ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL
VOLUME 1
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).
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 150: "I am thirsting for the souls of mankind. The world is desolated because of the iniquitous evil with exaggerated freedom and without scruples. "
When Our Adorable Jesus laments that "the world is desolated," He reveals a reality that human eyes rarely perceive: the deepest desolation is not first found in wars, economies, governments, or collapsing cultures, but in hearts that have gradually become empty of God (cf. Hos 4:1–2; Rom 1:21–25). A civilization does not suddenly fall; it slowly loses its capacity to adore, until the Creator is forgotten and created things quietly take His place (cf. Ex 32:1–8; Lk 18:8; CCC 2097). The first ruins are invisible. They appear when prayer becomes an interruption instead of a necessity, when conscience becomes quieter than personal preference, (cf. Am 8:11-12; CCC 29) and when the presence of God is replaced by endless noise . The soul may continue functioning normally, smiling, working, and succeeding, while inwardly resembling an abandoned sanctuary where the lamp before the tabernacle has silently gone out . This was the hidden tragedy during the reign of King Asa. He began by relying entirely upon the Lord, witnessing astonishing victories that no human strength could have achieved. Yet after years of success, his heart gradually transferred its trust from God to political alliances and human calculation. His greatest fall was not military but interior:(cf. 2 Chr 14:11-12; 16:1-12) he slowly ceased needing the God who had once been his only confidence . Desolation had entered long before disaster arrived. This same mystery quietly unfolds today. A husband faithfully provides for his family yet has not spoken to Christ except in hurried obligation for many months. Outwardly, nothing appears broken; inwardly, the sanctuary has grown empty. Once this identity is forgotten, the soul instinctively begins searching for substitutes—success, pleasure, recognition, control, or independence—none of which can satisfy the infinite hunger created for divine communion . Jesus therefore teaches that the world's restoration will never begin merely through better structures or greater prosperity. It begins whenever one soul quietly returns to the hidden sanctuary of the heart, allows Christ once again to occupy its center,(cf. Jn 14:23; Ez 37:26-28; CCC 260) and rediscovers that the true opposite of desolation is not comfort but the living Presence of God dwelling within .
Jesus does not simply speak of evil, but of "iniquitous evil," revealing a condition in which sin has become so familiar that it no longer awakens remorse. This is one of Satan's most subtle victories. He rarely persuades a soul to reject God openly; instead, he patiently dulls its spiritual sensitivity until what once troubled the conscience gradually becomes acceptable. The tragedy is not merely committing sin but losing the capacity to blush before divine holiness .This hidden process is seen in Gehazi, the servant of Elisha. He did not begin as a dishonest man. He walked beside a prophet, witnessed miracles, and lived close to God's power (cf. 2 Kgs 4:8–37). Yet he quietly entertained small desires for wealth and recognition until his heart became divided. When the opportunity came, (cf. 2 Kgs 5:20-27) he deceived Naaman and lied without trembling before God . Long before leprosy appeared upon his body, another disease had already spread through his conscience—the inability to distinguish personal ambition from fidelity to God. Iniquity had first become interior before it became visible. Such is the frightening mystery of habitual sin: (cf. Heb 3:12-13) the soul slowly loses not only its innocence but even its awareness that it has fallen . This hidden desolation quietly unfolds in ordinary lives. A Catholic businessman first accepts one dishonest payment to protect his company during difficult times. Years later he speaks of corruption as though it were simply "how the world works." A parent may laugh at behaviors that once called for loving correction, fearing conflict more than a child's spiritual good (cf. Prov. 22:6; Eph. 6:4). A priest who once approached the altar with profound awe may gradually allow routine and busyness to dull his Eucharistic wonder (cf. Mal. 1:6–8; CCC 1387). St. Peter Damian warned that when conscience is repeatedly ignored, it slowly loses its sensitivity to sin. Yet such numbness is not peace but the quiet approach of spiritual death (cf. Eph. 4:18–19; 1 Tim. 4:2). Therefore, Our Adorable Jesus invites every soul to beg for a tender conscience that grieves not merely from fear of punishment, but because it cannot bear to wound the Heart that loved us to the end (cf. Jn. 13:1; Ezek. 36:26; CCC 1431).
Perhaps the most prophetic words of this appeal are "with exaggerated freedom." Jesus is not condemning freedom itself,(cf. Sir 15:14-17; Gal 5:1; CCC 1730) for true freedom is one of the Father's greatest gifts and the very condition for genuine love . Rather, He unveils the deception of a freedom that no longer recognizes truth as its guide. Exaggerated freedom begins when the soul quietly believes that it can determine good and evil for itself while still expecting peace. It is the ancient temptation of Eden repeated in every generation—not merely to disobey God, but to live as though God were no longer necessary for happiness . This subtle illusion is beautifully illustrated in King Uzziah. While he depended upon the Lord, he prospered beyond expectation. Success itself became his greatest temptation. As his power increased, his heart slowly became convinced that the limits established by God no longer applied to him. Entering the sanctuary to perform a priestly ministry that was never entrusted to him, he mistook privilege for permission and ambition for freedom. His greatest tragedy was not the leprosy that later marked his body, (cf. 2 Chr 26:5, 16-21) but the pride that had already separated his heart from humble dependence upon God . Freedom detached from loving obedience quietly becomes slavery to self (cf. Rom. 6:16–22). The same illusion unfolds in ordinary life. A successful entrepreneur may gradually believe that financial independence removes the need for prayer, until profit rather than the Gospel guides every decision (cf. Mt. 6:24, 33). Even a consecrated soul may faithfully observe every rule while inwardly resisting the Holy Spirit's call to deeper surrender (cf. Acts 7:51; Rev. 2:4–5). St. Bernard of Clairvaux taught that the deepest slavery is the heart imprisoned by its own will. Our Adorable Jesus reveals that true freedom is not the absence of limits but the grace to delight in the Father's will (cf. Ps. 40:8; Jn. 8:31–36; CCC 1742). The freest soul is the one whose desires have become one with the Heart of Christ (cf. Jn. 4:34; Gal. 2:20).
The final wound described by Our Adorable Jesus is perhaps the most alarming: mankind acts "without scruples." In its true sense, a healthy scruple is not unhealthy fear but the delicate sensitivity of a conscience formed by love, one that quickly recognizes when it has wounded God or neighbor (cf. Rom. 2:14–15; CCC 1776–1779). To live without scruples is not merely to commit sin but to lose the capacity to grieve over it. The soul no longer asks, "Have I remained faithful to God?" but only, "Can I justify this?" . This is the quiet tragedy of a conscience that has gradually ceased listening to the Holy Spirit, (cf. Jn. 16:8, 13; Heb. 3:13; CCC 1431) whose gentle voice once led it toward repentance, truth, and freedom .Scripture illustrates this through King Ahab. His greatest downfall was not merely stealing Naboth's vineyard but the terrifying ease with which he justified injustice. After allowing Jezebel to orchestrate Naboth's death, (cf. 1 Kgs 21:1-16) Ahab calmly entered the vineyard to enjoy what violence had obtained . The absence of interior sorrow revealed that something more precious than justice had already died within him—his conscience. Only when Elijah (cf. 1 Kgs 21:17-29) confronted him with God's truth did the king begin to recognize the depth of his corruption . A conscience ignored does not disappear; (cf. Heb 3:13) it becomes buried beneath repeated compromises until the soul mistakes spiritual numbness for peace . This same tragedy quietly unfolds in ordinary lives. A young person consumes hours of immoral entertainment until purity itself appears unrealistic and the Gospel seems excessive. Even faithful Catholics can become spiritually indifferent when they receive the Eucharist week after week without examining their conscience or allowing the Word of God to challenge their lives . St. Catherine of Genoa taught that the closer a soul comes to God's holiness, the more delicately it perceives even the smallest obstacle to divine love—not because it lives in fear, but because it has fallen deeply in love with Christ. The saints possessed tender consciences because they possessed tender hearts. Jesus therefore calls His disciples not merely to avoid grave sin but to preserve an interior sensitivity that quickly returns to Him after every failure. A heart that still feels sorrow for sin is already being touched by mercy, for the Holy Spirit continues speaking where conscience remains alive .
After revealing the world's desolation, its iniquitous evil, exaggerated freedom, and the loss of scruples, Jesus quietly directs our gaze toward hope. He does not invite His disciples to despair over the darkness of the age but to cooperate in the hidden restoration of souls. Throughout salvation history, God has never renewed the world by beginning with structures, governments, or civilizations. He always begins with one heart completely surrendered to Him, through which His grace quietly reaches many others . This mystery is beautifully seen in Josiah. While still a young king surrounded by a nation steeped in idolatry, he first allowed the forgotten Book of the Law to pierce his own heart. Before cleansing Judah, (cf. 2 Kgs 22:11-13)he allowed God to cleanse him . His personal conversion became the beginning of national renewal because authentic reform always flows from interior holiness. Every authentic renewal in the Church follows this pattern. God does not first seek influential people but receptive hearts through whom His holiness can quietly shine (cf. 1 Sam. 16:7; 1 Cor. 1:27–29). Hidden communion with Christ often bears greater fruit than visible success because He Himself becomes the principal Apostle working through the soul (cf. Jn. 15:5; CCC 2715). This mystery unfolds in ordinary life. A father's quiet return to daily prayer gradually transforms the spirit of his home (cf. Josh. 24:15). A teacher formed by Eucharistic adoration begins to reveal Christ through patience more than words (cf. Col. 3:12–15; CCC 1380). A business owner who chooses integrity over profit quietly awakens the consciences of those around him (cf. Prov. 11:3; Mt. 5:16). Such hidden fidelity becomes a living Gospel through which Christ continues renewing the world from within . A young woman who abandons the constant pursuit of social approval begins radiating a peace that quietly leads her friends to ask about the source of her joy. None of these people change the world through extraordinary achievements. They change it because Christ has first transformed them from within . This is the antidote to exaggerated freedom. Instead of living according to self-will, the Christian freely surrenders to the Father's will and discovers the deepest liberty of all—to belong entirely to God (cf. Jn 15:4-5; Rom 12:1-2; CCC 1694, 2013). The world is not ultimately saved by stronger human ideas but by hearts that become living tabernacles where Christ once again dwells, reigns, and quietly restores His creation through the transforming power of His Presence .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, rescue our hearts from the desolation of sin, the deception of false freedom, and the silence of hardened consciences. Restore within us a pure love for Your holy will. Make us living sanctuaries of Your Presence, so that through our continual conversion many souls may rediscover the joy of belonging entirely to You. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 149: "... speak to souls for all the evil they do... I give you the words to speak and I give you light to see their consciences."
One of the deepest mysteries of Our Adorable Jesus' mercy is that He refuses to remain silent while a soul slowly hardens its heart against His love . Like the Lord who warned Cain before sin mastered him (cf. Gen 4:6–7), called Samuel (cf. 1 Sam 3:1–10) until he recognized His voice , pursued Jonah despite his flight , sought Elijah (cf. 1 Kgs 19:9–18) in his discouragement through the gentle whisper , and addressed Judas (cf. Mt 26:47–50) as "friend" even in the hour of betrayal , Christ always seeks restoration before ruin. Thus, when He says, "Speak to souls for all the evil they do," He invites us to share in His redeeming compassion—a love that enters another's darkness not to condemn, but to awaken conscience, heal what sin has wounded, and gently lead every wandering soul back into the Father's embrace . Divine love does not expose sin to shame the sinner but to rescue the image of God that sin has disfigured . Like a surgeon who must first uncover a hidden wound before healing it, Christ gently uncovers the illnesses of the soul so that grace may restore what sin has wounded . This was the mission of the prophet Nathan. Instead of publicly humiliating David after his adultery and murder, Nathan entered the king's heart through a simple parable until David himself recognized the darkness within him (cf. 2 Sam 12:1-13). God desired not humiliation but conversion. The same mystery unfolds today. A father notices that his adult son has slowly abandoned Sunday Mass. Every family gathering becomes an exercise in pretending nothing has changed. For months, a father remains silent, fearing that speaking will push his son further away. Yet after many hours before the Blessed Sacrament, he gently tells him that his deepest fear is not the loss of family harmony but the loss of his soul . His words carry tears rather than anger because they have first been purified in prayer. St. John Vianney often reminded others that hearts are won more by love than by eloquence. Only those who have first wept with Christ can speak with the tenderness that awakens sleeping consciences .
Jesus does not simply promise, "I give you the words to speak." First He says, "I give you light to see their consciences."This order is profoundly important. Before speaking about another soul, Christ teaches us to see that soul through His own eyes. Human judgment notices behaviour; divine wisdom perceives hidden wounds, forgotten battles, silent fears, and buried hopes . Many outward sins are the visible cries of hearts that have never experienced authentic love. Without the light of the Holy Spirit, correction easily becomes criticism. With His light, even difficult truth becomes an act of healing mercy . This mystery shines beautifully in Ananias of Damascus. To every Christian, Saul appeared to be nothing more than a violent persecutor deserving fear. Yet God revealed another reality invisible to human eyes: (cf. Acts 9:10-19) beneath the persecutor was an apostle waiting to be born . Had Ananias trusted only appearances, the Church might never have welcomed Paul. Every Christian faces similar moments. A teacher may see a rebellious student and assume laziness until she discovers the child spends each night caring for an alcoholic parent (cf. 1 Sam 16:7). A parishioner may quietly judge a priest's reserve, unaware of the hidden burdens he carries for his flock . A wife may mistake her husband's silence for indifference, not knowing he is privately entrusting his family's future to God amid the fear of losing his job . St. Francis de Sales taught that patient gentleness reflects the Heart of God because it seeks first to understand before judging. Christ's light transforms not only our words but also our vision, teaching us to look upon every person with the compassion and mercy of His Sacred Heart .
Perhaps the greatest mistake in correcting others is speaking before praying. Jesus never asks His disciples to become prosecutors of souls but intercessors for souls. Before His public words, Christ spent entire nights alone with the Father, allowing divine love to shape every action . Every apostle who wishes to touch consciences must first learn this hidden school of contemplation. The person who has never carried another soul before God will often carry hidden frustration into every conversation. Prayer purifies motives until correction no longer seeks victory but salvation . This truth appears powerfully in Moses after Israel worshipped the golden calf. Although the people had deeply offended God, (cf. Ex 32:30-32) Moses did not first accuse them. He ascended the mountain, wept, pleaded, and even offered himself for them before returning to speak to Israel . His words possessed authority because they had already been purified by intercession. This same mystery unfolds quietly today. A mother discovers that her daughter has become trapped in an unhealthy relationship. Though every instinct urges an immediate confrontation, she first spends weeks before the Blessed Sacrament, asking Jesus to prepare her daughter's heart before opening her own lips . When the conversation finally comes, it is marked not by fear or control but by compassion shaped through prayer. St. Monica wept and persevered in prayer for years before witnessing the conversion of her son, Augustine of Hippo . Her tears accomplished what arguments alone could not. Christ still seeks apostles who kneel before they speak, adore before they advise, and allow His Heart to form their own before leading souls back to Him .
When Our Adorable Jesus says, "I give you the words to speak," He reveals that there are words born of human impulse and words born of the Holy Spirit . Human words often defend pride, win arguments, or express frustration. Christ's words always seek the salvation and healing of the person before Him . Before He spoke, Jesus first entered the wounds of those He met, seeing beyond outward sins to the deeper thirst, fear, and loneliness that held them captive . This mystery shines through the prophet Hosea, whose faithful love for an unfaithful wife became a living sign of God's unwavering pursuit of His people . Mercy never excuses sin, (cf. Lk 15:11–32; CCC 1846–1848) yet it never ceases to seek the sinner's return . The same grace is urgently needed today. A physician must gently tell a patient that addiction is destroying both body and soul . A superior must lovingly correct a religious whose hidden resentment is weakening community life . A friend must courageously challenge dishonest business practices that cannot be reconciled with the Gospel . Such conversations often cost tears because authentic charity refuses both harshness and indifference. St. Philip Neri corrected souls with such fatherly joy that difficult truths were received as gifts of love. He won hearts before he corrected lives. This is the Heart of Christ: souls are rarely converted by arguments alone, but by encountering a love that speaks the truth with humility, patience, and unfailing tenderness .
The final and perhaps most humbling dimension of this appeal is that the light Jesus gives to see another person's conscience first shines upon our own. Before the apostle becomes a messenger, he must become a penitent. The more deeply one enters God's light, the less one feels superior to anyone else. Contemplation gradually replaces judgment with compassion because it reveals how much mercy we ourselves have received . This mystery appears profoundly in St. Peter. After denying Christ three times, (cf. Lk 22:61-62; Jn 21:15-17) Peter no longer possessed the pride of a man who believed himself incapable of falling. When the risen Lord later entrusted him with the care of the Church, Peter led not from remembered strength but from remembered mercy . His tears became the foundation of his ministry. He could strengthen his brethren because he knew what it meant to be restored by grace. Every Christian experiences this hidden school. A father who has wrestled with anger often learns to guide his son with greater patience because he remembers the mercy that changed his own heart . A woman restored through God's forgiveness welcomes returning sinners with compassion because she knows the joy of coming home to the Father's embrace. A priest formed by long hours before the Blessed Sacrament gradually discovers that every confession is holy ground where Christ has already begun His work of healing . Saint Faustina Kowalska discovered through her intimate communion with Divine Mercy that the more profoundly a soul allows itself to be transformed by Christ's merciful Heart, the less it judges and the more it reflects His compassion toward others. Having experienced its own poverty before God, such a soul no longer looks upon human weakness with superiority but with patient charity, recognizing that every sinner is someone for whom Christ shed His Precious Blood . This is the summit of Our Adorable Jesus' appeal: He desires not merely eloquent witnesses, gifted evangelizers, or zealous workers, but hearts so united to His own that His mercy continues to flow through them. Then Christ Himself quietly seeks the lost through their kindness, heals hidden wounds through their compassion, strengthens the discouraged through their hope, forgives through their gentleness, and patiently leads wandering souls back to the Father's house through lives that radiate His Sacred Heart .
Prayer
My Adorable Jesus, purify my heart before You send my voice. Give me Your light to see souls with mercy, Your wisdom to speak only what heals, and Your humility to remember my own need for grace. May every word I utter lead souls gently back to Your Sacred Heart. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 149: "My ministers are worriless and tranquil. They do not defend Me. Instead they step on Me and allow everything. My arm falls inexorably. Many of them do not believe My words."
The first cry of Our Adorable Jesus is one of profound loneliness: "My ministers are worriless and tranquil." He is not condemning the holy peace that springs from trusting the Father (cf. Jn. 14:27), but exposing a spiritual tranquility that has become detached from His own Heart. Christ never knew such indifference. Even after exhausting days of preaching, He looked upon the crowds with compassion because He saw them wandering without shepherds (cf. Mt. 9:36). He remained awake through the night before choosing the Apostles (cf. Lk. 6:12–13). He wept over Jerusalem because people were unknowingly rejecting the very grace that could save them (cf. Lk. 19:41–44). His priests are ordained to share this same Heart . Yet Our Adorable Jesus reveals that many ministers no longer carry the hidden anguish of His Shepherd's Heart. A priest may preach faithfully, celebrate the Sacred Mysteries, visit the sick, and fulfill every pastoral duty, yet gradually cease spending long hours before the tabernacle interceding for the souls entrusted to him by name (cf. Jn. 10:3–4; Heb. 7:25). A bishop may diligently oversee his diocese while failing to notice that some of his priests are quietly losing the joy of their first love, becoming spiritually weary and inwardly isolated (cf. Rev. 2:4–5; Jn. 21:15–17). A novice master may carefully form young religious in discipline and community life, yet overlook that one novice has abandoned intimate prayer and now serves Christ only outwardly, like Martha without first becoming Mary (cf. Lk. 10:39–42). A superior may rejoice that apostolic works flourish while failing to perceive that prolonged adoration has diminished, fraternal charity has cooled, and zeal for holiness has been replaced by efficiency (cf. Acts 6:2–4; Phil. 3:7–10).
Our Adorable Jesus does not condemn generous work; He mourns when ministry no longer springs from hearts consumed by His thirst for souls . The greatest poverty of a minister is not physical fatigue but the gradual loss of that interior fire which once kept him on his knees, carrying every soul before the Father with tears, faith, and persevering love (cf. Rom. 9:1–3; Col. 1:24). St. Alphonsus Liguori taught that the true shepherd measures his ministry by the salvation of souls rather than personal success. St. John Vianney often wept after hearing confessions because he knew each soul possessed eternal value . During the plague, St. Charles Borromeo tirelessly sought out the sick, longing above all that they might receive the sacraments and die reconciled with God (cf. Jas 5:14–15; Mt 9:36). Scripture (cf. Jer. 9:1) presents another heartbreaking image in the prophet Jeremiah, whose eyes became fountains of tears because God's people were spiritually lost . Christ asks why His ministers often sleep peacefully while He continues agonizing over every soul tempted to despair, every dying sinner postponing repentance, every young priest secretly losing faith, every religious sister slowly becoming consumed by routine. The shepherd who truly shares the Heart of Jesus cannot remain spiritually comfortable while heaven and hell continue to confront souls every hour (cf. Heb. 13:17; Ezek. 33:7–9).
The appeal then reaches an almost unbearable sorrow: "They do not defend Me. Instead they step on Me and allow everything." These words unveil a hidden form of betrayal that rarely makes headlines because it unfolds quietly, one compromise at a time . It begins when love gradually yields to comfort, truth to human respect, and prayer to routine, until the heart no longer resists what it once rejected (cf. Rev 2:4–5; Mt 24:12). Such infidelity is often invisible to others, yet it deeply wounds the Heart of Christ, who continually calls His servants back to their first love and wholehearted fidelity . Jesus does not first accuse His ministers of attacking Him but of no longer protecting what belongs to Him. Throughout His earthly life, (cf. Ps. 41:9; Jn. 13:18–30) Christ willingly accepted persecution from His enemies, yet His deepest wounds came from those closest to Him . The same mystery continues today. Every time a priest celebrates the Holy Eucharist hurriedly, speaking the sacred words with the same tone used for ordinary conversation, Christ experiences a poverty of love where there should be profound reverence . Every time perpetual adoration is quietly abandoned because "people are too busy," Jesus remains alone in the tabernacle, (cf. Mt. 26:40–45) waiting with the same patience He showed in Gethsemane while His closest friends slept . Every time a confessional remains locked for weeks because administrative work appears more urgent than reconciling sinners with God, souls drift further into darkness. Every time a homily deliberately avoids speaking about conversion, sin, judgment, purity, or the Cross to avoid complaints, (cf. 2 Tim. 4:2–4) Christ's own words are quietly set aside in favor of human approval . Whenever a religious superior sees a community slowly becoming worldly yet remains silent out of fear of disturbing a false peace, Christ's voice is left unheard (cf. Ezek 33:7–9; Gal 1:10). Whenever seminarians are formed in knowledge but not in prolonged Eucharistic prayer, the foundations of future priesthood are weakened (cf. Jn 15:4–5; CCC 1378).
St. Peter Damian courageously confronted corruption among the clergy, knowing that silence before spiritual illness is not charity but neglect. St. Catherine of Siena urged bishops and even the Pope to return to holiness because renewal begins with converted shepherds . St. Peter Julian Eymard devoted his life to rekindling Eucharistic love, convinced that the Church's deepest poverty was hearts that no longer adored Christ truly present in the Blessed Sacrament . Scripture (cf. Num. 25:6–13) offers the striking example of Phinehas, (cf. 1 Sam 1:3 ; 2:12) whose burning zeal defended God's holiness when others remained passive . Likewise, the young prophet Samuel refused to permit God's word to fall to the ground through negligence (cf. 1 Sam. 3:19). Our Adorable Jesus reveals that ministers do not wound Him only through grave personal sin. They also do so whenever human respect outweighs fidelity to the Gospel, silence replaces courageous charity, comfort prevails over sacrificial love, or preserving appearances becomes more important than defending the truth and the Eucharistic Heart of Christ . The deepest sorrow is that Jesus is often left abandoned not by strangers, but by those called to stand closest to His altar and shepherd His flock .
The words "My arm falls inexorably" reveal one of the most misunderstood mysteries of God's dealings with humanity. Jesus is not describing the exhaustion of His omnipotence but the sorrow of a Father whose offered mercy is repeatedly resisted by those entrusted with dispensing it. Throughout Sacred Scripture, God's "arm" symbolizes His saving power stretched out to rescue His people (cf. Ex. 15:16; Isa. 52:10). Yet there are moments when that saving arm appears to withdraw, not because God ceases to love, but because human freedom continually rejects His invitations. This sorrow becomes even more painful when the resistance comes from Christ's own ministers. A priest who gradually neglects daily mental prayer may continue preaching eloquently, yet his words slowly lose the warmth born of intimate friendship with Jesus . A bishop who fears public opinion more than the Gospel may preserve outward peace while leaving souls without clear spiritual guidance (cf. Acts 5:29; Gal 1:10). A religious superior who avoids necessary correction to remain liked can unintentionally allow spiritual complacency to spread . Likewise, a novice mistress who notices a young sister growing attached to comfort, distractions, or human approval, yet delays loving intervention, risks allowing small compromises to weaken a vocation meant to belong wholly to Christ . Jesus says otherwise. Every neglected inspiration of the Holy Spirit allows another opportunity for grace to pass. Eli watched the gradual corruption of his priestly sons until judgment reached his entire household (cf. 1 Sam. 2:22–36). King Saul repeatedly excused partial obedience until his heart became incapable of hearing God with simplicity (cf. 1 Sam. 15:13–23). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1865; CCC 2001) teaches that repeated resistance to grace gradually hardens the heart and dulls its sensitivity to God's voice . St. Bernard of Clairvaux observed that souls rarely fall all at once; they first lose their spiritual attentiveness. Christ's lament is therefore profoundly human: He grieves not only great sins, but the slow drifting of hearts that once loved Him deeply (cf. Rev 2:4–5; Mt 24:12). He watches priests who were once inflamed with Eucharistic love slowly become professional functionaries. He sees deacons who once embraced joyful poverty gradually become preoccupied with comfort, possessions, influence, or personal projects. He sees friars who once desired sanctity become absorbed by material possessions, titles, or intellectual prestige. His arm "falls" because those chosen to cooperate with His grace increasingly cooperate with themselves. The deepest sorrow is not that Christ ceases acting, but that His chosen instruments no longer allow Him to act freely through them.
The appeal reaches its most piercing climax: "Many of them do not believe My words." Our Adorable Jesus speaks of something far more frightening than doctrinal disbelief. He reveals a practical unbelief that quietly enters consecrated life when His words are still professed with the lips but are no longer lived as eternal realities (cf. Mt 15:8; Jas 1:22). The greatest danger is not openly denying Christ, but gradually living as though His promises, warnings, and commandments no longer shape daily decisions . A priest may profess belief in the Real Presence yet rush through thanksgiving after Mass because appointments seem more important than remaining with the One he has just held in his hands . A bishop may sincerely profess the Gospel yet allow fear of criticism to soften the proclamation of difficult truths (cf. Acts 20:27; Gal 1:10). A confessor may hesitate to call a penitent to genuine conversion out of fear of being rejected . A religious community may faithfully observe its rule while quietly measuring success by security, influence, or numbers rather than holiness (cf. Mt 6:33; Phil 3:7–8). Our Adorable Jesus does not ask whether His ministers can explain His words with eloquence, but whether they believe and live them with undivided hearts, loving truth more than approval and souls more than comfort . If they truly believed that one soul is worth more than the whole world , parish schedules would revolve first around confession, adoration, preaching, and the dying. If they truly believed that every Eucharist makes present the sacrifice of Calvary (cf. Lk. 22:19–20; CCC 1366–1367), no liturgy would ever become routine. If they truly believed that the devil continually seeks to destroy souls , they would never become spiritually casual. Scripture presents the moving contrast between Josiah, whose heart trembled upon hearing God's word and immediately sought reform (cf. 2 Kgs. 22:11–13), and King Zedekiah, who repeatedly heard Jeremiah yet lacked the courage to obey (cf. Jer. 38:14–28). The difference was not knowledge but belief.
Our Adorable Jesus calls every priest, bishop, deacon, seminarian, religious, consecrated soul, and every soul to return to the hidden simplicity of childlike faith, where every word from His Sacred Heart is received, contemplated, and lived with complete trust . The Church's deepest renewal begins not in human achievement but in souls transformed by the Eucharist, surrendered to the Holy Spirit, and conformed to Christ from within . It will begin when hearts are renewed by grace and ministers once again depend entirely upon Christ, allowing His presence, His mercy, and His truth to shape every aspect of their lives and mission . It will begin above all with hearts wholly surrendered to Christ—hearts that love His Eucharistic Presence more than success, seek holiness more than recognition, cherish prayer more than activity, and value the salvation of souls above every earthly ambition . Then Christ's ministers will become more than administrators or teachers; they will become living icons of the Good Shepherd, allowing His compassion, purity, and sacrificial love to shine through their lives . Their preaching will flow from contemplation, their authority from holiness, their service from Eucharistic communion, and their hidden sacrifices will quietly draw countless souls toward God .Such lives become living Gospels, proclaiming more powerfully than the most eloquent sermons that Our Adorable Jesus alone is the source of eternal life (cf. Jn 6:68), and that no soul which abandons itself entirely to His mercy and truth will ever be disappointed or put to shame .
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, renew Your priests and consecrated souls in childlike faith, Eucharistic love, and unwavering fidelity. Fill them with the Holy Spirit , that they may courageously proclaim Your truth, shepherd Your flock after Your Heart, and joyfully spend themselves for Your glory and the salvation of souls . Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.