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.