ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL
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.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 131: "Like a beggar I ask for reparation and consolation."
Our Adorable Jesus, who created and sustains every breath of life , enters our ordinary days with a humility so quiet that we often mistake His presence for coincidence. He does not force Himself upon us, even though all authority belongs to Him . Instead, He waits patiently at the door of the heart , often speaking through moments that seem small, inconvenient, or deeply human. This hiddenness is not distance but tenderness. Divine love refuses coercion because God desires children who freely respond, not servants acting from fear . Many times, Christ comes disguised within the ordinary struggles of life. The parent exhausted after caring for children may not realize that patience in fatigue becomes a hidden act of love. The student discouraged by failure may discover Christ quietly teaching perseverance (cf. Rom 5:3–5). The worker overlooked or treated unfairly receives an invitation to remain honest and merciful instead of bitter (cf. Col 3:23–24). Even family misunderstandings, disappointments, or loneliness may become sacred places where Jesus gently asks, “Will you still trust Me here?” Like the disciples on the road to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13–35) who failed to recognize Jesus walking beside them , we too often miss Our Adorable Jesus in ordinary life. St. Alphonsus Liguori taught that grace often comes quietly: the urge to apologize, pray, forgive, or visit the Blessed Sacrament. Like Elijah, (cf. 1 Kgs 19:11–13) God often speaks in gentle stillness . Scripture repeatedly reveals this hidden way of God. Elijah encountered Him not through dramatic force, but in gentle stillness (cf. 1 Kgs 19:11–13). Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10) learned to recognize God’s voice slowly and imperfectly . Peter encountered mercy even after failure (cf. Jn 21:15–17). God often works patiently within weakness rather than around it.
Our Adorable Jesus becomes most profoundly the Divine Beggar in the Eucharist, where infinite majesty hides beneath appearances so ordinary that many pass without noticing . The One before whom heaven bows chooses silence instead of spectacle. He does not demand attention, though every heartbeat depends on Him . Here lies one of the deepest mysteries of divine love: God makes Himself completely accessible while remaining painfully easy to ignore. This is not weakness—it is humility carried to its furthest limit. Christ waits, not because He lacks power, but because authentic love waits to be freely welcomed . In ordinary life, this hidden Eucharistic longing unfolds quietly and painfully. A worker passes a church during lunch break, inwardly feeling a small invitation to enter for even two minutes, yet rushes past because the day feels too busy. After Holy Communion, a young professional quickly checks messages, missing the silence of thanksgiving to Christ truly received . A student leaves Mass and turns to social media, while a tired caregiver enters church distracted and barely notices the tabernacle. A passerby feels a brief urge to pray but keeps walking, pressed by routine . In each moment, Our Adorable Jesus remains present, yet gently overlooked in the noise of daily life (cf. Jn 1:10–11). None of these moments are dramatic rejections; they reveal something deeply human: hearts can love Jesus sincerely, yet still fail to notice Him amid exhaustion, routine, and distraction (cf. Lk 24:13–35). Like Mary and Joseph searching unknowingly for Jesus , many souls realize only later how close He had been. Saint Peter Julian Eymard called the Eucharist the hidden dwelling of forgotten Love, silently waiting for companionship. Likewise, Saint Katharine Drexel recognized Christ both in the tabernacle and in neglected people, understanding that Eucharistic love must overflow into mercy . The Church teaches that Christ is truly, substantially present in the Eucharist—not symbolically distant, but personally near . Yet this Presence waits like a gentle beggar, asking not for greatness but attention: a whispered prayer before work, a few quiet seconds after Communion, a small visit during an ordinary day. In the divine economy of love, even unnoticed moments of fidelity console the Eucharistic Heart more deeply than we imagine.
Our Adorable Jesus rarely asks first for extraordinary sacrifices; more often, He asks for attentiveness in ordinary moments. The Divine Beggar quietly enters the unnoticed spaces of daily life, not through dramatic visions but through gentle interruptions of forgetfulness. He comes in conscience—that sacred interior place where God softly calls the soul toward truth, goodness, and love . Often, His voice is subtle: a pause before speaking harshly, an inner discomfort after gossip, a quiet invitation to remain honest when dishonesty seems easier, or a gentle urge to pray instead of endlessly distracting ourselves . These moments appear small, yet they are sacred thresholds where grace quietly waits . In deeply human ways, many recognize this interior movement but delay responding. Someone feels prompted to send a message of reconciliation after an argument but postpones it because pride still hurts (cf. Mt 5:23–24). A student senses the need to pray before anxiety overwhelms them but chooses entertainment to numb the stress . A worker feels moved to help a struggling colleague yet silently says, “Maybe another day.” A parent inwardly knows they should speak more patiently but excuses irritation because exhaustion feels stronger than charity. These moments are rarely acts of rebellion; they are often habits of postponement. Yet hidden within them is Christ gently asking for entrance . Saint Francis de Sales taught that holiness is built through small acts of fidelity offered consistently with love. Scripture reveals that God often speaks not through overwhelming force, but through quiet stillness . Like the prophet Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10) slowly learning to recognize God’s voice , souls grow spiritually by learning to notice these gentle promptings. Ignoring Christ is rarely dramatic; more often it happens through repeated delay—love postponed, forgiveness deferred, prayer neglected until “tomorrow” (cf. Heb 3:15; Jas 4:17). Yet the Divine Beggar never ceases knocking at the heart with quiet persistence . He patiently returns in the next conversation, the next silence, the next opportunity to love. Holiness begins when the soul stops postponing small acts of love and quietly says, “Yes, Lord, even here.”
Our Adorable Jesus continues His hidden, begging presence through the wounded and ordinary members of His Mystical Body. The Divine Beggar does not remain only in the tabernacle; He quietly approaches us through human need, weakness, loneliness, and suffering . This is not merely symbolic language or poetic spirituality. Christ truly identifies Himself with the vulnerable, so deeply that love offered—or withheld—toward another becomes love offered or withheld toward Him (cf. Mt 25:40; CCC 2443–2449). The mystery is startling: the God whom angels adore often comes disguised in forms we naturally overlook . He appears not always through inspiring people, but frequently through inconvenient ones. In daily life, this becomes painfully concrete and deeply human. An elderly relative repeating the same stories becomes Christ quietly asking not for efficiency, but patient attention. A difficult colleague who constantly frustrates us may become Christ asking whether we can love without emotional reward (cf. Lk 6:32–36). A struggling spouse silently carrying emotional burdens becomes Christ longing to be listened to rather than corrected. A poor stranger at the roadside becomes Christ asking whether compassion can interrupt comfort. Even within families, unresolved tension, unspoken wounds, or emotional distance may become sacred spaces where Jesus softly asks for reconciliation before resentment hardens . St. Damien of Molokai encountered Christ in those rejected and feared, remaining among the suffering when others withdrew. Scripture repeatedly reveals this divine pattern: God appears hidden in vulnerable encounters, as Abraham unknowingly welcomed heavenly visitors (cf. Gen 18:1–8), and as the disciples recognized Christ only in the breaking of bread after walking beside Him unnoticed . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1878–1889) teaches that love of God and neighbor cannot be separated because human persons are made for communion . Thus, every act of patience, forgiveness, listening, or mercy becomes more than kindness—it becomes response to Christ quietly begging for love through another human heart.
Our Adorable Jesus remains the only Divine Beggar who enriches every soul that responds to Him. Unlike human begging born from lack, Christ asks not because He needs something, but because love desires communion. His invitations are never about taking—they are about transforming. When Jesus asks for attention, trust, forgiveness, or surrender, He is quietly opening the soul to become more fully alive. The mystery is profound: the One who seems to ask is actually the One who gives. Like the woman at the well who came seeking ordinary water yet left inwardly renewed , every person who responds to Christ discovers that divine asking always conceals divine generosity. He asks for a few moments of prayer and gives peace. He asks for forgiveness and gives freedom. He asks for trust in suffering and gives strength to endure . Mystically, this transformation unfolds not in dramatic heroism but through hidden fidelity. A tired parent choosing tenderness instead of impatience becomes quietly transformed by grace. A student praying despite spiritual dryness learns faithfulness beyond feelings. A person forgiving an old wound, even while still hurting, slowly becomes capable of deeper love. Someone remaining honest when dishonesty would benefit them participates in Christ’s truth . These moments seem ordinary, yet heaven sees them as profound responses to divine love. The soul gradually changes; prayer becomes less obligation and more relationship, sacrifice becomes less burden and more offering. The beggar becomes the giver, and the receiver slowly becomes gift. The Blessed Virgin Mary embodies this mystery perfectly. When heaven quietly awaited her response, she offered complete openness without resistance . Mary did not simply give something to God—she allowed her entire life to become fully available to divine love (cf. Lk 1:38; CCC 494). Her hidden years in Nazareth reveal that holiness grows through ordinary faithfulness rather than visible greatness . Likewise, Thérèse of Lisieux discovered that sanctity is found in small acts done with great love: enduring misunderstandings peacefully, remaining kind when unnoticed, and persevering in prayer even in dryness (cf. CCC 2013–2014). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1, 27) teaches that humanity’s deepest vocation is communion with God Himself . Thus, the Divine Beggar of Heaven waits patiently—not from weakness, but from eternal love—so that our “yes” may become free, sincere, and everlasting.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, Divine Beggar of love, open our eyes to Your hidden presence in Eucharist, conscience, and the poor. Teach us not to ignore Your quiet invitations. May we respond quickly, love sincerely, and remain faithful in small things, so our lives become Your dwelling place. Amen. .
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 130: "I order you to pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart."
Numerous souls silently traverse the terrain of our life on a daily basis; some do so for a short time, some for a season, and some for many years. Yet no encounter is entirely accidental before God, for every person carries an eternal story known and loved by Him . Many are quickly forgotten, their faces fading into the silence of ordinary time. Yet the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus never forgets a single soul, for each person remains eternally known, remembered, and loved before Him . To cloister souls in the heart means learning to remember others the way Christ remembers them: not as interruptions, strangers, or passing encounters, but as persons carrying hidden stories, silent wounds, unseen struggles, and eternal dignity . Prayer silently refuses to allow another person to be spiritually abandoned; it is an inner vocation of sympathetic recall. Beneath continual busyness and seeming normalcy, loneliness is one of the worst hurts of modern existence. Many are completely invisible despite being in the middle of crowds. A cashier may smile while quietly carrying grief. A student may sit silently beneath invisible emotional burdens. An elderly neighbor may endure long days without meaningful companionship. A priest may minister generously while privately carrying discouragement. A young professional may appear successful while inwardly searching for meaning and hope. Our Adorable Jesus sees every burden hidden beneath appearances, every silent question, every unspoken sorrow, and every exhaustion the world overlooks . When He asks souls to cloister others in their hearts, He invites them to participate in His own compassionate gaze: a love that notices, remembers, intercedes, and quietly carries others before the Father . To cloister souls is not merely to pray occasionally for humanity in general. It is to allow specific people to occupy sacred space within one's spiritual life. Their struggles become part of our intercession. Their wounds become part of our prayer. Their salvation becomes part of our concern. Abraham carried an entire city before God (cf. Gen 18:22–33). Moses carried a rebellious nation (cf. Ex 32:30–32). Saint Paul carried entire Christian communities within his heart (cf. Phil 1:7; Col 1:9). The person who learns this spiritual art begins moving through life differently. Every encounter becomes a possible invitation from Christ. Every face becomes a soul entrusted to prayer. The heart gradually becomes less occupied with self and more occupied with the eternal destiny of others (cf. CCC 2634–2636).
One of the most beautiful dimensions of Christian love is perseverance. The world often remembers people only while they remain useful, interesting, attractive, successful, or physically present. Divine love works differently. Our Adorable Jesus continues pursuing souls long after others have forgotten them . Consider a mother whose son stopped attending Mass twenty years ago. Every morning she still whispers his name before the tabernacle. Consider a teacher who remembers former students caught in addiction and continues praying for them years after graduation. Consider a nurse who carries terminally ill patients in prayer long after they leave the hospital. Consider a priest who remembers parishioners who abandoned the faith decades earlier. Consider a widow who offers Rosaries for the conversion of family members she rarely sees. This is what cloistering souls looks like in ordinary life. It is spiritual fidelity. It is refusing to surrender people to hopelessness. It is saying through prayer, "Lord, I will continue bringing this soul to You until You decide otherwise." Saint Monica carried Augustine in her heart long before he became a saint. She saw not merely a rebellious young man but a soul pursued by grace (cf. CCC 1653). Hannah carried her deepest intentions before God with perseverance (cf. 1 Sam 1:9–20). The Church teaches that intercession participates in Christ's own prayer for humanity (CCC 2634–2635). Therefore every soul faithfully remembered before God enters a mysterious current of grace. Sometimes the results are seen immediately. Often they are revealed only in eternity.
It is easy to pray for those we naturally love. It is far more difficult to carry within our hearts those connected to painful memories. Yet this is precisely where the Heart of Jesus becomes most visible. The Gospel (cf. Lk 23:34; Jn 13:1) repeatedly reveals a Savior who continued loving those who abandoned, denied, mocked, betrayed, and crucified Him . Many people unknowingly keep prisons within their hearts. Old betrayals remain locked inside. Family conflicts continue shaping decisions years later. Words spoken decades ago still influence relationships. Yet cloistering souls transforms prisons into chapels. Instead of replaying wounds, the soul places wounded relationships before Christ.A woman whose marriage ended painfully may begin praying daily for her former spouse’s salvation, quietly transforming heartbreak into intercession (cf. Mt 5:44; Rom 12:21). A businessman who was cheated may refuse bitterness and instead pray for the person who harmed him, allowing mercy to resist resentment . A young adult may carry a difficult parent before God rather than feeding anger. A parishioner may continue praying for a priest who disappointed him, and a sibling may remember in prayer the family member who caused years of division . Such love does not excuse injustice, deny wounds, or pretend suffering never happened. Rather, it prevents pain from becoming spiritually sterile. When suffering is carried into prayer, the soul quietly refuses to allow injury to become hatred, and sorrow becomes a place where grace slowly restores what bitterness would destroy . Joseph (cf. Gen 50:20; Rom 8:28; CCC 2844) carried the brothers who sold him into slavery without allowing hatred to dominate his heart . Stephen (cf. Acts 7:59–60) prayed for his persecutors while dying . The Catechism teaches that forgiveness reflects participation in God's mercy (CCC 2842–2845). Sometimes the most powerful souls are not those who carry many friends in prayer but those who carry former enemies into the Heart of Christ.
The majority of people believe that intercession only takes place during official times of prayer, such as when one kneels in church, prays the Rosary, attends Mass, or sets apart time to spend in silence. Yet the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus often invites souls into something deeper and more hidden: carrying others throughout the ordinary movements of daily life . Prayer books and chapels are not the exclusive settings for intercession. It might silently accompany everyday obligations, traffic, exhaustion, job, illness, waiting, and disappointment. A parent driving children to school may silently entrust them to God. A worker enduring a difficult shift may offer hidden exhaustion for struggling families. A seminarian studying late into the night may offer mental strain for vocations or friends drifting from faith. A caregiver assisting an aging parent may quietly transform weariness into love offered for forgotten souls (cf. Col 3:17; Rom 12:1). Such hidden offerings often remain unnoticed by the world, yet Heaven sees them clearly. A father worried about an unemployed son may offer a day’s labor for him. A grandmother living with arthritis may quietly unite physical discomfort to prayer for grandchildren who no longer practice the faith. A cancer patient may offer painful treatments for priests and religious. A young mother carrying sleepless nights may place struggling marriages into the Heart of Christ. A studying priest facing academic pressure may offer difficulties for sinners far from God. These small acts may appear insignificant outwardly, yet love quietly transforms them into intercession (cf. Mk 12:41–44; Jas 5:16).This is precisely how Christ carried humanity: not only through words, but through an entire life offered in love, sacrifice, obedience, and self-giving . Every burden united to Him becomes spiritually fruitful because suffering offered with love mysteriously participates in His redemptive work . The Eucharist becomes central to this hidden mission. Souls cloistered in the heart may be spiritually brought to the tabernacle, remembered during adoration, and quietly entrusted during Holy Communion (cf. Jn 6:56; CCC 1379). What appears small on earth may become immense in eternity, for a hidden sacrifice offered faithfully may become the grace that softens a hardened conscience years later or quietly draws a forgotten soul back toward God .
The Heart of Christ is the great cloister of humanity. Every saint, sinner, believer, doubter, prisoner, child, parent, priest, religious, widow, worker, refugee, and dying soul is known personally by Him . Every tale, every injury, every hope, and every worry are all carried by him. He is bringing us into His own mission of love when He wants us to cloister souls in our hearts. This calling belongs to everyone. Priests cloister their parishioners. Religious cloister the Church. Parents cloister children. Children can cloister parents. Students can cloister classmates. Workers can cloister colleagues. The elderly can cloister entire generations. Even the sick, confined to a bed, can become powerful spiritual intercessors for the world. The Blessed Virgin Mary offers the most beautiful example. Her heart remained open from Bethlehem to Calvary. She carried the joys, sufferings, and future of countless souls within her maternal love . Her heart became a sanctuary where humanity was continually presented to God. The world teaches people to protect their hearts from inconvenience. Christ teaches them to enlarge their hearts through love. The more souls we carry, the more our hearts resemble His. Then prayer ceases to be merely a spiritual exercise and becomes participation in the saving work of Christ. The heart becomes a living cloister where souls are remembered, protected, loved, and continually entrusted to divine mercy until they reach eternity .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, place within us the heart of a spiritual father and mother. May we carry families, priests, religious, children, youth, and sinners within our prayers. Let no soul entrusted to us be neglected through indifference. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.