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Divine Appeal 114

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I love mankind so much, as you see Me there in My tabernacle apparently lifeless. I do not want anyone to perish.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. Spend this hour with Me and make amends. In the Sacrament of My Love I am so much consoled when you make acts of reparation. I love mankind so much as you see Me there in My tabernacle apparently lifeless. It is this love that keeps Me so lonely, always hidden beneath the Host. The veil covers me and the species of bread chains Me there as a prisoner. Pray more and do penance. Do not leave Me alone. I need you to repair the pains I receive when many receive Me in Holy Communion and then they leave Me horribly.

I am very thirsty for souls. I do not want anyone to perish. This is a grave moment. I want souls to know that My Heart is overflowing with mercy and love. The world has lost its senses. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. Time is short for saving souls. Do not waste any of these precious times.”

“I bless you.”

3.00 a.m., 9th April 1988

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com.

Overcoming the Obstacles of Incertitude

 Divine Appeal Reflection  - 113

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 113: "If they pray they will find source of light and love. I counsel them not to create any obstacles of incertitude. "

“Obstacles of incertitude” are the interior barriers the soul builds when it resists the light God already gives—fear, hidden attachments, unrepented sin, and the demand to understand everything before obeying; they cloud faith and make the heart hesitate before grace, as happened with Eve when doubt was welcomed over God’s word (cf Genesis 3:1–6; James 1:6–8). It is more than uncertainty about tomorrow; it is the exhaustion of a heart that desires to trust God yet continually retreats into fear, overthinking, and self-protection. Spiritually, incertitude emerges when the soul becomes divided between grace and control, between surrender and the demand for reassurance before obedience . The heart begins to seek guarantees rather than God Himself. A person senses the invitation to deeper prayer yet delays until they “feel ready.” Another knows forgiveness is necessary but repeatedly revisits the wound because vulnerability feels dangerous. A young adult endlessly searches for signs before responding to vocation or responsibility. A priest quietly fears failure, misunderstanding, or sacrifice in mission. A married couple postpones reconciliation because pride disguises itself as caution. Humanly, incertitude often appears in sleepless nights, constant mental replaying of conversations, anxious consultation of many opinions, and an inability to rest interiorly in Divine Providence. 

Scripture reveals this struggle repeatedly: Peter walked on water only while his gaze remained fixed on Christ rather than the storm (cf. Mt 14:28–31); (cf. Num 13:31–33) Israel hesitated before entering the Promised Land because fear magnified obstacles more than God’s fidelity . The Catechism teaches that hope anchors the soul in confidence amid obscurity (cf. CCC 2090–2092). St. John Paul II repeatedly called humanity to reject the paralysis of fear because fear closes the heart to the radical generosity required for holiness and mission . Pope Benedict XVI taught that faith is not the possession of complete certainty or total understanding,(cf. Heb 11:1; Spe Salvi 2, 7) but the courageous entrustment of oneself to the living God who remains faithful even in obscurity . Pope Francis likewise warned that excessive self-protection and spiritual self-preservation can imprison the soul in comfort, preventing the freedom necessary for authentic discipleship and missionary surrender . Thus the deepest tragedy of incertitude is not the absence of answers, but the slow erosion of trust that leaves the soul suspended between fear and grace—seeing enough light to move, yet refusing the next step already illuminated by God . In this suspended state, grace is not denied but delayed, and the heart grows heavy not from darkness, but from hesitation.

What makes incertitude spiritually dangerous is that it rarely announces itself as rebellion; it often appears as prudence, caution, or “waiting for the right time,” while silently teaching the soul to postpone grace. Pharaoh (cf. Ex 7–10) did not reject God in one moment but repeatedly delayed surrender until delay itself hardened his heart , showing that postponed obedience can slowly become resistance to mercy. Many lose years of grace not through dramatic sin but through hesitation before what Christ has already shown in prayer, conscience, and the sacraments. The rich young man (cf. Mk 10:17–22) recognized the beauty of Jesus’ call but walked away sorrowful because certainty would demand detachment ; the issue was not lack of light but attachment disguised as uncertainty. This remains profoundly human: a person delays confession, avoids reconciliation, stays in a relationship that weakens faith, or resists a vocation because obedience threatens comfort, status, affection, or control. St. Augustine of Hippo described this divided will—loving God yet fearing the loss of old pleasures—while John of the Cross taught that even small attachments can keep the soul inwardly split, unable to run freely toward God . Before the Holy Eucharist, Our Adorable Jesus reveals that incertitude often means not “I cannot see,” but “I am afraid to lose what keeps me from You”; and if repeatedly protected, this fear becomes a spiritual prison where delay is mistaken for discernment. Christ waits in Eucharistic silence until the soul dares to choose Him above every lesser security, because grace received “later” may be grace the heart no longer recognizes (cf. Heb 3:7–8; Jn 6:67–69).

Jesus speaks tenderly because He knows how quickly fear persuades the heart that uncertainty means God has withdrawn, yet Sacred Scripture shows that God often draws closest when the way remains hidden. Abraham walked out from everything familiar without seeing the destination (cf Gn 12:1–4; Heb 11:8), Mary, mother of Jesus gave her fiat before understanding the sword of sorrow that would pierce her soul (cf Lk 1:26–38; Lk 2:35; Jn 19:25), and Joseph, husband of Mary obeyed God through night dreams without explanations for every consequence . The Church teaches that faith is not full visibility but surrender to the God who speaks, trusting His truth even when the path remains veiled . In daily life, incertitude becomes dangerous when the soul interprets divine mystery as abandonment: a mother prays for a child but sees no change, a worker remains upright while opportunities close, a priest serves while carrying interior loneliness, a widow speaks to God and hears silence, a student studies while the future appears blank. The temptation becomes interior accusation: “God is not answering.” Yet Monica waited through years of tears for the conversion of Augustine of Hippo, and the persistence of the widow in Christ’s parable reveals that delayed response can deepen trust rather than signal refusal . God often forms souls in hidden seasons before revealing fruit, as He did with Joseph (son of Jacob) in prison before exaltation . The soul creates obstacles of incertitude when it insists that grace must always feel obvious, consoling, or immediate. 

Our Adorable Jesus in the Holy Eucharist destroys that illusion: He is entirely present while hidden under humble appearances, teaching that the deepest realities are often veiled to natural sight (cf Jn 6:35, 51, 56; Lk 24:30–31). The one who kneels before the tabernacle learns that silence is not emptiness but presence too deep for ordinary perception; as Elijah encountered God not in wind or fire but in stillness, so Christ often forms certainty through quiet fidelity . He may not answer every question, but He remains, and His hidden Eucharistic Heart becomes the school of trust. Therefore Jesus counsels: continue praying, continue obeying, continue loving, because divine light often appears during fidelity rather than before it. Israel received the pillar only while journeying (cf Ex 13:21–22), Peter the Apostle stood on the waters only while looking at Christ (cf Mt 14:28–31), and Thomas the Apostle (cf Jn 20:24–29) was led from demand for proof into deeper faith . What seems like silence may be the Eucharistic Jesus shaping the soul beyond dependence on signs, teaching the hidden maturity where one says not “I understand everything,” but “You are here, and that is enough” .

Incertitude often grows not from rebellion but from a wounded human condition—fatigue, grief, trauma, or repeated disappointment—where the heart no longer trusts easily because it has been hurt too deeply to move quickly in faith. Elijah collapsed in exhaustion after spiritual victory and asked for death, showing that even great prophets can enter interior desolation ,  while Thomas the Apostle required contact with Christ’s wounds because sorrow had destabilized his interior certainty . Jesus does not reject such souls; He meets them in their fragility,(cf. Mk 1:41) where divine pedagogy often begins with mercy before it calls to deeper conversion . Many experience incertitude because trust itself has been wounded: betrayal in relationships, fractured families, financial loss, illness, moral failure,(cf. Ps 34:18) or long-hidden sin can make obedience feel unsafe rather than life-giving . In this state, the soul does not stop believing, but stops risking trust. Yet Our Adorable Jesus gently restores it by steady presence, inviting the heart to begin again not with certainty,(cf. Mt 11:28–29) but with surrender . A father who lost employment fears providence again (cf Mt 6:31–33), a young person wounded by friendship struggles to trust vocation (cf Jer 29:11–13), and a soul repeatedly defeated by sin begins to doubt whether conversion is possible . In such interior states, incertitude is not abstract—it is emotional memory resisting hope. Yet Our Adorable Jesus reveals in mercy that He does not demand immediate emotional stability before grace can operate. In the silence of the Holy Eucharist, He receives trembling faith as genuine faith, because He Himself once met fear in the garden and sweat blood in human anguish (cf Lk 22:44; Heb 4:15–16). The soul learns that trust is not the absence of trembling but the decision to remain with Him while trembling, as Peter the Apostle (cf Mt 14:28–31) walked on water while fear still existed but gaze remained on Christ . Therefore Jesus’ counsel is profoundly gentle: do not create additional obstacles by feeding fear, rehearsing every possible failure, or postponing obedience until emotional certainty arrives. Instead, pray when exhausted (cf Mt 11:28–30), begin again after falling (cf Prv 24:16), reconcile when ashamed (cf Mt 5:23–24), and trust that grace works precisely within poverty of spirit . Human weakness is not the final obstacle; refusing grace within weakness is—because Christ does not wait for strength to heal us, He enters weakness to transform it .

The great liberation of the spiritual life comes when the soul understands that certainty in Christ is not the possession of complete explanations, but the secure knowledge of the One who leads it through every unknown. Scripture never presents faith as total visibility; rather, it presents communion with God amid partial understanding,(cf Heb 11:1; 2 Cor 5:7) where trust carries the weight that knowledge cannot bear . Jesus does not promise that the entire path will be explained in advance, but He does promise His abiding presence: “I am with you always” (cf Mt 28:20), and His peace that remains even when questions remain unresolved . In this light, incertitude loses its tyranny because the foundation is no longer information but relationship. This hidden certainty is beautifully embodied in Joseph, husband of Mary, who rarely received full explanations yet always responded with immediate obedience,(cf Mt 1:20–24; Mt 2:13–15) allowing divine providence to unfold through action rather than analysis . It is also seen in the interior life of St. Elizabeth of the Trinity, who discovered that peace is not produced by external clarity but by abiding continually in the indwelling presence of God . The soul begins to understand that God is not absent in what is not yet understood; He is already present in what is already given. 

In daily life, this becomes concrete and demanding: a mother entrusts her child to God without controlling every future outcome (cf Mt 6:34), a worker chooses integrity even when promotion is uncertain , a spouse forgives before emotional healing is complete (cf Eph 4:32), a priest continues serving through hidden loneliness , and a young person embraces purity without knowing how their vocation will unfold . In each case, faith is no longer anchored in visibility but in fidelity to Christ present in the moment. This is the heart of Eucharistic living: the believer receives Our Adorable Jesus in the Holy Eucharist without seeing outward change, yet trusts that the same hidden Lord is actively shaping every hidden corner of life (cf Jn 6:56; 1 Cor 10:16–17). The obstacle of incertitude collapses when the soul stops demanding the entire map and clings instead to the One who walks with it step by step through the unknown (cf. Prov 3:5–6). Jesus’ counsel is profoundly merciful: many hearts lose peace not for lack of grace, but through excess fear and overthinking . Our Adorable Jesus calls the soul back to simplicity—pray, obey what is already clear, entrust what is still hidden, and walk forward with Him in trust (cf. Jn 15:4–5). Like Peter stepping onto the water, peace is found not in full visibility,(cf. Mt 14:28–31) but in faithful movement sustained by His presence . In this way, uncertainty does not vanish, but it is transfigured—because Christ Himself becomes the path,(cf Jn 14:6; Is 30:21) and therefore the soul is never truly lost .

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, we surrender our minds and hearts to You, asking that no obstacle of incertitude may remain within us. Let our prayer become a place where confusion is transformed into peace and uncertainty into trust in Your providence . Guide our families, our vocations, our work, and our hidden struggles so that we may follow You without hesitation. May we always remember that You are the Light who never fails. Amen.

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

Buried in Sensuality, Forgotten in Mercy

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 113

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 113: "What a pain to Me! Souls are buried in sensuality! I wish that above all souls may understand My Divine Mercy."

Terrible is the sorrow of the Heart of Jesus when the soul, created for divine communion, slowly sinks beneath the weight of lower desires and forgets its eternal dignity (cf. Gen 1:26–27). Sensuality is not only impurity or bodily pleasure; it is the deeper disorder in which the senses begin ruling the soul, passions overpower reason, and immediate gratification replaces truth, sacrifice, and holiness (cf. Rom 8:5–8). A soul buried in sensuality gradually loses its hunger for God because earthly comforts begin occupying the space meant for grace. This captivity appears in painfully ordinary ways: compulsive attachment to screens (cf. Ps 101:3), overeating without self-mastery (cf. Phil 3:19), vanity and obsession with appearance (cf. 1 Pet 3:3–4), lustful imagination (cf. Mt 5:28), emotional dependence, avoidance of sacrifice, constant entertainment, excessive comfort, laziness, and inability to remain in silence before God. Even spiritual souls can become sensual when they abandon prayer the moment consolation disappears. The tragedy is subtle because modern culture celebrates indulgence as freedom,(cf. Gal 5:1) while the Gospel reveals that true freedom is interior mastery through grace . St. Augustine of Hippo knew this battle intimately, discovering how disordered passions slowly enslave the will when separated from God (cf. Rom 7:19–24). St.  John Paul II taught that the human body is meant to reveal divine love, not become an object of self-centered pleasure (cf. 1 Cor 6:19–20). Jesus mourns because man was created not for the tyranny of the senses, but for the freedom and beauty of holiness. The deepest tragedy is therefore not only sin itself,(cf. Phil 3:20) but forgetting that the soul was made for Heaven .

Profound is the blindness of the soul buried in sensuality,(cf. Jn 8:34) because what begins as harmless indulgence often ends in interior slavery . Sensuality deceives by appearing natural, deserved, and harmless, yet unchecked desire slowly weakens freedom and darkens spiritual perception. Eve first looked, desired, took, and fell;(cf. Gen 3:1–7) attraction preceded disobedience . David (cf. 2 Sam 11) allowed an unguarded glance to become adultery and violence , while Samson lost both spiritual and physical sight through sensual weakness (cf. Jdg 16). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1264; 1426) teaches that concupiscence remains after baptism and requires continual struggle through grace, vigilance, and self-denial . St. John of the Cross warned that attachment to created things—even small ones—can obstruct union with God (cf. Mt 6:21), while St. Teresa of Ávila observed that little attachments often prevent deeper holiness. In daily life, sensuality often appears not first in dramatic sins, but in the quiet habit of constantly satisfying appetite: endless scrolling without restraint, overdrinking for comfort , impulsive speech (cf. Jas 1:19), avoidance of sacrifice (cf. Lk 9:23), resistance to fasting , fleeing interior silence , or continually choosing comfort over responsibility. Slowly, the soul loses the strength to deny itself for love. The effects spread through every vocation. Families weaken when comfort replaces shared prayer (cf. Josh 24:15). Priests lose interior fire when activism replaces contemplation (cf. Mk 6:31). Young people become spiritually exhausted when the imagination is continually flooded with impurity, distraction,(cf. Rom 12:2) and noise . Even consecrated souls can begin seeking emotional reassurance more than hidden fidelity to Christ (cf. Rev 2:4). What seems small gradually reshapes desire until the heart becomes less attentive to God and more dependent on constant stimulation. The deepest tragedy is that the buried soul often no longer recognizes its chains because the culture praises indulgence as freedom. Yet Christ reveals the opposite: sensuality slowly suffocates prayer, weakens the will, darkens conscience,(cf. Rom 8:5–6) and makes eternal realities seem distant and unreal .

Overwhelming is the mercy of Jesus, because even while souls bury themselves beneath sensuality, His Heart continues seeking not their destruction but their restoration (cf. Ez 33:11). The sorrow of Christ is always joined to mercy. He does not expose sin in order to humiliate the sinner, but to heal what is wounded and raise what has fallen (cf. Eph 2:1–7; CCC 1846–1848). Divine Mercy is God descending into human misery to restore supernatural life where sin had brought spiritual death (cf. Titus 3:3–7). Christ came not for the self-satisfied, but for souls exhausted by passions, addictions, shame,(cf. Mk 2:17) and interior fragmentation . St. Mary of Egypt lived enslaved to sensuality before becoming a radiant witness of repentance and purification through grace. St. Faustina Kowalska contemplated mercy as the greatest revelation of God’s love toward human misery . Throughout Scripture, Christ repeatedly enters places of moral ruin in order to call souls back to life: the prodigal son returning from degradation , Mary Magdalene transformed by love (cf. Lk 8:2), the woman (cf. Jn 8:1–11) caught in adultery spared from condemnation and invited to conversion , and Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:1–10) lifted from greed into restitution and joy . In ordinary life, many souls hide after indulgence—after lust, pornography, vanity, gluttony, drunkenness, emotional dependency, selfish comfort, or repeated moral failure. Shame then whispers that restoration is impossible. Yet Christ insists above all on trust in His mercy,(cf. Rom 5:20) because despair often keeps souls buried more deeply than sin itself . The confessional becomes a place of resurrection (cf. Jn 20:22–23). Eucharistic adoration purifies the imagination, fasting restores interior freedom (cf. Mt 6:16–18), custody of the eyes heals spiritual vision (cf. Mt 6:22), and holy friendships strengthen perseverance in grace . Mercy never excuses sensuality, but it breaks its chains through grace. The sorrow of Jesus over fallen souls is immense,(cf. Jn 10:10) but His desire to restore them is greater still .

Magnificent is the Christian vocation to rise from sensuality into purity of heart, (cf. Mt 5:8) where the senses no longer dominate the soul but become servants of grace . Purity is not repression or hatred of the body; it is rightly ordered love, where desires, emotions, imagination, and bodily life are gradually brought into harmony with God . Christ does not reject human nature—He redeems and transfigures it . Sensuality turns the person inward toward self-gratification, but purity frees the soul to love truthfully, sacrificially, and peacefully. The saints reveal the beauty of this transformation. St. Maria Goretti defended purity as a witness to eternal dignity and forgiveness . Joseph reflects strong and silent chastity rooted in obedience, reverence,(cf. Mt 1:24) and hidden fidelity . Purity belongs to every vocation: spouses through faithful and reverent love , priests through spiritual fatherhood (cf. 1 Cor 4:15), consecrated souls through total belonging to Christ (cf. Rev 14:4), young people through disciplined imagination (cf. Phil 4:8), and even the suffering through patient self-offering united to the Cross . Daily purification unfolds through small but decisive acts: guarding media and conversations , fasting from unnecessary comforts , dressing with modesty and dignity (cf. 1 Tim 2:9), refusing lustful entertainment, ending unhealthy attachments, rising faithfully for prayer, and accepting sacrifice without complaint. Slowly the body ceases to be treated as an idol (cf. Rom 12:1) and becomes an offering to God . Sensuality says, “satisfy yourself”; purity says, “offer yourself.” Every conquered appetite creates deeper space for divine intimacy. The disciplined soul begins hearing God more clearly in silence . Prayer grows luminous, charity deepens, and interior peace becomes steadier, because grace is gradually restoring harmony within the whole person.

Astonishing is the final truth of this appeal: even souls buried deeply in sensuality can become saints when they truly encounter Divine Mercy. This is the triumph of grace—that no chain of passion is stronger than the redeeming love of Christ . The enemy whispers that repeated weakness makes holiness impossible, but Jesus reveals the opposite: the deeper the fall, (cf. Lk 15:20–24) the more radiant mercy becomes when the soul rises again through repentance and trust .  Grace transforms the soul not through willpower alone, but through continual surrender: returning to confession(cf. Jn 20:22–23) , remaining before the Eucharistic Christ in adoration , immersing the mind in Scripture , accepting spiritual guidance , embracing sacrifice , and living with filial devotion to Mary, whose purity gently leads wounded souls back to Christ . In apostolic life,  souls rescued from sensuality often become deeply compassionate witnesses because they understand human weakness from within . They speak with mercy to young people trapped in impurity, families weakened by indulgence, professionals consumed by comfort and ambition, and believers drifting into lukewarmness (cf. Rev 3:15–16). What once wounded them becomes, through grace, a place of healing for others. Their former wounds become places of mercy and mission. Thus this Divine Appeal is not only a warning against the grave of sensuality, but a call to resurrection before the heart hardens in despair. Christ desires not buried souls, but restored souls—hearts raised into freedom, holiness,(cf. Gal 5:1) and contemplative union where even human desire itself is purified and illuminated by Divine Love .

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, You know how easily we become attached to comfort, approval, and things that pass. Yet You never stop calling us back. Teach us to love You in small sacrifices: turning off what distracts us, forgiving someone, rising to pray, choosing purity, speaking kindly. May Your Mercy enter our ordinary life and make our hearts truly free. Amen

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

Divine Appeal 113

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1


“My Heart bleeds for all marriages in which My Sacraments have been suppressed.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. I want souls to be saved. I want them to recognize My Love and mercy towards them. These words I tell you will be the light and life for an incalculable number of souls. I give My grace that by this Word souls may be enlightened and be converted. Bring Me souls. What a pain to Me! Souls are buried in sensuality! I wish that above all souls may understand My Divine Mercy.

In the Sacrament of My Love, I am over there waiting for souls with open arms like the most affectionate parent in order to impart life and take joy in the children.

I come to say: repent before it is too late. The souls I love so much do not understand. I am so abused and profaned as I remain in My prison. Do not be afraid even when you receive sufferings. Only in this way, you will win battles of your apostolate to call lost souls and to repair, to dress the wound caused to Me by My own... If they pray they will find source of light and love. I counsel them not to create any obstacles of incertitude. In this hour in My Divine Sacrament My Heart bleeds for all marriages in which My sacraments have been suppressed.

I do not have any rest in this prison. Pray a great deal. Do not waste any of these precious times for saving souls. Put yourself in the high spirit of contemplation.”

“I give My blessing.”

2.30 a.m., 8th April 1988

Copyright © 2015 Bishop Cornelius K. Arap Korir, Catholic Diocese of Eldoret, Kenya.  All rights reserved. Reproduced from ON THE EUCHARIST: A DIVINE APPEAL, Volume I by www.adivineappeal.com.

Looking at Jesus in the Eucharist

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 112

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 112: "Look at Me in the Eucharist and you will understand to what extent I love mankind. "

Behold the unimaginable abyss of Divine Humility: the Eternal Word through whom galaxies were created chooses to remain imprisoned beneath the appearance of fragile bread so that no sinner may fear approaching Him (cf. Jn 1:1-14; Col 1:15-17; Phil 2:5-11). “Look at Me in the Eucharist” is the cry of a God who longs not merely to be worshiped from afar, but contemplated intimately in silence, faith, and love. The Eucharist is Heaven hidden beneath simplicity, Calvary concealed beneath whiteness, and Divine Love veiled beneath silence . Humanity constantly searches for visible greatness, dramatic signs, and emotional certainty, yet Christ reveals the deepest mysteries of His Heart through hiddenness (cf. Is 53:2–3). St. Francis of Assisi trembled before the humility of Christ in the Eucharist,(cf. Phil 2:6–8) recognizing that the Almighty continues to lower Himself upon the altar with astonishing meekness . St. Peter Julian Eymard saw every tabernacle as a throne of Divine Love often left alone by distracted and hurried humanity (cf. Mt 26:40). The soul that truly looks upon Jesus in the Eucharist begins seeing all earthly glory as passing smoke . Daily anxieties about status, success, appearance, possessions, and recognition slowly lose power before the silent Host. In Eucharistic adoration, Christ heals fragmented hearts intoxicated by noise and speed. He teaches exhausted parents hidden fidelity, priests sacrificial fatherhood, religious joyful obscurity, youth holy purity, workers sanctified labor, and suffering souls redemptive endurance. Looking at Jesus becomes the beginning of interior resurrection because the soul finally encounters Love that neither abandons nor changes.

How deeply the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus suffers because so many souls no longer truly look at Him even while standing physically before Him . At Holy Mass, when the Sacred Host is elevated toward Heaven—the very moment when Earth touches Eternity and Calvary becomes sacramentally present—many eyes remain lowered toward phones, books, clothing, distractions, wandering thoughts, or other people instead of gazing upon the Lamb of God lifted for their salvation . During Eucharistic adoration, souls often speak constantly interiorly yet rarely become still enough to simply behold Him in loving silence. Some enter the chapel only briefly without recollection, others sit before the monstrance while mentally absorbed in worldly anxieties, entertainment, resentments, plans, or curiosity about others, forgetting that the King of Heaven remains truly present before them (cf. Ps 46:10; Lk 10:38-42). Upon entering the church, many fail even to glance toward the tabernacle lamp announcing Christ’s Presence; they genuflect mechanically without awareness, converse loudly, rush hurriedly,(cf. Ex 40:34-38; CCC 1379) or remain spiritually unconscious before the God hidden among them . Some receive Holy Communion while their hearts remain attached deliberately to sin, unforgiveness, impurity, pride, gossip, or indifference . Others leave Mass immediately after Communion without thanksgiving, abandoning Jesus moments after receiving Him sacramentally. Many souls now look more attentively at screens for hours than at Christ for even a single minute (cf. Ps 115:4–8). Attention has become fragmented, constantly pulled toward noise, distraction, and endless stimulation, while the heart slowly loses its capacity for contemplation. Yet the Eucharistic Jesus continues waiting in silence with unchanging patience and love . He asks not first for extraordinary achievements, but for one sincere gaze of faith—one soul willing to truly see Him, remain with Him, adore Him, console Him, and love Him in return .

Contemplate with holy astonishment that the Eucharist is not simply a symbol of Christ’s love but the living continuation of His Incarnation, Passion, Resurrection, and abiding Presence among men until the end of time . “Look at Me in the Eucharist” means: look at how far Divine Love is willing to go for your salvation. On the Cross, Christ offered Himself visibly once for the salvation of the world (cf. Heb 9:28); in the Eucharist, He continues giving Himself sacramentally to every generation until the end of time (cf. Lk 22:19–20). St. John Vianney taught that no human work can equal the value of the Mass because it contains Christ Himself,(cf. CCC 1367) truly present and self-offering upon the altar . St. Teresa of Ávila urged souls never to abandon mental prayer before the Eucharistic Lord,(cf. Jn 15:15) because there the soul gradually learns intimate friendship with Christ . Looking at Jesus in the Eucharist gradually reveals the terrifying depth of sin and the even greater depth of mercy. The Host silently proclaims that humanity is loved beyond comprehension despite rebellion, impurity, violence, betrayal,(cf. Rom 5:6-11; Eph 2:1-7) and spiritual coldness . This realization changes practical life radically. A soul formed by Eucharistic mercy becomes slower to judge , quicker to forgive offenses (cf. Col 3:13), more patient in suffering (cf. Rom 5:3–5), and more compassionate toward human weakness . Even ordinary relationships begin to change: spouses learn to love more sacrificially than selfishly , families grow gentler in speech, and wounded hearts slowly rediscover tenderness through the hidden influence of Christ dwelling within. Parents become more gentle and prayerful. Young people resist impurity by remembering their bodies are temples destined for communion with Christ . Even hidden suffering acquires supernatural value when united to the Eucharistic sacrifice. The altar becomes the meeting place where human misery encounters inexhaustible Divine Mercy.

Enter now into the blazing furnace of Eucharistic contemplation where Christ slowly transforms souls into reflections of His Sacred Heart . “Look at Me in the Eucharist” is not merely an invitation to devotion but to total transformation. The longer the soul remains before Jesus, the more His dispositions begin shaping thoughts, desires, reactions, speech, and relationships (cf. Rom 12:2). St. Clare of Assisi taught that through continual contemplation of Christ, the soul is gradually transformed into His likeness . St. Elizabeth of the Trinity lived with profound awareness that God dwells within the soul in grace as within a living sanctuary . Eucharistic contemplation therefore forms saints quietly from within. The world changes behavior externally; Christ transforms the heart internally. Before the Blessed Sacrament, ambition is purified into service, lust into purity, anger into mercy, pride into humility, and anxiety into trust . Daily practical realities become mystical opportunities for communion with Jesus. The mother awake at night with her child participates in Eucharistic self-giving. The laborer offering exhausting work with patience becomes spiritually united to Christ hidden in Nazareth. The priest celebrating Mass faithfully amid dryness becomes another living host. The elderly suffering abandonment discover companionship in the silent tabernacle lamp. Even temptations become moments to run toward Eucharistic strength instead of away from God. The soul that constantly looks at Jesus eventually begins carrying His peace into workplaces, homes, schools, hospitals, and ordinary conversations. Eucharistic adoration gradually creates souls who radiate Heaven silently without seeking attention.

Stand finally beneath the overwhelming revelation that the Eucharist is the cry of Divine Love refusing to abandon humanity even when humanity abandons God . “Look at Me in the Eucharist” is Christ opening His Heart before every wounded, restless, sinful, exhausted, and searching soul. The Eucharistic Host silently proclaims that no darkness is deeper than His mercy, no loneliness greater than His presence, and no human misery beyond redemption (cf. Is 53:3–5; Rom 8:31–39). St. Faustina Kowalska contemplated Divine Mercy flowing ceaselessly from the Heart of Jesus toward wounded sinners (cf. Jn 19:34), while St. Thérèse of Lisieux understood holiness above all as confident surrender to merciful Love . The Eucharistic Jesus remains hidden in countless tabernacles across the earth like a silent sun pouring grace into a spiritually exhausted world (cf. Jn 1:5). Yet many souls remain interiorly starving, not because Christ is absent, but because they no longer remain long enough before Him to truly see, listen,(cf. Ps 27:4) and receive . They glance quickly but do not remain. They receive Communion physically but not interiorly. They attend Mass outwardly but without surrendering the heart. Christ therefore repeats His appeal urgently in this distracted age: “Look at Me.” Look until pride breaks. Look until wounds heal. Look until worldly illusions fade. Look until prayer becomes thirst. Look until purity becomes beautiful. Look until sacrifice becomes love. Look until eternity becomes more real than earthly ambition. For the soul that truly gazes upon Jesus in the Eucharist with faith, humility, reparation, and love eventually discovers the greatest mystery in existence: the God hidden in the Sacred Host burns with infinite love personally for each human soul forever.

Prayer

O Eucharistic Jesus, fix our restless eyes upon Your Sacred Host until our hearts are consumed by Your hidden fire. Deliver us from distraction, pride, impurity, and spiritual blindness. Teach us to adore, console, and imitate You so deeply that our entire lives become living reflections of Your Eucharistic Love and Mercy.

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