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For the Love of the Eternal Father

Divine Appeal Reflection - 156

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 156:  "You must put into practice what I have told you. Do it out of love for My Eternal Father."

Our Adorable Jesus teaches that love reaches its fullest maturity not in the fervor felt before Him, but in the quiet perseverance that remains faithful after the moment of prayer has passed (cf. Jn 15:9–10; Col 3:17). Many hearts delight in listening to God's voice, yet true transformation begins only when His word shapes ordinary conversations, hidden decisions, daily sacrifices, and the unseen duties of life, until every action reflects communion with Him . Christ therefore does not simply ask that His words be remembered, discussed, or defended; He asks that they become flesh once again in the lives of His disciples, just as the Eternal Word became flesh through perfect obedience to the Father's will . The tragedy of many spiritual lives is not rebellion but postponement. Felix trembled before the Gospel, yet delayed conversion until a more convenient time that never arrived (cf. Acts 24:24–27). The rich man who approached Jesus desired eternal life,(cf. Mk 10:17–22) but affection for earthly security quietly outweighed his willingness to surrender everything to God . By contrast, the obscure disciples who immediately left their fishing nets entered a history that transformed the world because they acted when grace invited them (cf. Mt 4:18–22). The Rechabites, though rarely remembered, remained faithful across generations to a difficult command received from their ancestors, (cf. Jer 35:1–19) becoming a living witness that steadfast obedience bears lasting fruit before God . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1814–1816, 1822–1829) teaches that faith reaches its perfection only when it becomes active through charity, for truth believed but not lived cannot mature into holiness . Saint Claude de la Colombière taught that the greatest gift we offer Christ is not admiration alone, but trusting obedience when His will challenges our desires . Every Christian must choose daily between simply looking at Jesus and becoming like Him, for only a life transformed by His love glorifies the Eternal Father .

This appeal also unveils the hidden intention that gives eternal value to every action: "Do it out of love for My Eternal Father." Here Our Adorable Jesus elevates the Christian life beyond duty into participation in His own filial love. Throughout His earthly life, every word, silence, miracle, step, tear, and suffering was directed toward pleasing the Father rather than seeking human approval (cf. Jn 5:19–20; Jn 8:28–29; Jn 17:4). This same spirit must penetrate every vocation. A surgeon performing a difficult operation with reverence for the dignity of life, a widow praying faithfully in an empty home, a mechanic refusing dishonest repairs despite financial pressure, a teacher patiently encouraging a struggling child, a seminarian embracing hidden discipline, or a religious joyfully accepting unnoticed tasks may all glorify the Father as profoundly as great missionaries when these acts are consciously united to Christ's love . Obed-Edom never preached publicly nor governed Israel, yet because he reverenced the Ark of the Covenant, his entire household became abundantly blessed by God (cf. 2 Sm 6:10–12; 1 Chr 13:13–14). Likewise, Bezalel sanctified his craftsmanship by fashioning the sacred furnishings according to God's design, reminding every Christian that work becomes worship when offered in loving obedience (cf. Ex 31:1–11; Ex 35:30–35). The Catechism teaches that every lawful activity, when performed in grace and united to Christ, becomes a spiritual sacrifice pleasing to the Father (cf. CCC 901, 2427, 358). Blessed Columba Marmion beautifully taught that the whole Christian life is an invitation to share in the Son's own relationship with the Father, so that even the smallest faithful act becomes an echo of Christ's eternal "Yes" offered in love .

Our Adorable Jesus desires more than occasional heroic sacrifices; (cf. Rom 12:1; Col 3:17; CCC 901) He longs that every ordinary duty become a quiet offering of love to His Eternal Father, transforming daily life into continual worship . One of the greatest dangers to the spiritual life is not open rebellion but quietly confining God to the church while excluding Him from ordinary decisions. A soul may adore Christ devoutly before the tabernacle, yet later humiliate an employee, ignore an elderly parent, manipulate the truth to secure a contract, remain silent before injustice, or withhold reconciliation from a wounded family member, revealing that the Eucharist has been received without fully transforming the heart .  Ebed-Melech, (cf. Jer 38:7–13) a humble servant in King Zedekiah’s palace, risked his life to rescue Jeremiah from the cistern when others remained silent . Though his courage was hidden from human eyes, God  remembered his mercy and promised him deliverance amid Jerusalem’s destruction (cf. Jer 39:15–18) , revealing that unseen acts of love are never forgotten by Him. Even in his old age, Barzillai served the Lord by quietly providing for David and those who journeyed with him, showing that simple acts of generosity offered at the right time can sustain God's saving work in ways known fully only to Him (cf. 2 Sm 17:27–29; 19:31–39). Likewise, holiness is fashioned through hidden fidelity: responding to injury with patience, rejecting dishonest gain, restoring what belongs to others without being prompted, welcoming the lonely, praying for those who oppose us, spending a few moments before the Blessed Sacrament, reverently making the Sign of the Cross when passing a church, teaching children to genuflect before the tabernacle, or persevering at Sunday Mass despite fatigue and life's many demands .  St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi taught that love proves itself not by lofty feelings but by faithful perseverance in the Father's will, especially when no one notices. The Eternal Father continually beholds these hidden acts, (cf. Mt 6:1–6; Col 3:3–4) and what the world considers insignificant often shines most brilliantly in heaven .

Yet Christ's command also exposes a subtle temptation that has accompanied God's people throughout salvation history: the temptation to substitute religious activity for interior surrender. King Amaziah outwardly obeyed many commandments, yet Scripture quietly reveals that his heart was never wholly given to the Lord (cf. 2 Chr 25:1–2). Jehu zealously destroyed idolatry,(cf. 2 Kgs 10:28–31) but never allowed God to uproot the idols hidden within his own ambitions . Such divided obedience remains a danger today. A priest may preach eloquently while neglecting silent prayer. Parents may teach children to pray yet fail to forgive each other. A parish leader may tirelessly organise apostolates while quietly nourishing jealousy. A businessman may donate generously to charity while exploiting employees through injustice. A student may defend Christian values publicly yet privately indulge impurity through digital media. Outward fidelity (cf. Mt 6:24; Hos 6:6) without inward conversion eventually becomes spiritually exhausting because the heart serves two masters . St. John Henry Newman taught that conscience is the sacred sanctuary where God quietly speaks, inviting the soul to choose truth before the world ever witnesses its actions . Saint Titus Brandsma bore witness to this hidden fidelity by allowing divine charity to triumph over hatred, remaining peaceful and forgiving even in persecution and death . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1776–1802, 1850, 2563) teaches that the human heart is the place where every moral decision is made, and where each free choice either deepens communion with God or gradually distances the soul from Him . Our Adorable Jesus therefore calls every Christian to a deeper integrity, (cf. Ps 51:6; Jn 4:23–24; Jas 1:25) where the hidden life and the visible life become one continuous offering of love to the Eternal Father .

The deepest fulfilment of this Divine Appeal is found in the Holy Eucharist, where Our Adorable Jesus continually offers Himself to the Father in perfect love (cf. Heb 9:11–14; CCC 1362–1368). Every Holy Mass invites us to unite our work, sufferings, family life, hidden sacrifices, and daily duties with His eternal offering, making ordinary life a living sacrifice pleasing to God . Like Aquila and Priscilla, (cf. Acts 18:1–3; Rom 16:3–5) who sanctified their ordinary work through faithful witness and generous hospitality , we are sent from the altar to continue Eucharistic worship wherever God has placed us. Dorcas transformed simple sewing into an apostolate of mercy, (cf. Acts 9:36–42) clothing the poor with such generous love that her absence left an entire community in tears . Joseph of Arimathea  risked his reputation by publicly honouring the crucified Christ (cf. Mk 15:42–47; Jn 19:38–42) when many who had witnessed His miracles remained hidden by fear . Today this same Eucharistic offering continues whenever an accountant refuses corruption despite financial loss, a daughter patiently cares for a parent suffering from dementia, a young professional rejects dishonest advancement, a teacher remains fair to every student, or a nurse comforts a dying patient long after the shift should have ended. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1324–1327, 1391–1397) teaches that the Eucharist is the source and summit from which every vocation receives the grace to transform daily life into spiritual worship . St. Peter Julian Eymard taught that the soul who lives from the Eucharist gradually begins to think, love, forgive, and sacrifice with the very Heart of Christ. Then every ordinary action, however hidden, quietly becomes an act of praise offered through the Son to the Eternal Father (cf. Eph 5:1–2; Col 3:17).

Ultimately, this Divine Appeal reveals that heaven will judge lives less by their visible achievements than by the love with which God's will was embraced. Our Adorable Jesus does not ask whether we accomplished extraordinary works, but whether we allowed His word to shape our hearts out of love for the Father. Anna the Prophetess spent decades in obscurity, worshipping through prayer and fasting until she recognised the Messiah whom powerful rulers failed to see (cf. Lk 2:36–38). Simeon patiently waited through long years of apparent silence until one moment of faithful expectation fulfilled his entire vocation (cf. Lk 2:25–35). Rizpah, through persevering love for her deceased sons, (cf. 2 Sm 21:10–14) became an unexpected instrument that moved King David toward justice and reverence for the dead . These forgotten figures remind the Church that God builds salvation history through hidden fidelity more often than public prominence. The same mystery unfolds today when grandparents quietly intercede for children who have abandoned the faith, when spouses remain faithful through years of misunderstanding, when missionaries continue labouring without visible success, when religious persevere through spiritual dryness, or when a lonely believer continues visiting the Blessed Sacrament despite receiving no sensible consolation . St. Elizabeth of the Trinity believed that the greatest mission on earth is to become "a praise of the Father's glory" by allowing Christ to live fully within the soul. St. Angela of Foligno taught that perfect love is recognised when the soul seeks God's honour before its own comfort. The Catechism teaches that the universal call to holiness invites every Christian to the fullness of charity through continual conformity to Christ, (cf. CCC 2012–2016, 1694, 2608) who alone perfectly glorifies the Father . Therefore, every moment becomes an eternal opportunity: every choice made in love, every sacrifice embraced in faith, every hidden act of obedience, and every duty faithfully fulfilled allows the Eternal Father to recognise in His children the living image of His beloved Son, through whom all creation was made and to whom all glory returns forever .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, teach us to love the Eternal Father with Your own Heart. May every prayer, sacrifice, duty, and hidden act of fidelity become united to Your Eucharistic offering. Purify our intentions, strengthen our obedience, and make our ordinary lives a continual hymn of love that gives glory to the Father and leads many souls to You . Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 156

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Do not be afraid.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. You must put into practice what I have told you. Do it out of love for My Eternal Father. We are at the end. Time is reaping what it has sown. I lead and direct you. Listen to My voice. Consummate yourself in Me. I command you, take action against evil and infirmity. I want complete obedience from you. You have to accept above all what could humiliate you. Do not be afraid. I have absolute right over you.”

“I bless you.”

2.00 am, 4th June 1988

Copyright © 2015 The Late Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir | Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya. All rights reserved. Reproduced by adivineappeal.com from "On the Eucharist: A Divine Appeal" (Vol. 1).

Ploughing, Manuring, and Weeding the Heart

Divine Appeal Reflection - 155

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 155: "I reveal My sad feelings. I have no rest or comfort in the midst of My ministers and consecrated souls to Me. More than ever they torture Me continuously. I call them all to watch and pray, fight their evil inclinations and suffer them not to grow into bad habits. The grass in the meadowlands has to be mowed every year. The ground needs to be ploughed, manured, and freed from weeds."

Our Adorable Jesus reveals a profound mystery of His Eucharistic sorrow when He laments that even among those consecrated most intimately to Him, His Heart often finds little consolation. This grief springs not from any diminishment of His infinite love, but from witnessing souls chosen for closest communion gradually neglect the hidden sanctuary where fidelity is either preserved or quietly surrendered . The Lord, who searches the depths of every heart, sees how seemingly small compromises, left unpurified, can slowly veil the radiance of sanctifying grace and weaken the soul's loving response to His Presence . Every vocation, whether priestly, consecrated, or lay, unfolds simultaneously upon two altars: the visible mission entrusted to the eyes of the world and the hidden life of communion that remains known fully to God alone. It is within this secret sanctuary of the heart that every apostolate is either continually renewed by divine love or gradually impoverished through unnoticed infidelity (cf. Mt. 6:6; Jn. 15:4–5; CCC 2563). The latter always determines the fruitfulness of the former. A chalice may appear polished externally while remaining empty within; likewise, a priest may celebrate the Sacred Mysteries faithfully, a religious may observe community life, a parent may provide generously, a teacher may instruct well, or a professional may excel in competence, yet if prayer quietly weakens, (cf. Jn 15:4–6; Rev 2:4–5) the roots begin drying long before the branches visibly wither . The prophet Elijah did not lose his strength on Mount Carmel but later beneath the broom tree when discouragement entered his heart unnoticed (cf. 1 Kgs 18:36–40; 19:1–18). Likewise, (cf. Mt 26:36–46, 69–75) Peter's denial did not begin in the courtyard but in Gethsemane when he slept instead of watching with Christ . The Catechism (cf. CCC 405, 409, 1426–1429) teaches that man's deepest struggle is the battle between grace and the lingering effects of sin, requiring continual conversion throughout life . St. Philip Neri often prayed for humility because he knew that without God's sustaining grace, even the strongest disciple could fall before sunset. The saints therefore feared spiritual complacency far more than external persecution, (cf. 1 Cor 10:12; Heb 3:12–13) for hidden neglect slowly extinguishes the fire that public trials can never destroy .

The Lord's command to "watch and pray" reveals that holiness is ordinarily preserved through daily fidelity rather than extraordinary moments (cf. Mt. 26:41; Lk. 21:36). Like a physician treating the first symptoms of illness, the vigilant soul learns to recognize the earliest movements of pride, impatience, discouragement, vanity, or self-love before they become habitual . The enemy rarely begins with grave sin; more often he exploits neglected prayer, forgotten silence, careless speech, unresolved resentment, or the quiet refusal of daily sacrifice . The same pattern touches every vocation. A marriage is often weakened not by one conflict but by forgotten gratitude, neglected forgiveness, and hearts that slowly drift apart . Likewise, priestly zeal usually fades gradually when personal prayer, the Divine Office, and Eucharistic intimacy yield to constant activity . Christ therefore calls every disciple to vigilant perseverance, for fidelity in little things safeguards the whole spiritual life . Likewise, a seminarian may become more concerned with academic success than interior purification, while a catechist may know doctrine thoroughly yet cease to nourish personal friendship with Christ . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1803–1805, 1865–1866) teaches that repeated acts shape moral character, strengthening either virtues or vices according to the choices freely embraced . St. John Vianney compared the soul to a neglected vineyard where weeds grow effortlessly while grapes require patient labour. St. Alphonsus Liguori likewise insisted that perseverance depends less upon extraordinary penances than upon fidelity to daily prayer and frequent reception of the sacraments . Heaven is ordinarily prepared through countless unnoticed victories over little temptations faithfully resisted each day.

The striking image of mowing the meadow, ploughing the soil, enriching it, and removing weeds unfolds an entire programme of lifelong spiritual formation. Grass grows continually because nature never remains idle; similarly, fallen human nature constantly produces selfish inclinations unless grace is actively welcomed (cf. Gen 3:17–19; Rom 7:21–25). Mowing signifies the regular examination of conscience by which recurring faults are recognised before they become part of one's personality (cf. Lam 3:40; 2 Cor 13:5). Ploughing represents the painful action of the Holy Spirit exposing buried wounds, false securities, and hidden attachments through humiliations, corrections, disappointments, or unexpected failures (cf. Hos 10:12; Heb 12:5–11). Manure symbolises sufferings that appear unpleasant yet mysteriously enrich the soul when united to Christ's Cross. Many souls spend years praying for patience while resisting the difficult neighbour through whom God desires to teach it; others ask for humility while rejecting every correction that could produce it (cf. Rom 5:3–5; Jas 1:2–4). Weeding signifies frequent Confession, sincere repentance, restitution for injustices committed, fasting, spiritual direction, and deliberate renunciation of whatever weakens communion with Christ . St. Benedict understood that monasteries flourish not because every monk is perfect but because conversion is renewed daily through obedience and humility. St. Hildegard of Bingen described the soul as a living garden whose greenness depends entirely upon remaining open to the life-giving breath of the Holy Spirit . Wherever spiritual cultivation ceases, interior barrenness quietly begins long before anyone notices externally.

Our Adorable Jesus also exposes the immense danger of allowing evil inclinations to become habitual. Habit gradually forms a second nature, making repeated choices seem effortless whether they lead toward virtue or away from God (cf. Rom 6:16–19). Cain did not become a murderer merely through anger; jealousy was welcomed repeatedly until it mastered his reason and extinguished brotherly love (cf. Gen 4:3–8). King Saul's insecurity slowly matured into obsession because he continually nourished comparison rather than gratitude for God's gifts (cf. 1 Sm 18:6–12). Ananias and Sapphira (cf. Acts 5:1–11) first desired human admiration before deception followed naturally from their disordered ambition . Daily life mirrors these biblical patterns. A businessman who repeatedly exaggerates small financial figures eventually loses the ability to distinguish honesty from manipulation. A student who frequently copies assignments weakens integrity long before facing greater moral decisions. A religious who quietly tolerates murmuring gradually loses joy in community life. Parents who constantly criticise each other before their children unknowingly teach division rather than charity. Young people who consume endless digital distractions often discover that silence before the Blessed Sacrament has become painfully difficult because the imagination has forgotten recollection .  St. Francis Xavier constantly examined whether his missionary activity still flowed from prayer lest external success conceal interior poverty. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2012–2015) reminds every Christian that growth in holiness requires disciplined cooperation with grace, sustained by prayer, asceticism, and sacramental life . Grace patiently transforms the heart, but repeated negligence patiently forms chains that later seem impossible to break.

Ultimately, this Divine Appeal is not a word of condemnation but a summons to confident hope rooted in the inexhaustible mercy of God(cf. Lam. 3:22–23; Rom. 5:20; CCC 1846–1848) . Our Adorable Jesus, the Divine Gardener, never abandons the vineyard He has planted so long as even the smallest seed of grace remains within the soul. With unfailing patience, He continues to cultivate, prune, heal, and restore, longing that every branch may once again bear abundant fruit for the glory of the Father . Peter's tears (cf. Lk 22:61–62; Jn 21:15–19) became the soil from which courageous apostleship emerged because repentance reopened his heart to grace . Mary Magdalene's steadfast love after conversion demonstrates that souls who have experienced mercy often become the most faithful witnesses of Christ (cf. Lk 8:2; Jn 20:11–18). The Prodigal Son first returned to God within his conscience before returning to his father's house, showing that sincere self-examination opens the way to mercy and restoration . St. Catherine of Genoa taught that every worthy confession purifies the soul through God's transforming love. St. Charles Borromeo renewed the Church because he first renewed his own heart through prayer, Eucharistic devotion, and personal holiness, proving that authentic apostolic fruitfulness always begins with interior conversion . St. Elizabeth of the Trinity believed that the greatest apostolate is becoming a living dwelling where the Blessed Trinity finds rest through continual recollection . The Catechism teaches that every Christian, regardless of vocation, is called to grow daily in holiness through continual conversion, the sacraments, prayer, and works of charity . Our Adorable Jesus therefore invites each soul to cultivate the hidden garden of the heart, where daily vigilance, humility, Eucharistic love, and faithful perseverance allow His sorrow to become joy, and ordinary lives to bear fruit that will remain for eternity .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, when our hearts become distracted, complacent, or weary, gently awaken us before small faults take deep root. Teach us to choose You in the ordinary moments of each day, to welcome Your loving correction, and to remain faithful in prayer. Through Your Eucharistic Presence, make our lives a garden where Your love may flourish for the glory of the Father and the salvation of souls . Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 155

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME
1

“The Church is in ruin.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. I am in search of souls to lead the world to me. It is My great love for mankind that keeps me a prisoner. I reveal My sad feelings. I have no rest or comfort in the midst of My ministers and consecrated souls to Me. More than ever they torture Me continuously.

My body and blood is an agony to Me. Did I shed it in vain for souls? What more could I have suffered for this mankind? These are My words from My Divine Mercy.

I call them all to watch and pray, fight their evil inclinations and suffer them not to grow into bad habits. The grass in the meadowlands has to be mowed every year. The ground needs to be ploughed, manured, and freed from weeds. My Church is in ruin. Great work must be carried on. Prayer must be carried on in souls. Many souls are blinded. They do not know what the truth is.

Grace loses its power. Sin increases and finally souls end up in hell. I pour My tears of blood over My church. Pray a great deal. In the Sacrament of My Love you are a victim. I assure you that you can  cleanse My defiled and disfigured countenance.”

“I bless you.”

3rd June 1988

Copyright © 2015 The Late Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir | Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya. All rights reserved. Reproduced by adivineappeal.com from "On the Eucharist: A Divine Appeal" (Vol. 1).

Jesus' Poor and Innocent Children

 Divine Appeal Reflection - 154

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 154:  “ My poor and innocent children do not know where the truth lies. "

Beneath these sorrowful words, Our Adorable Jesus unveils not merely an intellectual crisis but an exile of the human heart. Humanity was created to dwell within the light of Divine Truth (cf. Jn 1:1–5; Col 1:15–17) because every soul bears the imprint of the Eternal Word through whom all things were made . Before sin entered the world, Adam and Eve did not search for truth; they lived within it, contemplating God with the simplicity of children (cf. Gen 2:15–25). The fall did not only wound human nature; it fragmented man's interior vision, causing the intellect to mistake shadows for substance and echoes for the living Voice of God (CCC 396–409). Every error throughout history is, in some measure, the continuation of Eden's first deception—the temptation to possess truth rather than receive it as a gift flowing from the Father's Heart (cf. Gen 3:1–7). This explains why souls often pursue knowledge yet remain spiritually homeless. They gather information while losing wisdom, defend opinions while neglecting holiness, and cultivate certainty without encountering the Person who alone is Truth incarnate (cf. Jn 14:6). St. Augustine of Hippo perceived that every restless search, however misguided, is secretly a search for God because the soul cannot erase the divine image impressed upon it at creation. Thus Christ does not first lament human wickedness but human bewilderment. His Sacred Heart beholds countless souls wandering through deserts of ideology, pleasure, activism, technology, and self-sufficiency, all while thirsting for the living water they cannot name . A successful executive may master global markets yet never discover the silence where God speaks. A parent may sacrifice endlessly to provide every earthly opportunity for a child, yet unintentionally neglect the one inheritance that neither time nor death can take away—a living knowledge of Jesus Christ (cf. Deut. 6:6–9; Jn. 17:3; CCC 2225). A student may fill the mind with endless streams of information and digital voices, yet fail to cultivate the wisdom that recognizes God's truth and discerns the things that endure forever (cf. Prov. 9:10; Rom. 12:2; Col. 2:8; CCC 1783–1785). Even within the Church, souls may become occupied with religious activity while forgetting that Christianity is first an encounter with the living Lord before it is a system of ideas. Truth is therefore not simply something to be defended; it is Someone into whom the soul must continually be transformed (CCC 169, 170–171).

The innocence spoken of by Jesus is profoundly mysterious. It does not always signify the absence of sin but often the vulnerability of souls formed amid spiritual famine. Many have inherited confusion rather than rebellion. They breathe an atmosphere where objective truth is treated as intolerance, where conscience is detached from Revelation, and where freedom is mistaken for independence from God. Such souls resemble sheep (cf. Jn 10:1–16) born in thick mist who have never seen the brightness of the Shepherd's face . Christ's mercy flows from His awareness that deception rarely appears clothed in darkness but often disguises itself with the appearance of light (cf. 2 Cor. 11:14). St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that grace does not abolish human reason but elevates it to behold the mysteries of God beyond its natural limits . St. John Henry Newman observed that conscience remains a trustworthy guide only when formed by divine Revelation; apart from it, the heart gradually mistakes the passing opinions of the world for the voice of God.  Young Samuel (cf. 1 Sm 3:1–10) could not recognize the Lord's voice until he learned to answer with humble receptivity . The disciples journeying to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13–35) possessed the Scriptures yet remained blind until the Risen Christ interpreted them and broke bread before them . Their experience mirrors every Christian pilgrimage. Truth is not a possession conquered by human brilliance but a divine gift received by hearts purified through humility and obedience to grace . Christ entrusted the fullness of this saving truth to His Church, not to create or redefine it, but to guard it faithfully and proclaim it without diminution until the end of time (cf. Mt. 28:19–20; 1 Tim. 3:15; 2 Tim. 1:13–14; CCC 84; 96). Guided by this light, the People of God journey through history toward their heavenly homeland, where faith will yield to the Beatific Vision, hope will be fulfilled, and the redeemed shall behold the Blessed Trinity face to face in everlasting joy and perfect communion .

The deepest tragedy of spiritual deception is not that the soul ceases to seek God, but that it begins searching for Him apart from the path He has revealed. Every human heart is created with an infinite longing that only God can satisfy (cf. Ps. 42:1–2; Eccl. 3:11; CCC 27–30). Yet when this longing is separated from divine Revelation, it easily settles for lesser lights that promise fulfillment but cannot bestow eternal life . Our Adorable Jesus therefore grieves for His "poor and innocent children," many of whom do not consciously reject Him but wander through a world where human opinion is mistaken for truth. Christ alone reveals that authentic freedom is found not in creating truth but in receiving the Truth who sets us free (cf. Jn. 8:31–32; CCC 1741). The Catechism teaches that sin clouds the intellect and weakens the will until grace restores the soul's capacity to recognize God . St. Teresa of Ávila likened the soul to a crystal castle whose splendor shines only when turned toward the Divine Sun dwelling within. Darkness arises not because Christ withdraws, but because pride, distraction, self-reliance, and habitual sin gradually close the heart to His light . This blindness often appears in ordinary life. A physician may heal bodies while forgetting immortal souls. A teacher may impart knowledge without leading students to wisdom. Even apostolic activity can become spiritually barren when service replaces prayer. Like Martha, many become occupied with worthy responsibilities while neglecting the "one thing necessary" chosen by Mary—remaining at the feet of Jesus (cf. Lk. 10:38–42). The enemy rarely leads souls to reject Christ openly; instead, he fills their lives with lesser lights until they no longer hunger for the Light of the World, who alone satisfies every longing of the human heart .

Throughout Scripture, whenever God's people lost the truth, they first lost the capacity to recognize His voice. Israel fashioned the golden calf not because they consciously rejected God, (cf. Ex 32:1–8) but because they grew impatient with His hidden ways and desired a visible certainty fashioned by their own hands . The scribes and Pharisees searched the Scriptures with remarkable diligence, yet many failed to recognize the long-awaited Messiah standing before them because knowledge had ceased to lead them toward humble adoration (cf. Jn. 5:39–40; Mt. 15:7–9).For this reason, the Church affirms that membership in Masonic associations is incompatible with the Catholic faith, since certain of their underlying principles cannot be harmonized with the fullness of Revelation entrusted by Christ to His Church (cf. Mt. 16:18–19; Jude 3; CCC 84–87). At the same time, the Church never ceases to proclaim the incomparable dignity of every human person, for each is created in the image and likeness of God, redeemed through the Precious Blood of Jesus Christ, and lovingly called to the fullness of truth, holiness, and communion with the Father through His Son (cf. Gen. 1:26–27; 1 Pet. 1:18–19; Jn. 17:3; Eph. 2:13–18; CCC 1700–1706). St. Faustina Kowalska discovered that trust reaches its deepest maturity when every human certainty is surrendered into the limitless mercy of Christ . This is the enduring hope of the Church.Christ continues to lead His Church through Sacred Scripture, Apostolic Tradition, the living Magisterium, the sacraments, the witness of the saints, and the gentle promptings of the Holy Spirit welcomed by obedient hearts . Through every age of confusion, Our Adorable Jesus remains faithfully present with His Church, never ceasing to lead those who seek Him with humble hearts (cf. Mt. 28:20; Heb. 13:8).  Unrest gives way to a calm confidence born of living in Christ, who alone is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, as its inner sight is cleansed by grace (cf. Jn. 14:6; CCC 2717).The soul gradually learns to discern the soft voice of the Good Shepherd from the innumerable echoes of the world during the quiet of Eucharistic adoration.

The final movement of this Divine Appeal is not despair but radiant hope, for Our Adorable Jesus never uncovers humanity's blindness without at the same time offering the light that alone can heal it. Every warning that proceeds from His lips flows from the merciful Heart of the Good Shepherd, who never ceases to seek the lost, bind up the wounded, and carry the weary safely back to the Father's house . Divine Truth is therefore not merely a collection of doctrines to be mastered, but the living Person of Christ, who continually draws every soul into the communion of the Blessed Trinity (cf. Jn. 14:6; 17:3; CCC 260). The nearer the soul comes to Him in faith, prayer, and the sacraments, the more every illusion fades before the splendor of His eternal light . The saints teach that holiness is measured not by the greatness of one's knowledge but by the depth of a heart purified by grace and transformed into the likeness of Christ . The Church proclaims that Jesus Christ alone is the Way to the Father and, guided by the Holy Spirit, faithfully continues His saving mission until He comes again in glory . Thus, no darkness lies beyond His light, no error beyond His truth, and no soul beyond His redeeming mercy . This mission belongs to every Christian vocation. Parents evangelize through the witness of family life, priests through faithful preaching and the sacraments, religious through lives wholly consecrated to God, and the lay faithful by sanctifying the world through their daily work (cf. Deut. 6:6–9; 2 Tim. 4:2; Col. 3:17; CCC 897–913). More than persuasive arguments, it is lives transformed by grace that reveal the beauty of the Gospel, for truth lived in charity radiates a light no darkness can overcome (cf. Mt. 5:14–16; Jn. 13:35; CCC 2044).

Yet Our Adorable Jesus also directs this Divine Appeal toward every baptized soul, inviting each one to enter the sanctuary of conscience where truth is no longer discussed but encountered. It is possible to defend the doctrines of the Church with conviction while remaining inwardly distant from the living Christ whom those doctrines reveal (cf. Jas. 1:22–25; Tit. 1:16). The scribes and Pharisees diligently studied the Law, yet many failed to recognize the Divine Lawgiver standing in their midst because their hearts had grown resistant to the humility that welcomes God . Judas Iscariot listened to the voice of the Incarnate Word, shared in the apostolic mission, witnessed miracles, received the Bread from Christ's own hands, and still allowed disordered love to eclipse the grace offered to him (cf. Mt. 10:1–8; Jn. 13:21–30; Lk. 22:47–48). Their tragedy teaches that the gravest spiritual danger is not simply lacking knowledge of the truth, but refusing the conversion by which divine truth renews the mind, purifies the heart, and conforms the whole person to Christ (cf. Rom. 12:2; Eph. 4:22–24; Jas. 1:22–25). The Catechism teaches that charity is the soul and perfection of every virtue; therefore, all genuine knowledge attains its fullest meaning only when it draws the soul into a living communion of love with God .

Every authentic examination of conscience begins in the light of Christ's merciful gaze rather than in the shadow of fear (cf. Jn. 3:17–21; Rom. 8:1). The essential question is not merely whether we profess the truth, but whether the Truth Himself dwells within our hearts and shapes our lives (cf. Jn. 14:6, 23; Gal. 2:20). Does my life reflect the face of Christ, or have quieter voices gradually claimed the allegiance that belongs to Him alone ? Do I seek human approval more eagerly than holiness (cf. Gal. 1:10)? Does Sacred Scripture shape my imagination more deeply than the endless voices of the world (cf. Ps. 1:1–3; Rom. 12:2)? Have ambition, comfort, wealth, ideology, entertainment, or self-will begun to occupy the sanctuary of my heart more than the Eucharistic Lord (cf. Mt. 6:21, 24; Col. 3:1–5)? Christ asks these questions not to condemn but to awaken, heal, and restore, for His desire is always to bring the wandering heart back into the freedom of divine friendship (cf. Rev. 3:19–20; Jn. 10:10).The Holy Spirit patiently purifies every soul that surrenders to His gentle action, conforming it ever more deeply to the mind, the Heart, and the life of Christ . Then truth is no longer merely understood by the intellect but loved by the heart, embodied in daily life, and quietly radiated through every thought, word, sacrifice, and act of charity. Such a soul no longer simply knows where truth is found; it becomes a living witness to the Truth who dwells within, until faith is consummated in the eternal vision of God face to face .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, Eternal Truth made Flesh, gather every wandering soul into the light of Your Sacred Heart. Heal our blindness, purify our minds, and form our consciences through Your Church. May Your Holy Spirit keep us faithful until every shadow disappears in the everlasting light of Your heavenly Kingdom. Amen.

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