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The Broken Eucharistic Heart of Jesus

Divine Appeal Reflection - 139

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 139: "My Heart is broken in pain because I am so much abused in the Sacrament of My Love."

When Our Adorable Jesus speaks of His Heart being broken in pain because He is abused in the Sacrament of His Love, He reveals a sorrow that is profoundly human and profoundly divine at the same time . Every person understands, at least faintly, the pain of offering love and receiving indifference. A mother sacrifices quietly for her children and feels forgotten (cf. Is 49:15). A faithful spouse gives generously and slowly feels taken for granted . A loyal friend remains present through suffering and is quietly ignored (cf. Prov 17:17). Yet all these deeply human sorrows remain only pale reflections of what Our Adorable Jesus experiences in the Eucharist, where Infinite Love remains present yet so often remains unnoticed (cf. Jn 15:13; Rev 3:20). The Eucharist is not merely a doctrine to be accepted intellectually, but a Divine Person to be encountered, adored, and loved . After accomplishing redemption through His Passion, Death, and Resurrection, Jesus chose not to abandon humanity to distance or forgetfulness. Instead, He remained hidden beneath the humble appearances of bread and wine so that He might stay astonishingly near to every generation until the end of time . The Eucharistic mystery therefore reveals not divine absence, but divine closeness carried to its most intimate expression: Emmanuel—God remaining with His people (cf. Mt 1:23; Jn 14:18). The tragedy is that many Catholics intellectually affirm this mystery while practically living as though the tabernacle were empty . Imagine entering a home daily while never greeting the one quietly waiting within. Imagine sitting beside a faithful friend while never acknowledging his presence. Such images faintly reflect how Jesus is often treated in countless churches. Many souls enter, glance briefly toward the sanctuary, and continue as though nothing extraordinary dwells there (cf. Ps 84:1–4). Yet behind every tabernacle door remains the same Jesus whom Mary held at Bethlehem, whom Peter followed through Galilee, whom John rested beside at the Last Supper,(cf. Lk 2:16; Jn 13:23; Jn 20:27) and whom Thomas touched after the Resurrection . The Eucharistic Heart suffers because He remains infinitely near while being practically forgotten, waiting silently for love that often never arrives .

One of the deepest wounds in contemporary spiritual life is the loss of wonder in the face of divine familiarity (cf. Ps 95:6–7; CCC 2096–2097). The saints feared not persecution as much as the slow erosion of reverence through routine. St. John Chrysostom warned that repeated exposure to holy realities can lead the heart to stop perceiving their greatness, as familiarity without interior conversion dulls spiritual vision . The Eucharist is especially vulnerable to this hidden danger. Because Mass is celebrated daily, because tabernacles stand in nearly every parish, because Holy Communion is frequently received, many souls gradually lose the sense of awe that should accompany the Real Presence . If Christ were visibly manifested on the altar surrounded by angelic hosts, human instinct would bow in immediate reverence. Yet because He comes concealed under sacramental humility, many approach Him without corresponding interior awareness (cf. Phil 2:6–8). Sacred Scripture reveals a consistent pattern of trembling before divine manifestation: Moses before the burning bush (cf. Ex 3:1–6), Isaiah before the holiness of God (cf. Is 6:1–7), Ezekiel before divine glory (cf. Ez 1:28), and St. John before the risen Christ . Yet in contrast, modern man often approaches the Eucharistic Lord with less attentiveness than he gives to ordinary human ceremonies. This is not always deliberate irreverence, but often a gradual spiritual dullness in awareness of the sacred . The outward signs of this weakening awareness are subtle: arriving late without concern, distracted presence before the liturgy, immediate departure after Communion, or hurried exit before thanksgiving. The tragedy is not merely behavioral but interior—a diminished perception of the living Presence of God (cf. Mal 1:6–7; CCC 2628). Adoration, as the Church teaches, is the first movement of the human heart before God, the proper response of love before divine majesty. The saints instinctively understood this. St. Peter Julian Eymard devoted long hours to Eucharistic adoration because he knew that love naturally seeks presence, and presence demands time. In contrast, many modern souls lament a lack of divine closeness while neglecting prolonged silence before the very Sacrament where Christ is most intimately near . Thus, the real question is not whether God is close, but whether the heart has been reawakened to recognize Him.

Another wound often carried against the Eucharistic Heart is the subtle loss of bodily reverence in worship . Human beings do not worship with the soul alone, but with body and spirit together, and Sacred Scripture consistently reveals this unity. Solomon knelt in prayer before the Lord (cf. 1 Kgs 8:54), the Magi prostrated themselves before the Child Jesus (cf. Mt 2:11), the leper fell at Christ’s feet in supplication (cf. Mk 1:40), and Mary of Bethany (cf. Jn 11:32) knelt in silent devotion before Him . In each case, the body becomes an expression of interior faith, revealing what the heart believes. Within the tradition of the Church, kneeling, genuflecting, bowing, silence, and modest dress were never mere external customs but embodied forms of reverence flowing from faith in the living God (cf. CCC 1387, 1671–1673). Yet in many places these visible signs have weakened: genuflections become hurried, kneeling is sometimes omitted even when possible, silence is reduced, and sacred space can begin to resemble ordinary environments rather than places set apart for divine encounter . This is not a question of nostalgia or externalism, but of love expressed visibly. Love naturally seeks gesture; reverence naturally seeks form.  Even external appearance can reflect interior awareness, not as fashion but as consciousness before God. If a person prepares carefully to meet an earthly authority, how much more should the heart awaken when approaching the King of Kings (cf. Mal 1:6; CCC 1387). The sorrow of Jesus is not merely about external actions, but about the gradual fading of awareness that He is truly present. When this awareness diminishes, reverence weakens—not only in gesture, but in love itself (cf. Lk 24:32).

Perhaps one of the most painful wounds against the Eucharistic Heart is the reception of Christ without true interior reception (cf. Jn 13:26–30). Judas sat at the Last Supper and received from Christ’s own hand while his heart was already turning toward betrayal, revealing the tragic possibility of external nearness without interior communion. This sorrow is repeated whenever Holy Communion becomes separated from ongoing conversion of life . The Church therefore calls souls to examine themselves before receiving the Lord, not only in terms of moral readiness, but also in terms of interior disposition toward grace. Yet beyond formal preparation lies a deeper openness of the whole person: forgiveness offered or withheld, resentment retained or surrendered, commandments embraced or neglected, prayer cultivated or abandoned. Our Adorable Jesus desires not mere reception, but true communion—union of heart, mind, and life . St. Catherine of Siena described Holy Communion as fire entering dry wood, yet wood still saturated with self-love resists the flame of divine transformation (cf. Dt 4:24; Heb 12:29). In a similar way, when Communion is reduced to routine or external participation, the interior openness of the soul to grace is weakened, not because Christ is less powerful, but because the heart becomes less receptive to His action (cf. CCC 1380, 1391–1395). The Eucharist always remains the same divine Fire; it is the disposition of the heart that determines whether it is consumed in love or merely approached without transformation (cf. Lk 24:32).The Sacred Heart of Jesus longs not only to enter the soul sacramentally, but to reign within it completely, transforming desire, healing memory, and deepening charity . Each Communion, therefore, is not merely received, but either opened to or closed against the fullness of its transforming power.

The deepest dimension of this appeal concerns the loneliness of Jesus among His own people . During His Passion, Christ endured abandonment not only from His enemies but even more painfully from the weakness of His friends. Peter denied Him (cf. Lk 22:54–62), the apostles fled in fear (cf. Mk 14:50), and in Gethsemane (cf. Mt 26:40–45) He found not companionship but sleeping disciples . Scripture thus reveals a profound sorrow: divine Love remaining present while human love withdraws. This mystery continues in Eucharistic life. Many tabernacles remain silently unattended, many parishes lack sustained adoration, and many hearts pass near the Eucharistic Lord while remaining unaware of His living Presence . Modern life often fills hours with activity, entertainment, and distraction, yet many souls struggle to remain even briefly in silent adoration before the Blessed Sacrament .St. John Paul II repeatedly urged the Church to rediscover Eucharistic amazement, calling souls back to awe before the mystery of Christ truly present.   St. Teresa of Calcutta likewise linked many spiritual wounds of the modern world to the loss of sustained Eucharistic adoration, seeing in silence before Jesus the renewal of charity and clarity of faith . Thus, the real struggle of modern discipleship is not only belief in the Eucharist, but the capacity to remain with Him—awake, attentive, and loving—in a world that constantly fragments interior recollection . Thus, Christ is wounded not only by sacrilege, but by neglect; not only by irreverence, but by absence . Yet this mystery is also a summons to hope. Every act of reverent genuflection, every hour of Eucharistic silence, every preparation for Holy Communion, every child taught to adore, every priest celebrating Mass with devotion, and every family who visits the tabernacle becomes a living consolation to the Eucharistic Heart . In a world marked by noise and distraction, Our Adorable Jesus still seeks souls who will remain with Him, love Him, and offer reparation through faithful presence and Eucharistic love.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, forgive our forgetfulness before the Sacrament of Your Love. Restore holy awe within us. Teach us silence, kneeling, recollection, adoration, reverence, and loving attention to Your Eucharistic Presence. May our smallest acts of devotion console Your wounded Heart. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 139

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“When I instituted the Sacrament, I knew that a day would be reached when I would be so much blasphemed and abused by the souls I love so much.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. Pray a great deal. I come here to seek shelter. As you hear My voice always, the quietness which follows is in Me. Never grow weary of Me. When you call Me I am always here listening in the Sacrament of My Love. I am a stranger in the prison of My tabernacle. I remain day and night waiting for souls. I am always thirsty for souls. Bring Me souls in your prayers. In your sufferings learn from My courage in the Sacrament of My Love. When I instituted the Sacrament I knew that a day would be reached when I would be so much blasphemed and abused by the souls I love so much. In My Mercy you will find the source of light and love. Pray a great deal. Atone. My Heart bleeds in this grave hour. Do not be afraid. I beg you to carry out My direction and give Me the hours that I beg for the good of souls. Listen to My suffering call. Do not lose any of these precious times. Write My words and pray. I can do all things. Never doubt. With an anguished heart I come here to seek shelter. I am calling everyone to be converted.

In the Sacrament of My Love I am so lonely and blasphemed. Like Judas the souls consecrated to Me betray Me day and night. With unlimited tears in My Heart I give the warning from My Divine Mercy. Souls are to be converted through prayer and my Sacrament. The demon is disposed to mislead souls. Pray a great deal. Bring Me Souls. I am thirsty for souls that I love so much.

In this sacrilegious struggle, much of which has been created by man will be demolished due to both savage impulses and aggrandisement. My Heart is broken in pain because I am so much abused in the Sacrament of My Love. I have no rest. Keep Me in silence. Good people suffer and are so much persecuted by justice. They have nothing to fear because one day they will be separated from the impious and obstinate sinners who persecute them. What a pain for Me to see so much bloodshed in the world. It is a great desolation. Pray a great deal. In the Sacrament of My Love you are a victim. I close Myself in waiting and longing for the souls to come and repent before it is too late. How can I save the souls if they do not listen to Me? Look at My pains! I am reduced to such a state of pitiable disfigurement for the souls of mankind. Pray and quench My thirst.”

“I give My blessing.”

6th May 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.

Where Jesus Is Not Welcomed

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 138

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 138 : "I do not stay where I am not welcomed"

Our Adorable Jesus possesses infinite power, yet He refuses to remain where love is persistently resisted. This truth should pierce complacency because Christ does not usually become unwelcome through dramatic rebellion, but through gradual displacement. Souls rarely say openly, “Leave me.” More often, they quietly become too crowded for Him. Prayer becomes hurried, silence uncomfortable, conscience negotiable, and divine interruptions inconvenient. Yet throughout Scripture God repeatedly reveals Himself as One who seeks entrance without violating freedom. Adam and Eve (cf. Gen 3:8–10) hid after sin while God still searched for them tenderly . The ark (cf. Gen 6:5–8; 7:1–16) remained open before the flood while humanity delayed repentance . Bethlehem possessed no room for the Savior despite humanity’s desperate need for redemption (cf. Lk 2:1–7). Nazareth stood astonishingly close to Jesus yet resisted Him through spiritual familiarity and unbelief (cf. Mk 6:1–6; Lk 4:28–30). Jerusalem failed to recognize divine visitation despite repeated invitations toward conversion (cf. Lk 19:41–44). The Catechism (cf. CCC  2002) teaches that God created humanity in freedom because authentic love cannot be coerced . Jesus therefore speaks to the modern believer overwhelmed by endless distractions, the businessman too busy for prayer, the seminarian spiritually fatigued, the exhausted parent surviving responsibilities without recollection, and the young person endlessly overstimulated by digital noise: be careful that busyness does not quietly become spiritual refusal.

Another painful truth hidden within this appeal is that Jesus may remain physically near while becoming spiritually unwelcome. This mystery wounds the Heart of Christ profoundly because external religion can continue while intimacy quietly fades. One may attend Mass, receive Communion, lead ministries, preach retreats, teach catechism, pray novenas, wear religious symbols, or speak publicly of faith while inwardly protecting hidden rooms from divine light. Martha (cf. Lk 10:38–42) sincerely welcomed Jesus externally, yet anxiety nearly displaced contemplative attentiveness . Judas (cf. Jn 12:1–6; 13:21–30) shared meals with Christ while interior attachments to money, disappointment, and hidden compromise slowly weakened friendship . King Saul (cf. 1 Sam 15:10–23) initially responded generously to vocation, yet gradual self-will eventually narrowed his openness to grace . Scripture (cf. Is 29:13; Mt 15:7–9) repeatedly warns that lips may honor God while hearts drift elsewhere . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2558–2565) teaches prayer as covenant relationship requiring sincere receptivity rather than external performance alone . Consider deeply human realities: the priest preaching beautifully while neglecting hidden prayer, the married couple outwardly stable yet inwardly resentful, the novice endlessly postponing silence with God, the successful entrepreneur compromising integrity, or the religious soul mechanically faithful but emotionally distant. Christ often becomes unwelcome not through hatred but through divided affection.

The most hidden tragedy is that many sincere people stop welcoming Jesus because suffering quietly closes the heart. Not every resistance begins with pride; sometimes it begins with wounds. The spouse betrayed emotionally struggles to trust again. The grieving parent feels abandoned after loss. The person repeatedly disappointed by unanswered prayer slowly stops expecting God to speak. The young adult exhausted by recurring temptation quietly concludes holiness belongs only to others. The elderly person abandoned by loved ones silently embraces discouragement. Scripture repeatedly reveals wounded hearts struggling toward divine welcome. Elijah collapsed beneath emotional exhaustion and despair before rediscovering God not in force but in hidden tenderness (cf. 1 Kgs 19:1–18). Naomi (cf. Ruth 1–4) interpreted suffering through bitterness before grace quietly reopened hope . Thomas withdrew into doubt until Christ patiently entered wounded uncertainty (cf. Jn 20:24–29). Peter, (cf. Lk 22:54–62; Jn 21:15–19) burdened by shame after denial, feared closeness before mercy restored intimacy . Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity contemplated the soul as living sanctuary for divine indwelling, while Saint Jane Frances de Chantal learned surrender through grief and interior suffering. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2729–2733, 164, 165) teaches perseverance in prayer precisely amid dryness and suffering . Jesus therefore whispers gently to wounded souls: do not close the room where you hurt most—invite Me there first.

Another hidden obstacle that quietly makes Christ unwelcome is spiritual pride disguised as ordinary self-sufficiency. Pride rarely appears dramatic; it often sounds reasonable, mature, even responsible. I know what is best. I can manage alone. I will pray when life calms down. I do not need correction. My spiritual life is sufficient already. Lucifer’s tragedy began through self-exaltation resisting divine dependence (cf. Is 14:12–15). Pharaoh repeatedly hardened his heart despite overwhelming invitations to humility (cf. Ex 5–14). King Saul slowly preferred personal judgment over obedience until grace met increasing resistance (cf. 1 Sam 15:10–23). Saint John of the Cross warned that attachment to one’s own preferences obstructs union more subtly than obvious sins, while Saint Catherine of Siena insisted self-knowledge births humility. Scripture (cf. 2 Cor 12:7–10; Jas 4:6–10) repeatedly teaches that God works powerfully through surrendered weakness . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2544–2547) describes poverty of spirit as deep openness to God—a humble readiness to let grace enter where pride quietly resists . Yet pride often hides in ordinary places: the spouse replaying old hurts instead of beginning reconciliation, the parish volunteer offended when unnoticed, the parish curate refusing another parish help to avoid appearing weak, the professional unable to admit mistakes, the parent correcting everyone but resisting correction, or the busy Catholic postponing prayer because productivity feels more urgent than silence . Christ can heal weakness, confusion, failure, and even repeated falls, but pride quietly closes interior doors. Like Naaman (cf. 2 Kgs 5:10–14) who almost lost healing because humility felt too small , many souls struggle not because grace is absent, but because surrender feels difficult. Often holiness begins in hidden acts: listening instead of defending, going to confession without excuses, apologizing first, or quietly admitting, “Lord, I need You” .

A deeper dimension of this appeal concerns not only individuals but families, communities, institutions, and entire cultures. Jesus does not speak only to private hearts but to collective environments that either welcome or subtly exclude Him. Sacred Scripture shows that whole cities and households can recognize or miss the hour of God’s visitation. Jerusalem failed to recognize this moment and drifted into spiritual desolation (cf. Lk 19:41–44). In contrast, the household of Zacchaeus opened its doors to Christ, and renewal began not in theory but in the ordinary space of daily life (cf. Lk 19:1–10). Today, signs of faith are visible everywhere: vehicles with hanging rosaries swinging quietly on dashboards during traffic jams, schools displaying images of the Divine Mercy reminding children of forgiveness and trust (cf. Jn 20:21–23), convents sustaining the hidden heartbeat of perpetual adoration chapels where Christ is silently adored day and night (cf. CCC 1379), mission houses with small interior chapels anchoring apostolic life in prayer, and diocesan secretariats where images of saints silently witness to decisions, meetings, and administration. These are not decorations—they are theological statements that Christ is meant to dwell in the ordinary structures of life. Yet the appeal of Jesus still reaches deeper: many environments carry sacred symbols while struggling to fully integrate Christ into decisions, priorities, communication, and culture. Faith can become visible yet not fully formative; present in signs but absent in daily rhythm.  When Christ is gradually sidelined, even subtly, the effects appear over time: fragmentation in families, moral confusion in institutions, loss of interior peace, and weakening of unity . But where He is truly welcomed—homes, schools, convents, offices, and communities begin to breathe differently. Peace becomes more possible, forgiveness more natural, and truth more compelling . Thus, this appeal carries apostolic urgency: every believer is called not only to display signs of Christ, but to become a living place where Christ is quietly welcomed, loved, and allowed to reign in ordinary reality (cf. Mt 5:13–16; CCC 849–851).

Jesus leaves quietly, yet He remains astonishingly near, waiting for even the smallest reopening of the heart. Divine mercy is not easily exhausted; it endures human inconsistency with patient fidelity that does not cancel love when love is ignored . The Samaritan woman (cf. Jn 4:5–30, 39–42) slowly allowed her hidden story into the light of Christ, and what began as personal encounter became missionary renewal for many others . The disciples on the road to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13–35) walked in confusion and disappointment, yet Christ drew near in their ordinariness, interpreting their wounds until recognition came in the breaking of bread . Above all, the Eucharist reveals a Christ who chooses to remain with humanity even when received without full awareness, devotion, or love, yet still giving Himself entirely .The Catechism (cf. CCC 1428; CCC 2715) teaches that spiritual life is a continual conversion toward deeper communion with God, where growth often occurs through repeated return rather than uninterrupted perfection . This means dryness, distraction, or inconsistency are not final judgments on the soul but often places where humility is formed and grace begins again. Like Saint Peter who was restored not by flawless loyalty but by renewed love after failure (cf. Jn 21:15–17), or Saint Paul (cf. 2 Cor 12:9–10) who learned that divine strength is perfected in human weakness , the Christian journey is marked by returning, not giving up. Therefore Jesus speaks tenderly to distracted souls absorbed in noise yet secretly longing for silence, exhausted parents carrying unseen emotional burdens, wounded spouses living through unresolved pain, discouraged seminarians struggling with interior dryness, priests serving faithfully without consolation, religious enduring long seasons of aridity, lonely elderly persons facing quiet nights, and young people restless in identity and purpose: welcome Me again. Even one confession made in honesty, one Rosary prayed through distraction, one Eucharistic Holy Hour returned to after distance, one sincere act of forgiveness, one surrendered tear-filled prayer, or one brief moment of silence offered amid noise becomes a doorway where grace quietly re-enters . For Jesus is never searching for perfection, but for hearts that still allow Him to return

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, forgive the hidden ways we have resisted Your presence through distraction, wounds, fear, pride, and self-reliance. Enter every closed room of our hearts. Teach us to welcome You deeply in prayer, suffering, relationships, and the Eucharist so You may reign within us always. Amen.

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

When Jesus Gives Strength to Pray

Divine Appeal Reflection - 138

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 138: "Encourage yourself in Me ... I give you all the strength to pray. Take time for Me."

Awaken, soul, to a painful truth quietly shaping many lives: countless souls are not abandoning God through rebellion but through exhaustion. Many still love Christ sincerely, yet inwardly feel spiritually scattered. Their minds remain crowded, emotions depleted, prayer distracted, and hearts strangely heavy. Some wake already tired before the day begins. While going about their daily lives—making meals, driving, taking care of kids, performing parish ministries, preparing for tests, taking calls at work, or quietly experiencing setbacks that no one notices—others endure unseen pain. Into this hidden interior fatigue, Our Adorable Jesus speaks words almost startling in tenderness: “Encourage yourself in Me.” Notice carefully: Christ does not first command productivity, emotional strength, or flawless discipline. He calls the soul into divine dependence. Human beings instinctively seek encouragement in changing circumstances—success, relationships, recognition, certainty, emotional comfort, financial stability—but these remain fragile foundations. Scripture repeatedly reveals how human strength collapses when separated from God. David (cf. 1 Sam 30:1–6) strengthened himself amid grief and confusion not through self-confidence but through renewed trust in divine presence . Hannah (cf. 1 Sam 1:9–20) carried deep disappointment into persevering prayer before consolation slowly unfolded . Elijah, (cf. 1 Kgs 19:1–18) emotionally exhausted and spiritually discouraged, rediscovered hope through divine tenderness hidden in silence rather than spectacle . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2558–2565) teaches prayer as living covenant sustaining the soul through weakness and uncertainty . Jesus therefore whispers to the anxious father overwhelmed by unpaid bills (cf. Mt 6:25–34), the exhausted mother hiding tears after everyone sleeps, the seminarian discouraged by interior struggles and hidden temptations (cf. 2 Cor 12:7–10), the overworked employee quietly fearing failure, the student burdened by uncertainty about the future, the parish servant growing tired in unnoticed sacrifices, or the lonely elderly person whose faith feels quieter than before: seek courage first not in changing outcomes, but in My Heart. For the soul often searches for peace in solved problems, immediate answers, restored relationships, financial relief, emotional certainty, or visible consolations, yet Our Adorable Jesus gently redirects the weary heart toward a deeper refuge—the interior sanctuary of communion with Him .

Pause deeply before another astonishing truth hidden inside this appeal: Jesus Himself provides the strength He asks of souls. Many secretly believe prayer depends almost entirely upon emotional readiness, mental clarity, discipline, or spiritual enthusiasm. Thus, when weakness arrives, prayer quietly weakens. Yet Christ overturns this misconception completely: “I give you all the strength to pray.” What profound mercy! Divine life begins not through human sufficiency but through grace preceding effort. Scripture repeatedly reveals God strengthening fragile humanity rather than waiting for perfection. Moses trembled before vocation, overwhelmed by insecurity and inadequacy, yet grace sustained weakness (cf. Ex 3–4). Jeremiah feared his own limitations while God quietly strengthened him for mission (cf. Jer 1:4–10). Even Peter, (cf. Lk 22:31–34; Jn 21:15–19) impulsive and spiritually inconsistent, repeatedly discovered that divine mercy outweighed failure . Saint Thérèse of Lisieux contemplated weakness itself becoming pathway to divine confidence, while Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity recognized the soul as hidden sanctuary where God quietly acts interiorly. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2567, 2670) teaches that grace always precedes, awakens, and sustains human cooperation in prayer . This means the university student distracted during the Rosary while carrying academic pressure, the doctor emotionally depleted after witnessing prolonged suffering, the priest struggling critical illness after years of ministry, the religious silently persevering through interior desolation, the parent praying amid household exhaustion, or the caregiver wearied by constant responsibilities should not too quickly interpret weakness as spiritual failure. Scripture  (cf. 2 Cor 12:9–10; Rom 8:26) repeatedly reveals that God often begins His deepest work precisely where human strength appears insufficient .

Tremble, soul, before one of modern life’s quiet tragedies: many people no longer lose prayer suddenly—they lose it gradually. Rarely does spiritual distance begin dramatically. Instead, distraction quietly replaces recollection. Busyness slowly becomes identity. Exhaustion becomes excuse. Entertainment fills spaces once reserved for silence. The soul increasingly survives without interior rest until spiritual hunger feels strangely normal. The enemy understands this subtle erosion well. He rarely whispers, Stop praying forever. More often he says: You deserve rest today. Tomorrow will be better. God understands your schedule. You can pray later. Yet beneath such reasoning often hides invisible impoverishment. Scripture repeatedly reveals Christ protecting solitude amid overwhelming demands. Jesus (cf. Mk 1:35; Lk 5:15–16) withdrew frequently into prayer despite crowds needing Him . Martha’s anxiety (cf. Lk 10:38–42) gradually overshadowed attentiveness while Mary chose contemplative nearness . Daniel preserved prayer despite political pressure and uncertainty (cf. Dan 6:10–23). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2729–2733) teaches perseverance in prayer amid dryness and distraction as ordinary spiritual combat . Consider deeply human realities: the businessman endlessly refreshing emails instead of entering silence, the young adult losing recollection through constant scrolling, the mother postponing prayer until exhaustion wins, the religious distracted by ministry without intimacy, or the deacon slowly praying mechanically. Souls rarely collapse spiritually through dramatic refusal; often they weaken through neglected closeness.

Listen carefully now to perhaps the most demanding and most healing phrase in the appeal: “Take time for Me.” It reveals a simple truth—time exposes what the heart loves. Without reflection, people naturally protect what they value most: work, relationships, goals, entertainment, even worries they keep returning to. What receives time gradually shapes desire and quietly directs the soul .Yet Jesus is not asking for leftover moments. He asks for intentional presence—real interior space given in love. This becomes difficult in a world shaped by speed, distraction, and constant stimulation, where silence feels unproductive and stillness uncomfortable (cf. Mk 1:35; CCC 2711). Beneath this tension lies something deeper: many souls are not only tired but spiritually thirsty and inwardly scattered . So “Take time for Me” is not only a demand but a revelation—Christ gently showing that exhaustion often hides a deeper longing for communion, restored not by more activity, but by abiding with Him (cf. Jn 15:4–5).Yet contemplation insists upon another truth: hurried souls struggle to recognize divine presence. Moses (cf. Ex 34:29–35) encountered transformation while remaining before God long enough to be interiorly changed . The disciples on the road to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13–35) only gradually recognized Christ while remaining in prolonged encounter . John, (cf. Jn 13:23; Rev 1:9–20) resting near Jesus during the Last Supper, later perceived mysteries others struggled to understand . Saint Charles de Foucauld embraced hidden Eucharistic silence in the obscurity of ordinary life, where nothing seemed impressive, yet everything was quietly offered to God . Saint Teresa of Ávila, drawing from deep interior struggle, warned that prayer is not something we simply lose in one moment, but something that fades slowly when we stop returning to Christ in friendship and trust . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2709–2719) describes contemplative prayer as loving attentiveness resting before God—a quiet, sometimes wordless gaze where a tired soul simply stays near Him, even when thoughts are scattered and the heart feels heavy . This is where Jesus meets real life. Not in ideal conditions, but in kitchens after long days, in hospital corridors where fatigue sits in the bones, in lecture halls where concentration keeps slipping, in parish rooms after ministry feels dry, in small rented rooms where loneliness is loud, and in workplaces where pressure never really stops. Our Adorable Jesus gently speaks to the overworked parent trying to stay patient after everyone is finally asleep, the overwhelmed student rereading the same line without absorbing it, the exhausted nurse still carrying the faces of suffering patients, the busy priest whose prayers feel empty, the struggling entrepreneur hiding anxiety behind responsibility, and the lonely widow listening to silence that feels too long: protect time with Me because what you call exhaustion is often your soul asking for Me .

Finally, awaken to the profound consolation hidden beneath this appeal: Jesus never asks souls to climb toward Him alone. He becomes simultaneously the source, strength, companion, and fulfillment of prayer. Many discouraged souls wrongly imagine spiritual growth requires constant emotional intensity or extraordinary experiences. Yet divine intimacy often matures invisibly. Peter changed slowly through repeated returns to Christ (cf. Jn 21:15–19). The disciples journeying toward Emmaus discovered grace quietly working even while confusion remained (cf. Lk 24:13–35). The widow persistently seeking justice revealed how perseverance transforms weakness into fidelity (cf. Lk 18:1–8). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2564, 2734–2745) teaches prayer as covenant relationship strengthened through perseverance even amid dryness and discouragement . Therefore Jesus speaks gently to the soul ashamed of inconsistency: encourage yourself in Me. One Holy Hour offered through distraction, one whispered prayer through grief, one Rosary prayed imperfectly after exhausting work, one return to Eucharistic adoration after spiritual distance, one act of silence protected from digital noise may become hidden turning point of grace. For souls do not pray alone. Christ Himself secretly sustains every sincere effort to remain near Him.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, when discouragement overshadows our hearts and prayer seems empty, draw us deeper into Your Eucharistic Presence. Teach us to seek strength not in feelings but in faith. Sustain us through every dryness, and help us trust that Your hidden grace is always at work within us. Amen.

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

The Devil Has No Kindness

Divine Appeal Reflection - 138

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 138: "The devil has no kindness. Be brave"

There are spiritual realities so serious that souls often avoid contemplating them because they disturb comfortable illusions. Yet Our Adorable Jesus speaks this Divine Appeal like a loving physician urgently exposing an invisible illness before it becomes fatal: “The devil has no kindness.” Pause before these words. Christ reveals a sobering mystery: evil possesses no compassion. The enemy does not pity exhaustion, loneliness, shame, confusion, or spiritual weakness; he seeks entry precisely through wounded places . Scripture reveals that ruin rarely begins dramatically—the serpent first weakens trust before visible collapse appears (cf. Gen 3:1–7). Yet Jesus speaks of this not to frighten souls,(cf. Ps 91:1–4; CCC 2850–2854) but to awaken vigilance, for divine mercy guards most tenderly where human weakness feels most fragile . In Eden, (cf. Gen 3:1–13) the serpent approached not violently but persuasively, patiently weakening confidence in divine goodness before destruction unfolded . The Catechism teaches that the fall introduced an ongoing spiritual battle in which deceptive powers seek separation between humanity and God (cf. CCC 391–395, 409).This means that many wounds quietly entering ordinary life are not spiritually neutral. A student repeatedly comparing themselves online may slowly begin believing they will never be enough, until discouragement quietly matures into despair.  A woman carrying loneliness may seek comfort in attachments that briefly soothe but leave the heart more empty afterward. A seminarian struggling with recurring weakness may secretly begin believing holiness belongs only to stronger souls, forgetting that saints themselves were often formed through weakness surrendered to grace .The enemy rarely begins with catastrophe. More often, he speaks through tired thoughts that feel strangely reasonable: You are too tired to pray. (cf. Gen 3:1–5; 1 Pet 5:8) Nobody understands you . This compromise changes nothing. You will never change anyway (cf. Gen 3:1–5; 1 Pet 5:8–9). Yet Our Adorable Jesus tenderly unmasks these interior lies because spiritual cruelty often hides beneath familiar thoughts. Evil advances quietly where discernment sleeps, but grace slowly awakens the soul to recognize what steals peace, truth, tenderness, and freedom long before chains fully appear .

Awaken, soul, to one of the enemy’s most unsettling strategies: evil often disguises cruelty as comfort. This is why Our Adorable Jesus warns with such tenderness and clarity. Temptation rarely appears openly destructive; it frequently arrives clothed in relief, offering what seems comforting while quietly deepening wounds . The wounded heart may slowly begin calling revenge justice, rehearsing old injuries until bitterness feels reasonable . Emotional withdrawal can gradually appear safer than vulnerability, until silence becomes a form of self-protection against disappointment or pain. Yet what first feels protective may quietly deepen loneliness, harden tenderness, and distance the soul from the healing it truly seeks . Impurity presents itself as relief from loneliness, dishonesty as survival, bitterness as realism, cynicism as wisdom, and spiritual neglect as deserved rest . Yet beneath such whispers lies a profound mercilessness, for the enemy never seeks healing—only deeper captivity. Christ therefore unmasks deception not to frighten souls, but to preserve their freedom, peace, and capacity to love . Scripture repeatedly reveals that Satan never touches wounds to heal them; he enters wounds to enlarge them. Consider Judas, (cf. Jn 12:1–6; 13:21–30) whose hidden disappointments slowly became spiritual vulnerability before betrayal darkened his soul . Consider Cain, who allowed wounded resentment to mature into destruction because bitterness remained unchecked (cf. Gen 4:1–16). The Catechism (cf. CCC 2515–2516, 2846–2849) reminds souls that temptation becomes dangerous precisely because disordered desires cloud discernment . Jesus therefore speaks urgently to hidden human struggles. The employee increasingly dishonest because financial pressure feels unbearable, the spouse emotionally confiding in someone outside marriage, the exhausted priest quietly abandoning interior prayer, or the religious sister secretly consumed by comparison—all may mistake spiritual poison for emotional relief. But Christ says firmly: the devil has no kindness.

Tremble, soul, before another painful truth: the enemy studies wounds patiently. Satan rarely attacks randomly; he often strikes precisely where hearts feel weakest. He notices disappointments, loneliness, rejection, insecurity, exhaustion, grief, hidden shame, unresolved anger, and spiritual dryness. Scripture (cf. 1 Pet 5:8–9; Eph 6:10–18) repeatedly warns souls to remain vigilant because spiritual attack often enters through neglected interior spaces . King Saul’s insecurity slowly grew into jealousy, jealousy into inner instability, and instability into ruin, showing how unnoticed wounds, if left unguarded, can gradually reshape an entire life (cf. 1 Sam 18–19). Scripture reveals here a profoundly human mystery: spiritual weakening is often gradual rather than sudden, yet divine mercy meets such decline with patient restoration rather than condemnation . Elijah, overwhelmed by fear, loneliness, and exhaustion, reached the edge of despair, yet God restored him with striking tenderness—not through rebuke, but through rest, nourishment, silence, and a renewed sense of mission . In this encounter, divine care is revealed as deeply attentive to human limits, healing the soul not by force, but by gently rebuilding strength where it has been depleted . Such realities remain deeply human. A caregiver emotionally exhausted after years of responsibility may quietly grow resentful because prayer feels impossible amid fatigue. A young adult repeatedly wounded by rejection may slowly rename despair as “realism.” A person pressured financially may begin compromising conscience because integrity feels unbearably costly. A catechist serving faithfully may quietly question whether hidden sacrifices matter. A student repeatedly struggling may begin believing temptation defines identity rather than remembering that weakness surrendered to grace can become the place of transformation (cf. 2 Cor 12:9; Heb 12:12–13). The enemy often seeks not immediate collapse, but gradual erosion: hope weakening, prayer shortening, joy fading, trust diminishing, and spiritual vigilance quietly sleeping . Yet Christ reveals this mystery not to frighten souls, but to awaken them in time, for divine mercy desires to heal wounds while they are still whispers rather than chains . His light exposes what is hidden so that nothing quietly destructive may harden within the heart. In this way, divine revelation is not judgmental pressure, but preventative love—healing offered early, before weakness becomes bondage and before silence becomes captivity (cf. CCC 2847–2849).

Yet suddenly Jesus interrupts fear with two astonishing words: “Be brave.” Here lies the heart of the appeal. Our Adorable Jesus never reveals darkness to paralyse the soul, but to awaken courage and fidelity in it . He exposes danger because love protects what it refuses to abandon. Christian courage is not emotional confidence but faithful perseverance amid fear, weakness, and trial . Scripture shows this as strength drawn from divine companionship: David before Goliath, Esther before risk, and Peter restored after failure . True bravery is the soul remaining with God even when it trembles. David approached Goliath (cf. 1 Sam 17:32–50) not because danger disappeared but because trust exceeded terror . Peter (cf. Mt 14:22–33; Jn 21:15–19) sank through fear yet learned that weakness surrendered to Christ becomes strength . The apostles (cf. Acts 4:18–31) preached despite imprisonment because divine courage grew stronger than intimidation . Saint Gemma Galgani endured profound spiritual suffering while remaining radically faithful, while Saint Teresa of Ávila repeatedly insisted that courage in prayer weakens darkness. The Catechism(cf. CCC 1808, 1817) teaches that fortitude strengthens the soul to persevere through fear, temptation, and difficulty without surrendering hope . In this light, courage often appears in deeply human and hidden forms: the husband humbly apologizing after speaking harshly, the teenager honestly confessing hidden struggles,  the priest remaining faithful through financial constrains, or the young person beginning again after repeated weakness rather than surrendering to impurity . Heaven frequently calls bravery by quieter names: endurance, return, fidelity, confession, perseverance, and the humble decision to begin again. Our Adorable Jesus sees such hidden victories, for grace often shines brightest not in dramatic strength, but in souls who continue loving amid weakness .

Finally, awaken to the most consoling truth hidden beneath this stern appeal: Jesus speaks of the devil because He intends freedom, not fear. Christ never exposes darkness without simultaneously standing nearby as refuge. Divine mercy remains infinitely stronger than infernal cruelty. Scripture repeatedly reveals God reclaiming wounded souls from astonishing weakness. Mary Magdalene (cf. Jn 20:11–18) emerged from profound suffering toward apostolic love . Peter moved from shame to courageous witness through mercy stronger than failure (cf. Lk 22:54–62; Jn 21:15–19). The prodigal son (cf. Lk 15:11–32) rehearsed unworthiness while mercy already ran toward him . The Catechism (cf. CCC 982, 1428, 2010) teaches that grace remains stronger than repeated sin whenever souls sincerely return to divine mercy . Jesus therefore speaks tenderly to the soul exhausted by recurring temptation, the spouse trapped in resentment, the monk discouraged by weakness, the lonely person tempted toward hopelessness, the religious struggling rejection, or the parent overwhelmed by invisible burdens: be brave. One sincere confession (cf. CCC 1422–1498), one Rosary prayed through exhaustion, one hour of Eucharistic adoration , one refusal to surrender bitterness, one act of trust in darkness may quietly reclaim ground the enemy hoped to possess. For the devil has no kindness—but Christ never stops fighting for what He loves.

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, awaken us to the hidden cruelty of the enemy who seeks discouragement, confusion, and distance from You. Give us brave hearts for unseen battles. Strengthen us in prayer, guard wounded places, and teach us unwavering trust in Your victorious mercy. Amen.

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