ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL
VOLUME 1
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 119: "I want you to be a living tabernacle. It is very pleasing to Me."
The Eucharist is not meant to end at Communion; Our Adorable Jesus desires to continue His hidden life in the soul that receives Him.This appeal reveals a profound Eucharistic vocation: “I want you to be a living tabernacle.” The tabernacle in the church holds the sacramental presence of Christ, yet after Holy Communion the soul itself becomes, for a sacred time,(cf. Jn 6:56; 1 Cor 3:16–17; CCC 1374) a living sanctuary carrying the same Eucharistic Lord within . This is a mystery of astonishing intimacy: the Christ adored upon the altar now desires to dwell interiorly in the communicant, making the heart a hidden tabernacle of divine presence.This mystery often passes unnoticed. Many receive Him and immediately return to distraction, conversation, routine, and noise. Yet Our Adorable Jesus remains silently within, seeking recollection, companionship, and interior love. The catechism teaches that in the Eucharist Christ is truly, really, and substantially present (CCC 1374),(CCC 260, 1391) and through sanctifying grace He dwells in the soul . To become a living tabernacle means recognizing that the Host consumed is not a passing observance but an indwelling Presence asking hospitality. Mary, Mother of Jesus carried Christ in her body after the Annunciation; the communicant carries Him after Communion in a sacramental way,(cf. Lk 1:39–45) hidden but real . Her silence teaches Eucharistic recollection. In ordinary life, this means guarding the first moments after Communion. The person returning to a busy market, office, or classroom still carries Christ. The mother preparing breakfast after Mass, the worker boarding a bus, the student attending lectures, the nurse beginning a shift—all remain called to interior awareness. Saint Peter Julian Eymard insisted that thanksgiving after Communion shapes holiness. Our Adorable Jesus is pleased when He is not left alone within the soul .
If the church tabernacle is honored with silence, then the soul carrying Christ must also be guarded from interior desecration. Our Adorable Jesus asks not only to enter but to remain honored. The living tabernacle is formed when the soul learns to protect interior space from what contradicts His presence. This requires a Eucharistic conscience. Every word spoken, every image welcomed, every hidden thought, every emotional reaction touches the sanctuary where He dwells. Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:3–10) slept near the Ark and learned to recognize God’s voice in sacred stillness . Likewise, the Christian must learn to remain inwardly attentive. The tabernacle is veiled and reserved; so too the heart requires custody. Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska described living in continual awareness of Christ within, speaking to Him throughout ordinary duties. Practically, this transforms simple acts. The employee chooses not to join malicious conversation after Communion. The spouse refuses to answer harshly during conflict because Christ remains within. The civil servant resists impure content on the phone. The driver caught in traffic turns irritation into prayer. The elderly person alone speaks to Jesus inwardly while folding clothes or waiting for medicine. Such moments preserve the sanctuary.The catechism teaches prayer can become continual remembrance of God (CCC 2697, 2725). Our Adorable Jesus is deeply pleased when the soul protects His Eucharistic presence by choosing recollection over noise. The living tabernacle is not built by extraordinary visions but by fidelity in ordinary interruptions. The believer becomes a chapel carried through streets, markets, hospitals, and homes .
The truest adoration after Communion often happens not in the chapel but in the kitchen, workplace, hospital corridor, and silent suffering. Our Adorable Jesus desires to remain active in the soul beyond formal prayer. To be a living tabernacle means every task becomes shared life with Him. The Christian does not leave Jesus at church; he carries Him into washing dishes, teaching children, paying bills, farming, caregiving, and hidden labor. Martha teaches that service becomes holy when united to the Lord’s presence, while Mary of Bethany reminds that interior attention must remain central (cf. Lk 10:38–42). The two unite in Eucharistic living: action carried out while inwardly remaining near Christ. Saint ZĂ©lie Martin sanctified domestic life through hidden prayer in ordinary responsibilities. The mother changing a child’s clothes after Communion can whisper interior thanksgiving. The office worker can silently offer emails, meetings, and decisions. The teacher can correct students as though Jesus were receiving each word. The patient in chronic illness can offer discomfort as Eucharistic reparation. The farmer under sun can speak to Christ between tasks. This is contemplative ordinariness. The Eucharist enters labor. Bread becomes Body, and ordinary life becomes offering. The catechism (CCC 901, 1368) teaches the faithful unite daily work with Christ’s sacrifice in the Mass . Thus, the soul becomes a moving altar. Our Adorable Jesus is pleased because His sacramental presence extends into the unnoticed spaces where humanity spends most of life (cf. Rom 12:1; Col 3:17; CCC 1397).
The Eucharistic soul reveals its depth when suffering enters and Christ is not abandoned interiorly. Many receive Our Adorable Jesus in consolation, but the living tabernacle is proven when one continues to carry Him through pain. Suffering often exposes whether Communion is devotion or communion. If the soul remains recollected in grief, Christ becomes visibly alive within. Job remained open to God amid loss;(cf. Job 19:25–27) his life became a sanctuary of trust . Saint Alexandrina of Balazar lived profoundly Eucharistic suffering, uniting physical pain to the Host she adored. Her bed became a chapel. This touches ordinary realities. The widow returning from Mass to an empty house remains with Jesus in silence. The person with cancer receives Communion and offers treatments. The father burdened by debt continues interior trust. The medical student facing failure still preserves purity. The religious in dryness remains faithful to the Divine Office. The laborer with back pain offers fatigue. These become living monstrances hidden in ordinary weakness. The catechism (CCC 618, 1505) teaches suffering joined to Christ acquires redemptive value . When the Eucharistic Lord remains in a suffering soul, He continues His Passion there. The home, hospital, or office becomes Calvary joined to the altar. Our Adorable Jesus is deeply pleased because He finds in that soul what He sought in Gethsemane: (cf. Mt 26:38–40; Col 1:24; CCC 1521) companionship that does not flee .
The greatest Eucharistic miracle after the altar is a human life through which others unexpectedly encounter peace, purity, and mercy. Our Adorable Jesus desires living tabernacles because He wishes to continue His hidden Eucharistic mission through souls. The person who carries Him deeply becomes spiritually fragrant. Without preaching, Christ becomes perceptible. Stephen radiated heaven through his countenance before martyrdom (cf. Acts 6:15). Saint Benedict Joseph Labre had little education or status, yet many felt drawn to prayer simply by his presence. The Eucharistic Christ within transformed ordinary humanity into sanctuary. This is possible in every state of life. A cashier serves patiently. A mechanic works honestly. A grandmother silently prays while preparing food. A priest listens attentively. A young person resists vulgarity among peers. A housekeeper works in silence and charity. A soul that has received Our Adorable Jesus and guards His presence interiorly becomes a hidden apostle, carrying Christ silently into homes, workplaces, sufferings,(cf. Jn 6:56–57) and ordinary encounters . The Eucharistic mystery cannot end at Mass; what is received sacramentally must continue inwardly through thanksgiving, recollection, guarded speech, hidden sacrifice, and frequent return to the indwelling Christ . Communion is not a passing moment, but the beginning of deeper union. This means speaking words that heal rather than wound (cf. Eph 4:29), offering daily sufferings with Christ (cf. Col 1:24), and returning often to prayer amid ordinary duties . St. Charles de Foucauld learned hidden fidelity in ordinary life, revealing that holiness often grows through quiet companionship with God. The soul that guards the Eucharistic Guest becomes a hidden sanctuary through which Our Adorable Jesus continues to touch souls. Then the soul becomes a living tabernacle. Our Adorable Jesus is pleased because He is no longer visited only in church but carried through the world in ordinary people whose hidden fidelity becomes His procession among souls (cf. 2 Cor 2:15; Mt 5:14–16; CCC 2044).
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, remain alive within us after every Holy Communion . Make our hearts living tabernacles of Your presence, our daily work a hidden continuation of adoration , and our suffering a Eucharistic offering united to Your Cross . Teach us to guard Your indwelling in silence, purity, and love, so that all who meet us may encounter You without knowing it .Amen
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 118: "My love for mankind goes far (to) draw treasure out of mere nothing."
The greatest miracle of grace is not that God loves the great, but that Our Adorable Jesus sees treasure where humanity sees nothing. This appeal unveils the mystery of divine election: His love goes far enough to draw treasure out of mere nothing. This reveals the entire logic of salvation. God repeatedly chooses what appears insignificant so His glory may become visible. Scripture shows Him calling David from the pasture, not the palace; Gideon from weakness, not military prestige; Mary, Mother of Jesus from hidden Nazareth, not visible power . Divine love sees hidden capacity for sanctity before the soul perceives it. The catechism (CCC 1996–2001) teaches grace precedes every human merit; God acts first and raises the creature beyond natural capacity . Our Adorable Jesus loves not because we are already treasure, but because His love transforms emptiness into radiance. He enters moral weakness, emotional instability, ordinary homes, poor education, and hidden failures, and there begins the work of eternity. Daily life proves this. A person with little schooling may become wise in charity. A widow in solitude may sustain generations through prayer. A child considered ordinary may become a saint through fidelity. A worker carrying unnoticed burdens may become intercessor for many. Saint Josephine Bakhita rose from slavery into sanctity because divine love redefined her story. Our Adorable Jesus still draws treasure from those who think they have little to offer. The soul becomes precious not by self-importance but by surrender to grace (cf. 1 Cor 1:27–29; Is 43:1–4; CCC 2008).
The soul becomes treasure precisely when it stops pretending to be sufficient. Our Adorable Jesus says He draws treasure out of mere nothing, not to humiliate but to reveal that grace begins where self-reliance ends. “Nothing” in the spiritual life means creaturely poverty recognized before God. It is the truth that apart from Him, all capacities remain unable to save or sanctify. Peter the Apostle discovered this after failure;(cf. Lk 22:61–62; Jn 21:15–17) his denial shattered self-confidence so grace could deepen mission . Saint Angela of Foligno taught that self-knowledge opens the soul to divine transformation. The person who knows their poverty no longer resists dependence. The catechism teaches humility disposes the soul to receive the gift of prayer and divine action (CCC 2559). Our Adorable Jesus works most deeply where self-defense collapses. This becomes practical in every vocation. A teacher who admits impatience begins growing in patience. A father who recognizes emotional absence begins becoming present. A religious who confesses dryness becomes teachable. A student who acknowledges vanity becomes open to interior purity. The one who appears weak may become strongest because truth opens the door to grace. Mere nothing is therefore the fertile soil of holiness. The addict who seeks confession sincerely, the businessperson who admits dishonesty, the youth who abandons hidden sin, the elderly who accept dependence—these become places where Christ works. Our Adorable Jesus treasures sincerity more than image. Spiritual treasure is often formed in those who stop appearing strong and begin asking to be transformed (cf. Ps 51:17; Jn 15:5; CCC 2011).
God does not merely discover treasure; He forms it through trials that strip illusion. Our Adorable Jesus often draws treasure from nothing through long hidden purification. The soul may feel forgotten while grace is quietly enlarging capacity. Joseph (son of Jacob) moved through betrayal, slavery, and imprisonment before becoming instrument of providence (cf. Gen 37–50). The years of obscurity were not delay but formation. Saint Benedict Joseph Labre reveal that apparent uselessness can conceal immense holiness. The catechism teaches the way of perfection passes through the Cross and spiritual battle (CCC 2015). Our Adorable Jesus forms treasure through surrender in weakness. In practical terms, this includes seasons where prayer feels dry, plans collapse, friendships fail, work remains unnoticed, illness restricts activity, or family misunderstandings increase. A young person discerning vocation may experience uncertainty. A priest may labor without visible fruit. A mother may carry years of hidden sacrifice. Yet these are often furnaces of divine craftsmanship.Our Adorable Jesus shapes interior gold through unnoticed fidelity, often in hidden seasons where the soul feels forgotten or unfruitful (cf. Mal 3:2–3). Patience is formed where waiting feels unbearable, trust where certainty disappears, silence where answers seem absent, (cf. Rom 5:3–5) and compassion where suffering has pierced the heart . Often, the deepest spiritual work happens precisely where control is lost and dependence on grace quietly begins. What appears wasted or unproductive may become profound preparation for future fruitfulness . St. Frances Xavier Cabrini endured exhaustion, misunderstanding, fragile health, and continual uncertainty, yet holiness quietly matured through steadfast fidelity to God’s will rather than outward success (cf. 2 Cor 12:9–10). Her sanctity was forged in hidden perseverance, revealing that Divine Providence often works most deeply where plans fail and only trust remains . What appeared as interruption became preparation; what felt like weakness became mission. Therefore, do not despise hidden seasons. Our Adorable Jesus may be refining within the soul treasures the world cannot see—purifying motives, enlarging love,(cf. Is 48:10; 2 Cor 4:17) and preparing unseen fruit for souls yet unknown .
Grace never transforms a soul only for itself; treasure becomes gift for the Body of Christ. Our Adorable Jesus forms saints not as private achievements but as channels of mercy. A soul rescued from weakness often becomes instrument for many. Mary Magdalene (cf. Jn 20:11–18) moved from brokenness into witness to the Resurrection . Divine love changed her history into mission. The pattern continues. The teacher once wounded may understand students deeply. The recovering sinner may become compassionate confessor. The widower may become support for grieving families. The convert may strengthen an entire parish. Our Adorable Jesus transforms wounds into ministry.The catechism teaches charisms are given for the common good and building the Church (CCC 799–801). Treasure drawn from nothing becomes apostolic. The one forgiven learns mercy. The one purified learns patience. The one healed learns to accompany others. Thus, no life is too broken for mission. This becomes urgent in ordinary life. The elderly can evangelize grandchildren by serene suffering. A house helper can transform a family through hidden prayer. A college student can witness purity among peers. A nurse can restore dignity to the dying. The treasure may not be talent but sanctified presence. Our Adorable Jesus delights in turning those overlooked into signs of hope. Heaven often chooses hidden instruments because they know grace belongs entirely to God (cf. 2 Cor 4:7; Mt 13:44; CCC 2003).
The soul remains ordinary only when it resists the transforming love of Our Adorable Jesus. The Divine Appeal ends in invitation: Christ’s love goes far. The question is whether the soul allows that love to enter the deepest places. Many remain spiritually small not because grace is absent but because surrender is partial. The treasure already lies hidden, but fear protects the old self. Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:1–10) allowed Christ into his house and his life was reordered . Saint Mary of Egypt permitted radical conversion and became luminous holiness. The difference was consent. Practically, this means allowing Christ to transform money habits, family tensions, speech, private thoughts, digital life, relationships, ambitions, and wounds. A businessperson lets ethics prevail over gain. A youth chooses chastity despite pressure. A spouse forgives deeply. A consecrated soul renews hidden fidelity. A sick person offers pain. Treasure emerges through cooperation. Our Adorable Jesus looks at every soul and sees what grace can produce. He sees saints where we see failure, apostles where we see limitation, contemplatives where we see noise. He draws treasure from mere nothing because divine love creates what it seeks. The Christian task is simple and demanding: consent. Allow yourself to be loved, corrected, purified, and sent. Then what seemed insignificant becomes eternal wealth for the Church and joy for heaven (cf. Eph 2:4–10; Rev 3:18; CCC 2014).
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, draw treasure from our poverty and hidden nothingness. Enter our weakness, wounds, failures, and ordinary duties. Purify us through Your love until our lives become offerings for others. Teach us to trust Your gaze, consent to Your grace, and become treasures formed only by Your mercy, Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 118: "Many among the consecrated souls do not understand My feelings. They treat Me as one unknown to them. I like them to know how much I desire perfection."
A soul can belong to the sanctuary and yet remain interiorly distant from the One it serves. This appeal exposes one of the most painful mysteries of love: many consecrated souls treat Our Adorable Jesus as unknown, though they have given Him their vocation. This is not merely about priests or religious; every baptized person consecrated by baptism shares in this warning (cf. Rom 6:3–4; 1 Pet 2:9). Proximity to sacred things does not guarantee communion. Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10) served in the temple before he learned to recognize the divine voice personally . Familiarity with sacred routine can coexist with inner unfamiliarity. The Catechism (CCC 2012–2014) teaches all Christians are called to holiness in the fullness of charity, not minimal observance. Our Adorable Jesus desires perfection not as flawless performance, but as total communion—a heart wholly given rather than partially reserved . He longs to be known intimately in His sorrows, His Eucharistic hiddenness, His thirst for souls, and the tenderness of His Sacred Heart . Consecration therefore is not merely service for Christ, but interior union with Him. The tragedy begins when consecrated life slowly becomes functional: prayers spoken without encounter, liturgy celebrated without interior adoration, ministry performed without contemplative listening (cf. Is 29:13). This appears whenever a priest prepares homilies yet neglects silent prayer before the tabernacle, a religious observes rules while quietly resisting surrender,(cf. Rev 2:4) or a catechist teaches doctrine yet avoids allowing the Gospel to disturb personal comfort . The danger is not open rebellion, but spiritual familiarity—remaining near holy things while the heart grows distant. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton understood consecration as continual conversion,(cf. Phil 3:12–14) where love for Christ must deepen through repeated surrender and fidelity amid ordinary struggles . Holiness matures when service ceases to be mere duty and becomes loving participation in the life and feelings of Our Adorable Jesus. Our Adorable Jesus asks to be known, not merely served. He desires hearts that perceive His silent grief when ignored, His joy when loved, and His longing to transform ordinary duties into communion (cf. Rev 2:2–5; Jn 15:15; CCC 2715).
Many serve Christ’s works while remaining strangers to Christ’s Heart. The appeal reveals that Our Adorable Jesus possesses feelings that He desires souls to understand. This is deeply contemplative. The Incarnation means the Son truly loved, sorrowed, thirsted, rejoiced, and suffered. To ignore His interior life is to remain on the surface of faith. Saint John the Apostle leaned near Christ’s Heart and thus became witness to divine intimacy (cf. Jn 13:23; Jn 19:26–27). Proximity to His Heart precedes true mission. The feelings of Our Adorable Jesus include sorrow for indifference, joy in fidelity, thirst for souls, longing for reparation, tenderness toward the weak, and pain over consecrated infidelity. These are not abstract. He feels abandoned in neglected tabernacles, forgotten after Communion, treated as duty in ministry. St. Margaret Mary Alacoque received revelations of the Sacred Heart because she learned to remain deeply attentive to the hidden sorrow and love of Our Adorable Jesus, allowing prayer to become loving companionship rather than mere obligation . In daily life, understanding His feelings means asking before action: what consoles You here? In parish service, does this decision honor Your humility? In marriage, does my impatience wound Your gentleness? In youth, does my hidden compromise increase Your sorrow? In religious life, does my routine still listen? To know Christ’s feelings is to read events through His Heart. A seminary rector correcting students, a novice washing dishes, a nurse in a night shift, a bishop in administration—all can act with awareness of what brings Christ joy. The spiritual life matures when one ceases asking only what is allowed and begins asking what pleases Him .
Perfection frightens many because they confuse it with never failing, while Christ means complete belonging. Our Adorable Jesus desires perfection because He desires undivided love. The Gospel command to perfection refers to maturity of charity (cf. Mt 5:48). The Catechism (CCC 2013, 2028) teaches Christian perfection is charity lived through continual conversion . It is not elite spirituality but the destiny of every soul. Abraham was not perfect because he never struggled, (cf. Gen 22) but because he allowed trust to mature through obedience . Saint Josephine Bakhita became holy not through ease but through radical forgiveness. Perfection means letting grace govern every faculty: thought, memory, appetite, ambition, speech, and use of time. Practical perfection appears in hidden places. The seminarian who studies diligently but also kneels sincerely before the tabernacle. The consecrated sister who obeys an overlooked duty joyfully. The parish administrator who refuses dishonest profit. The postulant who blesses those who neglect her. The studying priest who avoids corruption during examinations. The sister doctor who treats difficult patients with reverence. Our Adorable Jesus seeks perfection in fidelity, not visibility. He desires consecrated souls to stop treating holiness as optional generosity. It is covenantal response. Love must deepen. The one who belongs to Christ publicly is called to resemble Him interiorly. Perfection is the gradual surrender of every room of the heart to grace. The smallest resistance delays union. The smallest fidelity enlarges communion .
Christ suffers less from weakness than from coldness that refuses deeper love. Our Adorable Jesus speaks with sorrow: many treat Him as unknown. This implies emotional distance. A consecrated soul may avoid grave sin and still grieve Him by remaining unresponsive. Routine replaces wonder. Prayer becomes obligation. Eucharistic presence becomes background. The heart ceases to marvel. Martha served faithfully yet risked losing interior attentiveness, while Mary of Bethany remained at His feet (cf. Lk 10:38–42). Christ desires service rooted in adoration. Blessed Columba Marmion taught that holiness flows from interior union before external work. This remains urgent. Today this coldness appears when prayer is shortened for convenience, when ministry becomes self-reference, when adoration is replaced by activism, when digital distractions invade recollection, when one speaks to everyone except Christ. A priest may hear confessions yet not confess deeply himself. A lay apostle may organize retreats but neglect silence. A religious may serve the poor but resist hidden surrender. Our Adorable Jesus desires to be consulted, loved, and accompanied. Pause before the tabernacle. Remain after Mass. Speak to Him before meetings. Ask His intentions. Offer fatigue. Listen in silence. He desires friendship. The saints became saints because they allowed Christ to become familiar in love, not merely familiar in religious habits. Consecration without intimacy risks spiritual exhaustion. Intimacy restores fire.
The soul that truly knows Christ’s Heart cannot remain spiritually ordinary. Our Adorable Jesus desires perfection because perfect love radiates Him to others. Consecrated souls are not called merely to preserve structures but to make Christ visible. The one who knows His feelings becomes apostolic through resemblance. Stephen radiated grace because his face had become transparent to heaven (cf. Acts 6:15). Saint Charles de Foucauld transformed hidden life into evangelization by becoming a living Eucharistic presence. This is perfection: allowing Christ’s interior dispositions to shape reactions. A superior corrects with mercy. A teacher remains patient. A young consecrated soul embraces obscurity. A friar lives fidelity through hidden sacrifices. A lay professional refuses unethical gain because Christ is known interiorly. Our Adorable Jesus desires consecrated souls to understand that perfection is missionary. A lukewarm soul weakens witness. A holy soul strengthens countless others. The one who loves deeply influences homes, seminaries, offices, hospitals, and parishes without noticing. Hidden fidelity multiplies grace. Therefore, every soul must ask: do I know Christ’s feelings or merely His commands? Do I listen to His Heart or only complete duties? Do I seek perfection or spiritual comfort? The answer shapes eternity. Our Adorable Jesus waits not for impressive works but for intimate surrender. He desires to be known as Friend, Bridegroom, Redeemer, and Eucharistic Companion. Where He is deeply known, holiness becomes radiant and lost souls recognize the face of God in ordinary lives .
The journey toward perfection for priests and consecrated souls unfolds as a daily, living fidelity that matures through disciplined conversion, deep communion, and self-giving love. In the first movement, continual conversion becomes a structured interior vigilance: not only repentance from sin, but refinement of intention—so that even good works are purified from self-reference. This includes consistent self-examination in the presence of God, openness to correction, and deliberate growth in virtue through concrete decisions shaped by grace (cf. Phil 1:9–11; Prov 4:26–27; CCC 1435, 2019). In the second movement, prayer becomes transformed into sustained indwelling rather than episodic speech; Our Adorable Jesus is encountered not only in vocal prayer, but in silent attentiveness where the heart learns to remain before Him without haste. This includes allowing interior silence to carry wounds, desires, and decisions into His presence until they are purified and reordered (cf. Ps 62:1–2; Rom 8:26; CCC 2709–2719). In the third movement, perfection reaches its fullness in apostolic self-offering: a readiness to be available without reserve, to serve without selecting comfort, and to remain faithful even when fruit is hidden or delayed . In this ascent, Mary, Mother of Jesus stands as the purest pattern of total receptivity to God’s will, not through multiplication of activity but through perfect interior alignment. Her maternal intercession continually draws priests and consecrated souls toward deeper fidelity to her Son, while the Church entrusts them to her care so that their holiness may become more transparent and fruitful in the world .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, teach us to know Your feelings and not remain strangers to Your Heart. Draw every priest and consecrated soul into intimate fidelity. Purify routine, deepen prayer, and awaken the desire for perfection. Make our vocation, hidden work, and suffering a living response to Your thirst for holiness, Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.