentic life . The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that charity is not one virtue among others but the form that gives life and supernatural orientation to all virtues, elevating human acts into divine communion (cf CCC 1827–1829, 1996–1997). Thus, every ordinary moment becomes charged with eternal significance: the unnoticed sacrifice, the hidden fidelity,(cf Mt 6:6; Col 3:23–24) the perseverance in dryness . This love demands embodiment. It must “beget,” as the Lord reveals—producing fruits that endure beyond emotion (cf Gal 5:22–23; Jas 2:17). Consider the silence of Saint Joseph, whose justice was not legal rigidity but docile obedience to divine will (cf Mt 1:19–24). In him, love became action without self-reference. Likewise, The Blessed Virgin Mary reveals that true love consents to God even when it pierces the heart . This incarnational dimension extends into daily realities: choosing honesty when deception would secure advantage (cf Prov 11:3), remaining faithful in commitments when feelings waver (cf Mt 24:13), forgiving when wounded (cf Mt 18:21–22), and persevering in charity amid contradiction (cf Rom 12:9–12). Love here becomes cruciform—shaped by the Cross, where mercy and justice meet in perfect unity .

The saints penetrate this mystery with luminous clarity. Saint John of the Cross teaches that love is purified in darkness, where the soul is stripped of consolations so that it may love God for Himself alone (cf Job 23:8–10). Saint Thérèse of Lisieux reveals that even the smallest acts, when infused with pure intention, participate in infinite love . Saint Paul the Apostle proclaims that without charity, even the greatest works are empty (cf 1 Cor 13:1–3), yet with it, suffering itself becomes redemptive . Thus, love matures not in emotional intensity but in fidelity across changing interior states—whether in consolation or desolation  . Here the soul stands at a decisive threshold: to remain in self-seeking affection or to enter divine charity. Sentiment must be crucified , not destroyed but transfigured, so that Christ may live and act within. This love is Eucharistic in its essence—self-giving, hidden, and real, flowing from the sacramental presence where Christ offers Himself entirely . To receive Him is to be drawn into His own movement of love toward the Father and toward souls. Thus, authentic charity becomes generative, bearing unseen fruit that endures into eternity . It transforms work into offering, suffering into intercession, and daily life into participation in divine life. In this, the soul no longer merely speaks love—it becomes love, living from God, in God, and for God alone.

To “keep My love in pain” draws the soul into the innermost mystery of Jesus Christ, where suffering is no longer meaningless but becomes a privileged place of union. Human nature instinctively resists pain, yet Christ reveals that love reaches its fullness not by escaping the Cross, but by remaining with Him upon it (cf Col 1:24; Lk 9:23). The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that when suffering is united to Christ, it participates in His redemptive work,(cf CCC 1521, 618) acquiring a mysterious fruitfulness for the salvation of souls . This transforms suffering into an interior offering—a conscious surrender of the will into the hands of the Father (cf Lk 23:46).The transformation is seen in Saint Peter, whose tears after his fall purified his love from presumption into humility (cf Lk 22:61–62; Jn 21:15–17). Likewise, in daily life, this mystery becomes concrete when one endures misunderstanding without resentment, accepts weakness without despair, or remains faithful in trials without visible consolation (cf 1 Pet 2:19–20). Saint John of the Cross teaches that such darkness purifies love of self-interest, leading the soul into a deeper,(cf Job 23:10) more authentic union with God . In the Eucharist,(cf Mt 26:26–28; CCC 1324) this mystery reaches its summit: Christ gives Himself completely under the veil of fragility . Thus the soul comes to know that love is not grounded in sentiment but in fidelity; in suffering, it is purified, becoming constant, surrendered, and perfectly aligned with the will of God.

To “keep My love in rest, in prayer, in comfort” reveals a more hidden trial, where the soul is not purified by suffering but tested by abundance. In these states, vigilance becomes essential, for consolation can subtly shift the heart from God to self. The Heart of Jesus Christ calls not only for endurance in pain but for fidelity in peace, where love risks dilution through forgetfulness. The Catechism  teaches that prayer requires constant vigilance, not only against distraction and dryness, but also against the illusion of self-sufficiency that can arise when all seems well (cf CCC 2729–2730). Consolation, if not received in humility, becomes spiritually dangerous—it can foster a quiet independence from grace. This dynamic is reflected in the life of King Solomon, whose wisdom was a divine gift, yet whose heart gradually turned when comfort weakened his vigilance . His fall reveals that gifts, when not continually referred back to God, can obscure the Giver. Thus, rest must become offering. The contemplative soul learns to receive peace, success, and interior sweetness not as possessions, but as occasions for deeper surrender (cf Deut 8:10–14). In daily life, this takes concrete form: the professional who prospers yet increases generosity (cf 2 Cor 9:6–8), the family that experiences harmony yet deepens prayer and service (cf Col 3:15–17), the individual who enjoys interior consolation yet remains humble and vigilant . The saints insist that love must be as deliberate in consolation as in suffering. Saint Teresa of Ávila teaches recollection—a continual return of the soul to God within, even amid external ease . Without this interior anchoring, comfort disperses the soul. But when rightly lived, rest becomes communion, not escape. Love is preserved when every state—activity or stillness, struggle or peace—is referred back to God as its origin and end (cf Rom 11:36). In this way, the soul remains rooted in divine love, not in passing consolation.

To “keep My love in distress” unveils the unwavering constancy demanded by authentic discipleship, where love is stripped of all supports and must stand upon God alone. In moments of distress, the soul is confronted with a decisive question: does it love God for Himself, or only for His consolations? The agony of Jesus Christ in Gethsemane reveals this mystery in its purest form—love persevering in obedience even when overwhelmed by sorrow and apparent abandonment . The Catechism (cf CCC 2734–2735) teaches that prayer in such trials becomes a true spiritual combat, requiring perseverance, vigilance, and radical trust in the Father’s fidelity . Job stands as a profound witness to this purified love, remaining oriented toward God even when deprived of understanding, security, and consolation . His fidelity reveals that love, when rooted in truth, does not depend on circumstances. In contemporary life, distress takes many forms: financial instability that threatens peace , relational wounds that test forgiveness (cf Eph 4:31–32), or interior desolation where God seems silent (cf Ps 22:1). In these moments, love must become an act of the will—choosing God in darkness, adhering to Him beyond feeling . This fidelity is profoundly apostolic. The parent who continues to intercede for a distant child , the worker who remains just despite loss (cf Prov 10:9), the consecrated soul who perseveres in dryness (cf Gal 6:9)—all participate in the steadfast love of Christ toward the Father. Mystically, this is union with the Crucified, where love becomes silent, hidden, and real . Philosophically, it manifests the primacy of the will anchored in truth over fluctuating emotion. Thus, in distress, the soul learns that love is not possession but surrender, not clarity but trust, not ease but fidelity that endures unto the end .

The Lord’s call to follow “My path of truth and justice” unveils a demanding synthesis at the heart of divine love: it is never detached from moral reality, never reduced to sentiment or personal preference. In Jesus Christ, love is inseparably united to truth,(cf Jn 14:6; Mic 6:8) and truth is always expressed through justice . This means that authentic charity does not merely affirm; it orders, corrects, and elevates. The Catechism (cf CCC 1928–1930, 1822) teaches that respect for the human person flows from justice and is animated by charity, which binds individuals to the moral law and to one another in dignity . Thus, love that ignores truth becomes illusion, and truth without love becomes harshness; in Christ, both are perfectly united. This unity is revealed in His encounter with the sinner: He does not condemn, yet He commands transformation . Love, therefore, is not permissive—it is redemptive. The life of King David manifests this drama: his fall into injustice is met not with abandonment,(cf 2 Sam 12:13; Ps 51:12) but with a call to repentance that restores him to truth . In daily life, this path demands moral courage: to speak truth in environments shaped by compromise (cf Eph 4:15), to defend the vulnerable when silence is easier (cf Prov 31:8–9), and to reject dishonesty even when it entails loss . Such choices reveal that love is not abstract but incarnate in decisions. Eucharistically, this path is sustained by communion with Christ, who gives Himself as Truth made present and received . The saints insist that holiness is not an idea but a concrete conformity to divine order. Thus, every vocation becomes apostolic: the teacher forms consciences in truth (cf Deut 6:6–7), the professional upholds justice with integrity (cf Col 3:23), the parent cultivates virtue through discipline and love . In this way, love becomes transformative—quietly shaping the world according to God’s truth and establishing His justice in the hidden fabric of daily life .

Prayer 

O Adorable Jesus, consume all that is not You within us. Establish Your love in our souls through every state of life. May we live no longer for ourselves, but in Your truth and justice, becoming a silent witness of Your divine life in the world. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 81

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“I thirst for souls.”

“My daughter, never mind, let Me speak to you. Offer yourself as a victim in such a way as to make reparation for all the pains I receive from many souls. I hope to find consolation from you. Open your whole souls to Me. I shall be the Divine torment of your whole being. I make you a victim of My Love. Being a victim you shall suffer. I will join all fidelity of other souls to yours.

In the Sacrament of My Love I remain so lonely and abused by My own. What a pain to Me! Many souls think that love consists in saying ‘Lord I love you’. Not this way. Love is good and it begets because I love. Keep My love in pain, in rest, in prayer, in comfort, as in distress. If souls would really understand My love they would be able to follow My path of truth and justice.

In your sufferings I shall come and ask you for the love that many of My own refuse Me so that you may understand My sorrows. Give Me rest in your heart. I want you to be one of those helping Me to snatch souls from the evil one. Suffer in silence.

Love very much without introspection. I love you. Do not be afraid. I will not abandon you to death. I want you to leave Me a current between your heart and Mine.

I need souls to know that weakness will never surpass My strength. As I am exposed, I will pour My infinite mercy into human souls. I want them to repent. I address myself to souls. The souls that I love so much pay no heed to My call of Love. Instead they pay heed to the evil one. Consider how I suffer from loneliness, rejected by My own loved ones. Come closer to Me.

In My Divine Sacrament defend Me from the abuses and insults. My soul is devoured while praying for the souls that have whipped Me. They only think of abolishing My Presence. What a pain!

Share My agony. When I raise My eyes with tears to them, let Me find yours looking at Me in My prison. I thirst for souls. Pray for them and cloister them in your heart. Receive My share of pains.”

“I give My blessing.”

3.00 a.m., 9th 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.