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Jesus Needs the Desire to Repair

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 129

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 129:  "I need the desire to repair"

One of the most overlooked realities in the spiritual life is that Our Adorable Jesus often looks less at what a soul has accomplished and more at what it desires to offer. Before great acts of reparation come great desires of reparation. Before heroic sacrifices come hearts wounded by love. The desire to repair is born when a soul begins seeing the world through the pierced Heart of Christ. It is the moment when one no longer views sin merely as personal failure but as a rejection of Divine Love itself . Many people witness moral confusion, broken families, abandoned churches, attacks on human dignity, sacrileges, impurity, violence, dishonesty, and indifference toward God. Most simply complain about these realities. Reparative souls respond differently. They ask, "Lord, what can I offer for this?" This question has transformed saints throughout history. Moses stood between divine justice and sinful Israel (cf. Ex 32:11–14, 30–32). Esther (cf. Est 4:13–16) risked her life for her people . Daniel (cf. Dan 9:3–19) fasted and interceded for a nation . Today the same call remains urgent. A university student can offer a Rosary for classmates living far from God. A father can offer daily work for the conversion of his children. A widow can offer loneliness for priests. A sick person can transform physical suffering into prayer for dying souls. The desire itself already consoles the Heart of Jesus because it reveals a soul that no longer lives for itself alone but has entered the mystery of redemptive love .

Modern culture teaches people to avoid sorrow, discomfort, sacrifice, and responsibility. The Gospel teaches something radically different. It reveals a God who enters human suffering because He refuses to abandon humanity . Reparative souls gradually discover that authentic love carries concern for the beloved. The more they love Christ, the more they begin noticing what wounds His Heart. Our Adorable Jesus sees every neglected tabernacle, every forgotten Mass, every confession postponed for years, every marriage weakened by selfishness, every child deprived of faith, every soul trapped in addiction, every priest carrying hidden burdens, every elderly person abandoned in loneliness, every young person searching for meaning without God . The reparative soul does not merely observe the wounds of the world; it quietly carries them into prayer . This does not mean becoming emotionally overwhelmed, but allowing compassion to replace indifference and love to overcome passivity. Such a soul learns to suffer with Christ for others, transforming concern into intercession and sorrow into hidden acts of love . In this way, even ordinary burdens become silent offerings placed within the merciful Heart of Our Adorable Jesus. A nurse may offer exhausting shifts for souls dying without the sacraments. A teacher may offer daily frustrations for struggling families. A mother caring for a sick child in the night may quietly entrust sleepless hours for sinners far from God. In this way, ordinary sacrifices become hidden acts of intercession (cf. Rom 12:1). Saint Catherine of Siena carried profound concern for the renewal of the Church, while Saint Veronica Giuliani understood reparation as participation in Christ’s love for wounded souls (cf. Col 1:24). The Church teaches that all members of Christ’s Body remain spiritually united (CCC 946–959). Therefore, no act of love, suffering, or prayer offered for others is ever wasted before God, for divine charity quietly multiplies what is surrendered in love .

Many people think reparation concerns only grave sins. Yet some of the deepest wounds within the Mystical Body arise from neglected love. Souls often focus on evil actions while overlooking opportunities for holiness that were ignored. A person may never commit serious wrongdoing yet repeatedly refuse invitations to deeper charity, prayer, sacrifice, forgiveness, and faithfulness . Our Adorable Jesus suffers not only because souls reject Him, but also because so many fail to respond to His love (cf. Lk 19:41–42; Rev 3:20). He beholds confessions delayed, prayers neglected, acts of charity left undone, vocations resisted, reconciliations postponed, Holy Communion received without preparation, and countless graces quietly ignored . Yet even amid such sorrow, His Heart continues waiting with patience and mercy, never ceasing to invite souls back into deeper communion and love (cf. 2 Pet 3:9; CCC 1432).The desire to repair enters precisely here. A businessman chooses honesty where others choose corruption. A parishioner remains after Mass for thanksgiving while others rush away. Such actions repair not merely because they avoid evil but because they actively respond to grace. Consider (cf. Lk 10:25–37) the Good Samaritan . The priest and Levite did not necessarily commit an obvious crime; they simply failed to love when love was needed. Reparation often begins where indifference ends. The Church (CCC 1827, 2447) teaches that charity covers a multitude of sins and contributes to the sanctification of the world . Every act of intentional love offered to Our Adorable Jesus becomes a hidden restoration of what selfishness, neglect, or sin has wounded.

Among the most astonishing mysteries of divine love is the silent patience of Our Adorable Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, where He remains waiting, loving, and inviting souls despite indifference, forgetfulness, and delay . Century after century He remains. Kingdoms rise and fall. Cultures change. Empires disappear. Yet Our Adorable Jesus continues waiting in tabernacles throughout the world, longing for souls to visit, adore, and love Him . Reparative love becomes especially Eucharistic because the Eucharist reveals both the greatness of divine love and the tragedy of human indifference. Many churches remain empty throughout the week. Many souls pass near tabernacles without entering. Many receive Holy Communion while giving little attention to the One received. Yet Jesus remains. The reparative soul seeks to remain where others do not remain. It spends fifteen minutes after Mass. It stops briefly before work to greet Christ. It makes a weekly Holy Hour. It kneels before the tabernacle while shopping nearby. It remains after confession simply to thank Him. It joins Eucharistic adoration not because it receives emotional consolation but because Jesus deserves companionship. Saint Peter Julian Eymard dedicated his life to Eucharistic reparation. Saint Manuel González García was deeply moved by neglected tabernacles. Their witness reminds us that reparation is not merely an action but a relationship. The Church (CCC 1378–1380, 1418) teaches that Eucharistic worship extends and intensifies communion with Christ . 

At Calvary, many voices condemned Christ, mocked Him, abandoned Him, or remained indifferent. Yet a few remained near Him. Mary remained. John remained. The holy women remained (cf. Jn 19:25–27). Their presence could not remove the Cross, but it consoled the Crucified Heart. This remains the essence of reparation. Our Adorable Jesus continues experiencing rejection wherever truth is ignored, life is devalued, faith is abandoned, families are wounded, and souls drift from grace. Reparative souls choose not to flee these realities. Instead, they bring Christ into them through prayer, sacrifice, witness, and charity. A grandfather praying daily for grandchildren who no longer attend church repairs. A religious persevering through community hatredness repairs. A young adult courageously defending Christian values repairs. A priest faithfully celebrating Mass despite discouragement repairs. A bedridden patient offering pain for missionary work repairs. A spouse remaining faithful through difficulties repairs. Every act united to Christ participates in His redemptive mission . The saints understood that Jesus does not first ask, "How much have you done?" He asks, "How much do you love?" The desire to repair is therefore one of the clearest signs of mature love. It reveals a heart that has moved beyond self-interest and entered into the concerns of Christ Himself. Such souls become living consolations to the Sacred Heart and hidden channels through which mercy reaches the world (cf. Phil 2:1–5; Eph 5:1–2; CCC 2013).

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, make us companions of Your Eucharistic Heart. Where You are forgotten, let us remember You. Where You are neglected, let us visit You. Where You are unloved, let us love You more deeply. May our presence before You become an act of reparation. Amen. 

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

Divine Appeal 129

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I need the desire to repair.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal and atone. Give Me company in this dark and terrible hour. Listen well. Do not be afraid. I will guide you. I order you to pray even in spite of your sufferings. Humanity has united itself to the devil. I am shedding tears of blood for the whole of humanity.

I have come to seek for shelter. Pray a great deal. Do it out of love. Time is reaping what has been sown. Keep silence. It is not in vain. My Sacrament under both species will be profaned with blasphemy. I need the desire to repair. What a pain! I am forced to walk through the streets with tears in My eyes! Do not leave Me alone. Pray and expiate for evil.”

“I bless you.”

2.00 a.m., 22nd April 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.

Jesus Speaks Through His Divine Presence

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 128

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 128: "I speak to you by the means of My Presence in the Divine Sacrament."

One of the greatest mysteries of the Blessed Sacrament is that Our Adorable Jesus remains not merely present but actively engaged in the life of every soul who approaches Him. The Eucharist is not a sacred object but a living encounter with the risen Christ who knows every thought, wound, fear, temptation, desire, vocation, and struggle hidden within the human heart . The same Jesus who called Samuel during the night (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10), spoke to Moses from the burning bush (cf. Ex 3:1–10), instructed Elijah in gentle silence (cf. 1 Kgs 19:11–13), and transformed Saul on the road to Damascus , remains alive in every tabernacle of the world. Yet Eucharistic listening begins with an important truth: Christ speaks because He loves. He does not speak merely to transmit information but to deepen communion. Every authentic word from Jesus seeks the salvation, purification, strengthening, healing, or sanctification of the soul . Sometimes He speaks through Scripture. Sometimes through conscience. Sometimes through interior light. Sometimes through a deep conviction. Sometimes through holy peace. Sometimes through a growing desire for holiness. The Eucharistic Heart is constantly radiating grace whether the soul perceives it or not. Many leave adoration believing nothing happened because they did not experience emotions or extraordinary phenomena. Yet the greatest communications of Christ are often hidden. Just as sunlight silently nourishes a seed beneath the soil, Jesus often works within souls without immediate awareness .

Modern humanity suffers from a profound crisis of interior attention. Many souls carry the noise of the world even into the sanctuary; the body arrives before the tabernacle while the mind remains occupied with unfinished conversations, worries, family burdens, plans, regrets, anxieties, and countless distractions (cf. Ps 46:10; Lk 10:41–42). Yet before the Eucharistic presence of Our Adorable Jesus, the soul is gently invited to return inwardly, laying aside inner noise in order to rediscover the forgotten art of silent attentiveness to God . Consequently, they struggle to hear the gentle movements of grace. Our Adorable Jesus teaches that listening is not primarily an activity but a disposition. Before hearing His voice, the soul must learn to become present. This is why adoration often begins not with speaking but with simply remaining before Him. Like Mary of Bethany (cf. Lk 10:39) sitting at His feet , the soul learns to rest in His presence before seeking answers. Practical Eucharistic listening may begin with a simple prayer: "Jesus, I am here. Teach me what You desire." Then remain quietly before Him. Read a short Gospel passage. Slowly reflect upon it. Offer your concerns. Then wait peacefully. Do not force thoughts. Do not manufacture messages. Do not become anxious. Silence itself slowly becomes an act of love, because before the Eucharistic Presence the soul learns that communion is not built only through words, but through attentive nearness . St. Pier Giorgio Frassati found strength for ordinary life through silent time before the Blessed Sacrament, revealing that Eucharistic intimacy quietly forms courage, purity, and charity. In adoration, the soul discovers that love sometimes deepens most when it simply remains with Our Adorable Jesus in faithful stillness .  The deepest listening before Our Adorable Jesus often begins when words become fewer and loving attention becomes greater, for silence itself can become prayer (cf. Ps 46:10; Jn 15:4–5). Sometimes Christ speaks through inspirations or insight; often He speaks through His Presence alone, quietly forming the soul through silent communion .

Many sincere souls become discouraged because they expect a message during every Holy Hour, every Mass, every visit to the Blessed Sacrament, or every period of adoration. Yet Our Adorable Jesus often works most deeply in silence, where grace quietly forms the heart without extraordinary feelings or words . The Eucharistic life is not sustained by constant spiritual experiences, but by faithful presence, loving attention, and quiet perseverance before Christ . When no obvious inspiration arrives, they conclude that Jesus is distant or silent. This misunderstanding can deprive them of immense graces. Consider two close friends sitting together. Genuine love does not require constant conversation. The mere presence of the beloved already communicates affection, security, and communion. The same is true in Eucharistic prayer. There are times when Our Adorable Jesus speaks clearly through an interior conviction. There are times when He grants understanding regarding a difficult situation. There are times when He illuminates Scripture. But there are also times when He simply invites the soul to remain with Him. At Gethsemane, (cf. Mt 26:38–40) Jesus asked His disciples to stay with Him . The request was not first about speaking but about companionship. Likewise, many Holy Hours may appear uneventful outwardly while accomplishing profound hidden work within the soul. In silence, the heart gradually learns patience, fidelity, trust, humility, perseverance, and a purer love for God . The saints repeatedly teach that spiritual maturity consists not in receiving many consolations, but in remaining faithful when consolations are absent. The Church (CCC 2715–2719) describes this as contemplative prayer, where the soul quietly remains attentive to God even in apparent silence . Therefore, a Holy Hour is never wasted. If Jesus speaks, receive His word; if He remains silent, receive His Presence. Both are gifts. Both are encounters. Both quietly transform the soul (cf. Ps 46:10; Jn 15:4–5).

One of the enemy's most subtle deceptions is convincing ordinary Christians that Eucharistic intimacy belongs only to saints. Many parents, students, workers, professionals, elderly persons, and young adults assume that Jesus speaks only to extraordinary souls. Yet Scripture reveals the opposite. God speaks to shepherds, fishermen, tax collectors, widows, laborers, children, kings, prophets, and sinners . The Eucharistic Lord desires communion with every baptized soul . A mother praying after morning Mass can hear His guidance. A businessman stopping briefly before work can receive His light. A student visiting the chapel between classes can encounter His wisdom. A sick person praying from a wheelchair before the tabernacle can receive His strength. A young person discerning a vocation can discover His direction. The determining factor is not status but openness of heart. Our Adorable Jesus speaks where He is welcomed, where humility creates space, and where faith quietly perseveres even in silence or uncertainty (cf. Rev 3:20; Jas 4:6). Divine intimacy is not reserved for the extraordinary, but offered to every soul willing to listen, trust, and remain near Him . Throughout history, saints such as Saint Catherine of Siena and Carlo Acutis remind us that holiness is not reserved for a privileged few, but remains accessible to every soul willing to love God deeply . The Eucharistic Christ does not create an elite circle of listeners, for His Heart remains universally open to all who approach with faith and sincerity . Every soul is invited to come, remain, listen, and receive. The voice of the Good Shepherd continues calling all His sheep, not merely a select few, for Christ desires intimacy with every heart that seeks Him (cf. Jn 10:14–16, 27; CCC 2013).

The purpose of Eucharistic listening is not curiosity but obedience. Many souls desire to hear Jesus, yet fewer desire to follow what He reveals. The tragedy is not that Christ fails to speak but that His invitations are often resisted. The rich young man (cf. Mk 10:17–22) heard the call of Jesus but departed sorrowfully . Pilate recognized innocence but ignored truth (cf. Jn 18:37–38). Judas (cf. Jn 13:21–30) heard Christ's words for years yet hardened his heart . The voice of Jesus frequently comes through conscience. It urges forgiveness when resentment feels easier. It calls for confession when pride prefers delay. It encourages prayer when distractions seem more attractive. It invites generosity when selfishness appears safer. It directs souls toward holiness when compromise seems more comfortable . How can we know it is truly Jesus speaking? His voice never contradicts Scripture, Church teaching, authentic charity, humility, purity, or truth . His voice produces deeper peace even when demanding sacrifice. Authentic movements of grace bear recognizable fruits within the soul. They draw the heart toward God rather than self-glorification, inspire obedience rather than rebellion, and deepen humility rather than self-importance . True spiritual promptings increase faith, hope, and love, leading the soul toward greater peace and fidelity, rather than confusion, pride, or despair . Therefore never ignore the gentle voice of Our Adorable Jesus. Every inspiration toward holiness may become the doorway to a greater grace. Every act of obedience deepens communion. Every response strengthens spiritual hearing. Eventually the soul becomes so familiar with the Eucharistic Christ that His voice is recognized amid life's many competing voices. Then adoration becomes not merely a visit but an ongoing conversation of love between the Heart of Jesus and the soul He desires to sanctify .

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, teach us that Your Presence is already a gift beyond measure. Even when we receive no clear answer, help us believe that You are working within us. May we remain at Your feet with confidence, patience, and love. Amen.

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

Fearless Kneeling Before Jesus

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 128

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 128: "In the sacrament of My Love I need you to kneel without fear."

In an age that glorifies self-sufficiency, personal autonomy, and visible achievement, kneeling before Our Adorable Jesus becomes a prophetic act. It is the silent proclamation (cf. Acts 17:25–28) that God remains God and that humanity remains dependent upon Him for every breath, grace, and hope of salvation . Kneeling is not first an action of the body but an attitude of truth. The knees descend because the soul has recognized the infinite majesty concealed beneath the Eucharistic veils. Every genuflection before the tabernacle becomes a profession of faith stronger than many words. The body itself testifies that the One present is not merely remembered but truly present, living and active among His people . Throughout salvation history, holy men and women instinctively knelt whenever divine glory touched earth. Abraham (cf. Gen 18:2) bowed before the Lord . Moses fell before divine holiness (cf. Ex 34:8). Solomon (cf. 1 Kgs 8:54) knelt before the God of Israel . The Magi (cf. Mt 2:11) prostrated themselves before the Child who appeared outwardly ordinary but was inwardly King of kings . Their posture revealed what their eyes could not fully comprehend. The Eucharist presents the same mystery. Outwardly, bread remains visible; inwardly, the living Christ is present. Therefore kneeling becomes the language of faith. The saints understood this deeply. The Church teaches that bodily gestures express and intensify interior adoration (CCC 1153, 2702). Thus every knee bent before Our Adorable Jesus becomes an act of love, faith, humility, reparation, and worship directed toward the hidden God who waits in silence for souls .

One of the gravest spiritual tragedies is to stand before divine mystery and slowly cease to tremble in love. Souls may attend Mass, pass before tabernacles, and receive Holy Communion while gradually losing wonder before the living presence of Our Adorable Jesus . Yet the Eucharist remains heaven hidden in humility: Christ truly present, silently waiting to be adored, loved, and received with reverence . What once inspired wonder can become routine. What once moved hearts to adoration can become ordinary through habit. Kneeling protects the soul from this spiritual blindness. Our Adorable Jesus remains hidden in countless tabernacles, not because His glory has diminished, but because His humility has become even greater. The Creator of galaxies remains enclosed within sacramental signs. The Judge of history waits silently. The King of angels allows Himself to be approached by sinners. Such humility should produce holy astonishment within every believer (cf. Heb 12:28–29; Rev 5:11–14). Many misunderstand kneeling as an outdated custom or merely cultural practice. Others see it as optional because they focus only on interior devotion. Yet authentic Catholic spirituality never separates the body from the soul. Human beings are not spirits trapped in bodies but embodied souls created to worship God with their entire being . Just as love naturally seeks visible expression, adoration also takes bodily form through kneeling, silence, reverence, and humble presence before the Eucharistic Lord. Saints such as Saint Peter Julian Eymard and Saint Manuel González García spent long hours before the Blessed Sacrament because they recognized the hidden longing of Christ who remains silently present in tabernacles . Their reverence was not empty practice, but love made visible. Every act of adoration quietly tells Our Adorable Jesus that He is not forgotten, abandoned, or left alone, consoling the Eucharistic Heart that continues waiting for humanity .

The body that bends today may not bend tomorrow. Youth often assumes permanence, and health can quietly create the illusion of endless opportunities. Yet time changes what strength once made easy. Many elderly souls would gladly exchange earthly comforts for a few more moments kneeling peacefully before the Blessed Sacrament. Our Adorable Jesus invites souls to adore Him now, not later, for no one knows how swiftly weakness, illness, or age may alter the body . Arthritis may stiffen the joints, suffering may limit movement, and advancing years may weaken physical strength. Many faithful souls eventually reach a moment when they can no longer kneel outwardly, though their hearts still burn with longing before Christ. Blessed, therefore, is the soul that reverences Him while strength remains, offering bodily love before bodily limits arrive . Their inability becomes its own sacrifice, but their condition also teaches a powerful lesson to those who still possess the gift. Scripture repeatedly reminds humanity of life's brevity and uncertainty . The wise soul therefore treasures every opportunity to worship. Kneel after Mass while you can. Kneel during Eucharistic Adoration while you can. Kneel before the tabernacle during a weekday visit while you can. Kneel in thanksgiving after Holy Communion while you can. Kneel during moments of personal prayer while the gift remains available. Saint John Paul II continued showing profound reverence before the Eucharist even when illness weakened his body; his frailty itself became a silent homily on love stronger than physical strength . In this light, the soul that kneels today is quietly preparing for the day when physical kneeling may no longer be possible, yet interior adoration can deepen even as outward capacity diminishes. Every act of Eucharistic reverence, however small or hidden, becomes a treasure stored in eternity, where love offered to Our Adorable Jesus is never lost but eternally received .

Physical kneeling possesses immense value, yet its ultimate purpose is interior transformation. A person may kneel outwardly while remaining resistant inwardly. Conversely, true Eucharistic adoration gradually teaches the soul how to kneel interiorly before God in every circumstance of life. The knees touch the ground so that the heart may learn surrender. This interior kneeling becomes visible in ordinary life. A spouse chooses forgiveness instead of resentment. A worker refuses dishonest gain despite financial pressure. A youth in courtship chooses purity despite temptation. A priest embraces hidden sacrifices without complaint. A religious remains faithful during community struggles. A parent perseveres in charity amid exhaustion. In each situation, the soul bends before God's will rather than exalting personal preference (cf. Lk 22:41–42; Rom 12:1–2). The Blessed Virgin Mary lived this perpetual interior kneeling. Her entire life reflected surrender to God's designs .  The Eucharist strengthens this disposition by teaching the soul the humility of Christ Himself. The Catechism teaches that adoration is the first attitude of man acknowledging that he is a creature before his Creator (CCC 2628). Thus kneeling before Our Adorable Jesus forms the soul in humility, obedience, trust, dependence, and love. Eventually the soul no longer kneels only during prayer; it learns to kneel spiritually before God's wisdom, providence, mercy, and truth throughout every aspect of life .

Kneeling without fear reaches far beyond comfort, convenience, or appearances; it is love choosing Christ above self-consciousness. It means kneeling on a dusty church floor without worrying about stains. It means kneeling on wet grass during an outdoor Mass, a pilgrimage, a pavilion celebration, or a Eucharistic procession because Our Adorable Jesus is present and worthy of adoration. It means kneeling even when others remain standing, when friends misunderstand your devotion, when society considers reverence outdated,(cf. Mt 5:11–12; Rom 1:16) or when your faith becomes the object of quiet ridicule . It means being more concerned about honoring Christ than preserving personal dignity. Kneeling without fear means not worrying whether carefully pressed clothes will gather dust, because love values the Beloved more than appearances. It means remaining on one's knees during a Holy Hour when the body grows tired because the soul recognizes the One who remained on the Cross for love of humanity (cf. Jn 19:17–30). It means becoming like Veronica, who stepped forward through the hostile crowd to console the suffering Face of Christ despite possible mockery and danger. It means becoming like Simon of Cyrene, (cf. Mk 15:21) who accepted the burden of the Cross and accompanied Jesus on the road to Calvary . It means joining Mary Magdalene at the feet of Jesus, (cf. Lk 7:37–38) choosing love over public opinion . Ultimately, kneeling without fear means placing Christ above comfort, reputation, convenience, human respect, and every competing attachment of the heart (cf. Gal 1:10; Mt 10:37–38). Such kneeling is not merely a posture of the body but a courageous confession of love made visible in humility before God (cf. Phil 2:10–11). The soul silently declares: “My Lord is here, and nothing—not pride, embarrassment, inconvenience, or sacrifice—will prevent me from adoring Him.” In such acts, Our Adorable Jesus finds not only worshippers, but true lovers of His Eucharistic Heart who choose Him above all else (cf. Jn 6:68; CCC 1380).

The final destiny of humanity is not endless activity but eternal worship, communion, and love before God. The Book of Revelation  repeatedly portrays heavenly beings (cf. Rev 4:10–11; Rev 5:8–14; Rev 7:9–12) falling down in adoration before the Lamb  . Earthly kneeling is therefore a preparation for eternal glory. Every hour spent before the Blessed Sacrament trains the heart for Heaven. Our Adorable Jesus asks souls to kneel without fear because fear often prevents intimacy. Some fear their sins. Others fear their weakness. Others fear silence. Still others fear what God may ask of them. Yet the Eucharist is not a place of rejection but of encounter. The One hidden in the Host is the same Christ who welcomed sinners, healed the brokenhearted, forgave the repentant, and laid down His life for humanity . Every Eucharistic chapel becomes a school of eternity. There the soul learns to listen rather than speak, adore rather than demand, surrender rather than control, and love rather than possess . Before the silent presence of Our Adorable Jesus, the heart is gradually formed in patience, humility, and surrender, (cf. Lk 10:39–42) learning truths that words alone cannot teach . Saints such as St. Carlo Acutis and Saint Katharine Drexel discovered that prolonged Eucharistic adoration quietly transformed every dimension of life, drawing the soul into deeper love, service, and communion with Christ . Their apostolic fruitfulness flowed from kneeling before Christ. The Church (CCC 1378–1380, 1418) teaches that Eucharistic worship outside Mass deepens communion with Christ and prolongs the grace of the sacrifice celebrated upon the altar . One of the hidden mysteries of prayer is that God often transforms the soul before He transforms the situation. Prayer, therefore, is not always escape from struggle; (cf. Rom 12:1; Phil 4:11–13) often it becomes the sacred place where suffering is quietly transformed into trust and offering . Our Adorable Jesus receives not only strong prayers, but also distracted, wounded, unfinished, and tearful prayers, for He sees the love hidden beneath weakness and gently gathers every sincere offering into His mercy . He hears not just uttered words but also silent longing, hidden sadness, weary trust, and the faint scream of a suffering heart because no real movement towards Him is ever lost or forgotten.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, grant us the grace never to lose wonder before Your Eucharistic Presence. As we kneel before You, remove pride, indifference, and distraction from our hearts. May our adoration console Your Sacred Heart and draw many souls closer to Your mercy. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 128

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“... the powers of evil will break loose more for those who do not sincerely detest their faults.”

“Prayer for atonement will do.”

“My daughter, I speak to you by the means of My Presence in the Divine Sacrament. I beg you to pay debts of lost souls. In My Name be calm and strong. Keep in mind that this is My difficult hour. I tell you truly the time has come for the world to repent. My warning is strict. It is not in order to condemn the world. On the contrary, I want to save souls by My words. I must warn mankind in order to avoid catastrophes. More than ever I am so much blasphemed and abused. These times demand accelerated action because My pain is immense. I come here to seek shelter.

If prayers and penances are not offered, the powers of evil will break loose more for those who do not sincerely detest their faults. Consummate yourself and transfigure yourself in Me that you may be able to pray a great deal. Do not be afraid.

My daughter, do not be frightened of what I assure and reveal to you. A just soul has to go through pains and hardships. Learn to persevere. The devil is rolling over in order to get rid of souls. He already knows that his time is short. He will cast his power in the nations and in a given moment he will destroy the best part of the flock.

... Sin has blindfolded and covered their eyes. Nothing can prevent this harm. Prayers of atonement will do. Pray a great deal and do penance. Offer your sufferings united to My Heart’s merits. Abandon yourself completely in My call so that I may be able to act exactly as I want in you. I reveal My desires to you. I need you by all means to pray and finally all the evil ways will be in vain. In the sacrament of My Love I need you to kneel without fear.”

“I give My blessings.”

21st April 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.