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The Tyrant Who Steals Hearts

 Divine Appeal Reflection  - 110

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 110:  "The souls I love so much do not understand to what extent. They do  not know that the tyrant has stolen their hearts locking them up in  the scandal of all kinds of malicious corruption... "

The sorrow of Jesus in this Appeal is deeply personal. He is not speaking as a distant Judge observing humanity’s failures; He is speaking as a wounded Lover whose beloved has been stolen. “The souls I love so much…”—these words alone reveal His Heart. Christ sees what we often fail to see: many souls are alive outwardly but internally captive. They function, smile, work, attend church, and fulfill responsibilities (cf. Mt 7:21–23), yet the heart is no longer fully free. Something else begins to govern from within—fear, ego, resentment, lust, greed, vanity, addiction, wounded memory, pride, (cf. Jn 8:34) or indifference . The Catechism teaches that the heart is the place of deepest decision, (cf. CCC 2563) where man either belongs to God or becomes divided within himself . St. Augustine of Hippo saw this hidden captivity clearly: (cf. 1 Jn 2:16) outward life can continue while inward freedom is slowly lost through disordered love . Yet Christ continues to call the heart back to undivided love and true freedom in Him alone . The “tyrant” is not merely Satan in an abstract sense; it is every force that gradually replaces God’s rightful throne in the soul. This is what happened to Samson: his outward strength remained for a time, (cf. Jgs 16:15-21) but inwardly compromise had already weakened him . It happened to Solomon too: his wisdom remained externally admired, yet his heart slowly drifted into divided love (cf. 1 Kgs 11:1-9). The Catechism teaches that sin produces an “inclination toward evil” and slowly creates slavery (CCC 1865, 1739). How deeply human this is: a parent too distracted to pray (cf. Lk 10:41–42), a worker driven by success that never satisfies (cf. Mt 16:26), a parish council leader dependent on approval for identity (cf. Gal 1:10), a priest inwardly worn out by the need for affirmation (cf. Jn 12:43), a spouse present in body but distant in heart without knowing why (cf. Eph 5:33). St. Augustine of Hippo recognized this hidden captivity with piercing honesty: the heart becomes shaped by what it loves, until desire quietly forms identity (cf. 1 Jn 2:15–16). Christ’s sorrow is not distant; it is the grief of Love itself before a soul that no longer perceives its own need (cf. Rev 3:17). The tragedy is not only sin, but unawareness—life lived while interiorly displaced from God (cf. Ps 139:23–24). Yet even here, (cf. Jn 15:5) grace still calls the heart back to truth and belonging in Him alone .

This is the tragedy of corruption—it rarely begins dramatically. It begins quietly. A tolerated bitterness. A repeated compromise. A “small” dishonesty. A neglected prayer. A hidden habit. A tolerated impurity. The devil prefers gradual occupation to open confrontation because unnoticed chains are stronger than visible ones. Judas did not betray Jesus in one night;(cf. Jn 12:4-6; Lk 22:3-6) betrayal had been growing in him through years of tolerated greed and hidden resistance . David did not wake up planning adultery and murder;(cf. 2 Sam 11:1-5) it began in an unguarded moment of spiritual laziness . This is why Jesus says to souls “do not understand to what extent.” Corruption blinds. One can normalize gossip, excuse envy, laugh at impurity, justify dishonesty, and slowly lose sensitivity to grace. The Catechism (CCC 2284) warns that scandal spreads evil by imitation . A father normalizing anger teaches his children fear. A mother normalizing vanity teaches insecurity. A leader normalizing dishonesty teaches compromise. Social media can normalize comparison, vanity, lust, and cruelty. Workplaces normalize unethical shortcuts. Even Christian communities can normalize lukewarmness. Saint Teresa of Ávila warned that souls are often ruined not by major sins first, but by neglecting “small fidelities.” Humanly, many souls are simply tired—and tired souls are vulnerable. That is why Jesus is so tender here. He is not shaming; He is awakening. Like Elijah (cf. 1 Kgs 19:11-13) hearing God in the gentle whisper after the storm , Christ speaks softly to the tired heart: “Come back before the chains become harder to feel.”

At the deepest level, this Appeal concerns the human heart—the sanctuary where God longs to dwell. Scripture repeatedly emphasizes that the battle is interior: “Guard your heart, for from it flow the springs of life” (cf. Prov 4:23). The Catechism calls the heart the “dwelling-place” of the person where covenant with God is decided (CCC 2563). This is why the enemy attacks the heart first. If the heart becomes distracted, fragmented, overstimulated, and divided, prayer slowly grows difficult—not because God has withdrawn, (cf. Mk 4:18–19) but because other voices and lesser loves have become louder within the soul . The Catechism teaches that the heart is the place of covenant and decision before God (cf. CCC 2563); therefore spiritual warfare is fought first in attention, desire, and interior focus. When the heart is constantly occupied by noise, entertainment, anxiety, or self-concern, (cf. Lk 10:41–42) it loses the quiet capacity to remain with God in loving recollection . Martha loved Jesus, yet anxiety occupied her interior space (cf. Lk 10:38-42). The rich young man loved goodness, (cf. Mk 10:17-22) but attachment occupied his freedom . Many modern hearts are full—but not with God. Full of notifications, noise, comparison, deadlines, entertainment, resentment, endless opinions, emotional fatigue. A mother may kneel for prayer while mentally burdened by worries. A businessman may attend Mass while internally consumed by profit. A consecrated soul may serve God while secretly craving recognition. Saint John of the Cross teaches that even lawful attachments can become chains when they quietly take the place of God in the heart (cf. Mt 6:21). Christ is not only asking for better conduct, but for interior repossession—“My son, give me your heart” (cf. Prov 23:26), (cf. Mk 12:30) a call to return the center of life to Him alone . Eucharistic devotion becomes the place of this restoration. In adoration, the soul is re-taught to belong, to remain, and to be healed in silence before God (cf. Ps 46:10). The Catechism  (cf. CCC 2563) affirms that prayer is a covenant relationship that transforms the heart’s deepest orientation . Before the Blessed Sacrament, (cf. Jn 15:4–5) the scattered heart is gently re-gathered into unity in Christ .

This Appeal reminds us that human life is not spiritually neutral; (cf. Eph 6:11–17) it is a real combat for the heart . Modern culture often avoids speaking about spiritual warfare, yet the Catholic faith reveals that the deepest human struggle is profoundly spiritual (cf. Eph 6:12). The enemy attacks identity as children of God (cf. 1 Jn 3:1), truth (cf. Jn 8:32), chastity (cf. 1 Thess 4:3–5), trust (cf. Mt 6:25–34), and hope . His most dangerous weapon is often discouragement—the lie that holiness is impossible, that weakness means rejection, (cf. Rev 12:10; CCC 2091) and that grace can no longer restore the soul . He whispers to souls: “You are too weak. Too compromised. Too far gone. Change is impossible.” Peter the Apostle (cf. Lk 22:54–62) heard that fear in the courtyard and denied Christ three times .Yet when Peter the Apostle met the eyes of Christ, he encountered neither rejection nor cold disappointment, but a mercy strong enough to reach him even within his denial (cf. Lk 22:61–62). That gaze entered the place fear had hardened, shattered the illusion that failure was final, and opened the path back to love through tears (cf. Ps 34:18; Jn 21:15–17). In a single moment, Peter discovered that his sin was real,(cf. Rom 5:20) but the mercy of Christ was deeper still . That same merciful gaze is present in this Appeal. Christ exposes the tyrant because He desires liberation, not humiliation. 

In her wisdom, the Church does not leave wounded souls defenseless in spiritual combat. She hands them living remedies: confession that restores grace , the Eucharist that nourishes divine life (cf. Jn 6:54), fasting that weakens disordered desires (cf. Mt 6:16–18), the Rosary, Scripture that pierces deception (cf. Heb 4:12), sacramentals, spiritual guidance, communion with believers , and acts of mercy (cf. Mt 25:35–40) that reshape the heart . These are not decorative practices for the devout; they are sacred instruments through which Christ protects, heals, and strengthens souls against the forces that seek to separate them from Him. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1999) teaches that grace truly heals and elevates wounded human nature . St. Padre Pio often taught that frequent confession humiliates Satan because it drags hidden darkness into the light of Christ. This battle becomes deeply practical in ordinary life: deleting an unhealthy app (cf. Mt 5:29), ending an immoral relationship (cf. 1 Cor 6:18), setting time aside for prayer (cf. Mk 1:35), confessing hidden sins honestly (cf. Jas 5:16),(cf. Mt 5:23–24) apologizing to someone wounded , blessing the home, (cf. Josh 24:15) or praying together as a family . These are not small actions; they are acts of resistance against darkness. Even hidden suffering (cf. Col 1:24) offered with love becomes spiritually powerful . The enemy fears humble souls because humility closes the doors pride once opened. The Sacred Heart does not demand perfection before rescue—only surrender.

Yet the most beautiful part of this Appeal is Jesus’ tenderness. He says “the souls I love so much.” He does not stop loving corrupted souls. He never speaks of them as disposable. He speaks of them as stolen treasures. Like the father awaiting the prodigal son , Christ watches the road. Like the shepherd leaving ninety-nine for one (cf. Lk 15:4-7), He pursues. Like Hosea (cf. Hos 3:1-3) redeeming his unfaithful bride , He pays the price to recover what belongs to Him. This is Divine Mercy. Mary Magdalene was not rejected in her brokenness; (cf. Jn 20:11-18) she was transformed by love . Zacchaeus was not condemned first; he was invited down from his tree . Peter was not replaced; (cf. Jn 21:15-17) he was restored . The Catechism (CCC 982) says there is no offense beyond God’s willingness to forgive the repentant . This should strike every soul: no corruption is final if surrender begins. Every worthy Communion restores life. Every sincere confession weakens chains. Every hidden act of fidelity reclaims lost territory. Francis de Sales taught that God is pleased not by extraordinary greatness alone, but by ordinary acts faithfully surrendered in love (cf. Col 3:17). This means every vocation can begin again through grace: marriages can slowly heal (cf. Eph 5:25), priests can be renewed in zeal (cf. 2 Tim 1:6), young people can recover purity (cf. Ps 51:10), families can reclaim peace (cf. Josh 24:15), (cf. Rom 8:38–39) and wounded hearts can learn to trust God again . Jesus’ cry in this Appeal is not merely warning—it is rescue. He is saying: “Let Me have your heart again.”

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, my heart is often more occupied than I realize. Search it. Reveal every hidden chain, every subtle corruption, every divided affection (cf. Ps 139:23-24). Break what binds me. Reclaim what is Yours. Let Your Sacred Heart dwell fully in mine, until I belong to You alone—now and forever. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 110

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“I want My consecrated souls.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. Pray a great deal and cloister souls in your heart. This is the time for reparation. I want everyone to be saved. Time is reaping what has been sown. Listen to Me. It is not in vain. The souls I love so much do not understand to what extent. They do not know that the tyrant has stolen their hearts locking them up in the scandal of all kinds of malicious corruption...

Both hatred and emptiness have fettered them to evil. They do not think of how much pain they cause Me.

As I remain in the Sacrament of My Love, My love does not penetrate them. They do not want to humble themselves again and repent. I want to wash them from their sins. I am calling them back through My messages. I will shelter them with My mantle of mercy if only they would repent. There will be no other way to salvation because there are many lost souls among My own... who do not want to hear My call of mercy.”

3.00 a.m., 5th 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.

The Piercing Power of Words

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 109

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 109: "Many words pierce Me from My own... Because of all this My Eternal Father’s anger is cast down on this world."

The cry of Our Adorable Jesus, “Many words pierce Me from My own,” reveals a suffering that many souls scarcely consider: the martyrdom inflicted upon the Sacred Heart through speech. Christ does not speak first of weapons, persecutions, or visible crimes, but of words. This shows how deeply Heaven sees the interior weight of daily speech. The Word made Flesh (cf. Jn 1:1–14) is wounded when words are used against truth, charity, purity, and love. Scripture repeatedly reveals the tongue as spiritually dangerous: death and life flow from it (cf. Prov 18:21), it corrupts the entire body (cf. Jas 3:6),(cf. Mt 12:36–37) and careless speech will be judged before God . In Catholic spirituality, words are never merely sounds; they manifest the hidden state of the soul. Christ taught that speech proceeds from the abundance of the heart . Therefore, the tongue often reveals what the heart tries to conceal: angry words uncover hidden pride (cf. Jas 1:20), gossip exposes wounds in charity (cf. Jas 4:11), vulgarity reflects interior disorder (cf. Eph 4:29), and constant criticism can reveal resistance to grace rather than zeal for truth (cf. Phil 2:14–15). Many souls today wound others through subtle but real forms of invisible violence—sarcasm, online cruelty, mockery of sacred things, family insults, detraction,(cf. Mt 15:18–19) and habitual complaining—while still outwardly considering themselves devout . Yet Christ teaches that holiness is measured not only by external practices, but by whether the heart has become gentle, truthful, and charitable in daily speech (cf. Col 4:6). Yet every bitter word becomes spiritually connected to the soldiers who mocked Christ during His Passion (cf. Mt 27:27–31). The Catechism warns against rash judgment, calumny, lying, and detraction because these destroy communion and violate charity . Saint John of the Cross taught that the purified soul becomes increasingly silent because union with God cleanses unnecessary speech. This appeal therefore exposes one of the greatest hidden sins of modern life: verbal wounds disguised as normal behavior.

The Heart of Jesus suffers especially because these piercing words come “from My own.” This reflects the agony of betrayal experienced throughout salvation history. David lamented that betrayal came not from enemies but from a companion and friend (cf. Ps 55:12–14). Jesus experienced this fully through Judas’ kiss (cf. Lk 22:47–48), Peter’s denial (cf. Mk 14:66–72), the disciples’ abandonment (cf. Mt 26:56), (cf. Mt 23:13–36) and the mockery of religious authorities who externally served God while internally resisting Him . Today Christ is pierced when baptized souls speak like the world while claiming to belong to Him. Many receive the Eucharist yet destroy peace through harsh words moments later. Families become spiritual battlefields because words are used to dominate rather than heal. Parents crush children through humiliation; spouses reopen wounds through bitterness; clergy sometimes discourage souls through coldness or pride; Souls attack one another publicly instead of protecting unity. The Letter to the Ephesians (cf. Eph 4:29–32) commands believers to avoid corrupting speech and instead speak words that give grace to listeners . The Catechism (CCC 2284–2285) teaches that scandal becomes especially grave when caused by those entrusted with spiritual influence . Thus when Christians speak without charity, they deform the Face of Christ before the world. Saint Francis de Sales insisted that gentle speech converts souls more powerfully than harsh correction. Mystically, every cruel word spoken by a Christian becomes another reed striking the crowned Head of Jesus during the Passion (cf. Mt 27:29–30). This appeal therefore calls souls into profound examination not only of actions but of tone, attitude, humor, reactions, and hidden interior conversations.

This Divine Appeal becomes even more urgent in the modern world because humanity now multiplies words endlessly. Modern culture has created vast oceans of speech with very little silence, discernment, or reverence (cf. Jas 1:19). Through social media, entertainment, political hostility, and constant digital communication, many souls grow accustomed to words that wound rather than heal . Over time, this habitual noise can dull interior awareness, making it harder to recognize what is true, what is charitable, and what leads the heart toward God. Christ is pierced anew through blasphemy, vulgarity, pornography, slander, cynical humor, ideological hatred,(cf. Mt 12:36–37) and mockery of sacred truths . Isaiah lamented living among a people of “unclean lips” (cf. Is 6:5), while Paul the Apostle warned against obscenity, foolish talk, and coarse joking that darken the soul (cf. Eph 5:3–4). What Heaven sees as spiritually destructive is often treated as normal entertainment. Lies spread quickly, reputations are attacked casually, purity is mocked, and humiliation becomes amusement. Even within Christian circles, gossip can disguise itself as “concern,” while criticism disguises itself as wisdom (cf. Jas 3:5–10). Yet the saints understood silence not as emptiness, but as spiritual purity. St. Teresa of Calcutta taught that silence prepares the soul to hear God, (cf. 1 Kgs 19:12) because constant noise clouds the presence of grace . In silence, the heart becomes less reactive, less harsh, and more capable of speaking with charity, truth, and reverence. The Desert Fathers often preferred hiddenness and restraint because they knew words can destroy years of spiritual growth within moments. The Catechism teaches that respect for the reputation and honor of persons forbids every attitude and word likely to cause unjust injury (CCC 2477). Daily practical life reveals how serious this is: one humiliating sentence can damage a child’s confidence for years; one rumor can destroy trust; one sarcastic remark can harden a wounded soul; one impure conversation can corrupt innocence. Conversely, holy speech participates in Christ’s priestly mission. Encouraging the suffering, defending the absent, speaking truth gently, praying with others, blessing enemies, and offering forgiveness become acts of mystical reparation. The soul united to Jesus becomes Eucharistic in speech: measured, peaceful, truthful, sacrificial, and healing.

The appeal also reveals that words pierce Jesus because they frequently emerge from hearts emptied of contemplation. Modern society often fears silence because silence exposes the soul before God, uncovering wounds, distractions,(cf. Heb 4:13) and hidden attachments that constant noise helps conceal . Yet Our Adorable Jesus repeatedly withdrew from crowds and activity into solitude and prayer (cf. Mk 1:35; Lk 5:16), revealing that silence is not emptiness, but the sacred space where the heart learns again to listen, surrender, and remain before the Father. The Blessed Virgin Mary  guarded and pondered mysteries in her heart rather than multiplying unnecessary speech .  Many arguments arise not from truth but from wounded ego. Saint James (cf. Jas 4:1–3) explains that conflicts emerge from disordered passions within the heart . Thus uncontrolled speech is ultimately a symptom of deeper spiritual illness: pride, insecurity, envy, impurity, anger, or lack of prayer.  The Catechism (CCC 1829) teaches that charity requires benevolence and fraternal correction marked by humility and love . Therefore Christians must examine not only what they say but why they say it. Some speak to dominate, others to impress, others to wound, others to seek attention. Christ, however, (cf. Jn 12:49–50) spoke only what He heard from the Father . The mystical soul gradually learns to unite speech to Divine Will. This transforms ordinary life profoundly. In workplaces, holy speech resists corruption and gossip. In marriage, holy speech restores tenderness. In suffering, holy speech refuses despair. In evangelization, holy speech transmits truth without pride. Apostolic power is weakened when speech lacks purity. Pentecost (cf. Acts 2:1–4) itself revealed sanctified tongues set aflame by the Holy Spirit . Thus the healing of the tongue is deeply connected to the renewal of the Church.

Finally, “many words pierce Me” points toward reparation. Jesus reveals His wounds not to condemn faithful souls but to invite consolers into deeper union. During His agony in Gethsemane,(cf. Mt 26:38–40) Christ sought companions who would watch one hour with Him . Today He still seeks souls willing to console Him through purified speech, prayerful silence, and sacrificial charity. Reparation begins with examination of conscience concerning daily conversations, online behavior, hidden criticisms, impatience, and interior negativity. Confession becomes a place where wounded speech is surrendered to Divine Mercy. Eucharistic adoration gradually heals the tongue because prolonged silence before Christ purifies the heart. The Psalms repeatedly pray for guarded speech: “Set a guard over my mouth” (cf. Ps 141:3). Saint Faustina Kowalska wrote that holiness consists greatly in mercy expressed through words, actions, and prayer. This means every vocation can console Jesus practically. Priests console Him through truthful preaching and compassionate counsel. Parents console Him by blessing their children instead of discouraging them. Young people console Him through purity in friendships and digital life. Religious console Him through silence and obedience. Workers console Him through integrity and encouragement toward colleagues. The Eternal Father’s justice falls upon a world increasingly poisoned by hatred, lies, blasphemy,(cf. Rom 1:28–32) and division , yet mercy triumphs where souls become living reflections of Christ’s gentleness. The Sacred Heart longs for voices that heal rather than wound (cf. Prov 15:4). Every restrained insult, (cf. Eph 4:15) every truthful word spoken with humility , every act of encouragement offered in charity, and every prayer whispered through suffering becomes a hidden consolation to the pierced Heart of Jesus . In a world saturated with noise, accusation, and cruelty, gentle speech becomes profoundly apostolic (cf. Prov 15:1). Every word shaped by patience, truth, (cf. Eph 4:29) and mercy quietly reflects the tenderness of Christ toward wounded souls . What seems small in human eyes—a restrained response, a compassionate correction, a consoling word—can become a hidden participation in the healing love flowing from the Heart of Jesus.

Prayer

Our Adorable Jesus, forgive the moments we speak out of frustration, pride, or hurt feelings. Sometimes our words leave wounds we never intended to cause. Teach us to speak from hearts filled with charity and understanding, for our words reveal what lives within us . Through the Holy Spirit, make us instruments of kindness and healing. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 109

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“My ministers... step over Me and allow everything.”

“My daughter, listen to Me. Spend this dark hour with Me. Pray a great deal. Bring Me souls. The spirits are plunging deeper into darkness. My ministers are tranquil. They step over Me and allow everything. Cloister souls in your heart. Even those to whom I entrusted souls cause Me more pain. I am shedding tears of blood over mankind. My Eternal Father’s anger is overflowing.

I assure you, in the Sacrament of My Love I am profaned and so much blasphemed. My Eternal Father is sending many epidemics so that mankind may pray and be converted before it is too late. I order you to pray. This is a serious moment. In the Sacrament of My Love you are a victim. Pray a great deal and keep Me company in atonement for all the offences, abuses, and insults against My Presence in the tabernacle. It is My great love for mankind that keeps Me there as a prisoner. Many words pierce Me from My own... Because of all this My Eternal Father’s anger is cast down on this world. Pray a great deal to appease the wrath of My Eternal Father. The Chalice is filled. Pray and atone.

I need the desire of reparation. I come to seek shelter. I want souls to dress the wounds caused by the souls I love so much. For the sake of souls put yourself in the high spirit of contemplation. Pray a great deal. I will pour the treasures of My infinite mercy into human souls.”

“I bless you.”

3.00 a.m., 4th 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.

Jesus’ Unlimited Mercy and Love for Fallen Souls

Divine Appeal Reflection  - 108

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 108: "I make it known that the measure of My love and mercy for fallen souls is unlimited" 

The most terrifying prison in the spiritual life is not sin itself but the moment a soul begins to believe that it is no longer worth pursuing. Into this hidden graveyard of shame, Our Adorable Jesus descends with an appeal that overturns every human calculation: no darkness in man is deeper than the abyss of Divine Mercy. Humanity instinctively withdraws from what is stained, broken, repetitive, or humiliating, yet the Sacred Heart moves precisely toward the wounded places most feared and concealed (cf. Lk 5:31–32). The Catechism reveals that God’s revelation reaches its fullness in the mercy poured forth through Christ (cf. CCC 1846–1848, 211). Mercy is not sentimental tolerance; it is Divine Love entering misery in order to restore what sin deformed. Calvary unveils this mystery completely: Christ does not remain distant from betrayal, impurity, violence, addiction, hypocrisy, or despair, but absorbs their wounds into His pierced Heart (cf. Is 53:4–6; Jn 19:34). Peter denied Him and returned through tears, while Judas collapsed beneath hopelessness because he no longer believed mercy could still seek him . The modern soul relives this ancient tragedy in painfully human ways: the priest carrying hidden exhaustion beneath faithful preaching (cf. 2 Cor 4:8–9), the young person trapped in secret habits that slowly erode hope (cf. Jn 8:34), the married couple sharing the same home while silence quietly widens the distance between hearts (cf. Eph 4:26–27), the consecrated soul preserving outward discipline while inwardly growing cold and divided (cf. Rev 2:4), the elderly person haunted by past failures that seem impossible to redeem . Beneath many outwardly functioning lives lies the same hidden fear—that God must eventually grow weary of forgiving, that mercy has limits,(cf. Lam 3:22–23) and that certain wounds can no longer be healed . 

Yet the Gospel reveals the opposite: Christ remains patient even with hearts that struggle to return, seeking not perfect souls,(cf. Lk 15:20; CCC 982) but surrendered ones willing to begin again . Yet the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus reveals the opposite mystery: repeated returns to Him do not weary Divine Mercy but magnify its depth (cf. Lam 3:22–23; CCC 982). The prodigal son (cf. Lk 15:17–24) rehearsed arguments of unworthiness while the father was already running toward him . Peter’s tears after betrayal became the doorway to deeper intimacy because he allowed himself to remain before the gaze of Christ rather than flee from it . Satan continually tempts souls to interpret repeated weakness as proof of rejection, whispering that recurring failure means grace has withdrawn (cf. Rev 12:10). Yet Heaven sees differently: the soul that continues returning after every fall manifests not defeat, but the quiet triumph of grace over despair (cf. Prov 24:16). St. Faustina Kowalska understood that the deepest misery of the soul is precisely where Divine Mercy desires to reign most powerfully . Thus, repeated confessions, hidden struggles in prayer, ongoing battles against pride, impurity, anger, or discouragement do not automatically signify spiritual failure; when endured with humility and perseverance, they can become places where sanctity is slowly forged (cf. 2 Cor 12:9–10). Christ is not scandalized by wounded humanity, (cf. Is 53:5; 1 Pt 2:24) because He has already entered fully into its burden . The Cross reveals not a God shocked by weakness, but a Savior who carries it, transforms it, and patiently calls the soul to rise again. The true danger, therefore, is not falling,(cf. CCC 2091) but surrendering to hopelessness—allowing shame to speak louder than mercy . When a return is marked by trust rather than self-reliance, it becomes profoundly pleasing to the Heart of God (cf. Heb 11:6). The soul that refuses to abandon Christ in the midst of weakness, repeated struggle, or humiliation discovers—often through painful perseverance—that Divine Mercy is not exhausted by human frailty,(cf. Rom 5:20; Ps 51:17) but glorified through unwavering confidence . What appears to the world as failure can become, in grace, a deeper surrender, where the soul ceases to rely upon its own strength and learns instead to cling entirely to the mercy flowing from the pierced Heart of Christ .

This Appeal also uncovers the hidden tragedy of spiritual pride, which often wounds the Heart of Our Adorable Jesus more deeply than visible sin because it disguises distance from God beneath the appearance of holiness (cf. Lk 18:9–14). Fallen sinners frequently return more quickly than self-righteous souls, since the wounded often know they need mercy, while pride convinces the heart it is already secure. The Pharisee praised God outwardly while secretly admiring himself;(cf. Lk 18:13–14) the tax collector went home justified because he stood before God in truth . This same temptation quietly enters ordinary life: the devout Catholic who looks down on weaker believers (cf. Rom 14:10), the minister seeking admiration more than service , the professor intoxicated by knowledge without charity (cf. 1 Cor 8:1), parents correcting without tenderness (cf. Eph 6:4), or Christians defending doctrine while lacking compassion . Yet Our Adorable Jesus reveals that mercy is not sentimental permissiveness, but the supernatural power that restores broken communion. The Catechism (cf. CCC 982) teaches that no sin exceeds the forgiveness of God for the repentant heart . Thus, no addiction, adultery, sacrilege, occult bondage, hatred,(cf. Is 1:18) or blasphemy has the final word when the soul opens itself to grace . St. Augustine of Hippo wandered through lust, pride, and error, yet Divine Mercy transformed his restless heart into a light for the Church. Satan therefore tempts souls in opposite directions: presumption, which denies the seriousness of sin (cf. Rom 6:1–2), or despair,(cf. CCC 2091) which denies the power of mercy . Christ destroys both lies. True mercy does not leave the soul unchanged; it awakens compunction, humility, restitution, (cf. Ez 36:26)and a deeper hunger for holiness . Mercy does not remove the Cross—it gives the grace to carry it with hope.

This Appeal also unveils the profoundly Eucharistic dimension of Divine Mercy. Our Adorable Jesus remains hidden in the Blessed Sacrament precisely because wounded humanity still needs continual healing, nourishment, and restoration . Every tabernacle becomes a silent refuge where Christ waits patiently for souls too burdened to carry themselves. Many avoid Eucharistic adoration because they feel unworthy, yet the Eucharist was not instituted for flawless souls,(cf. Mk 2:17) but for sinners longing to be transformed by grace . Peter the Apostle denied Christ three times, yet beside the sea Jesus fed him, restored him,(cf. Jn 21:15–19) and entrusted souls to him again . Mercy did not erase Peter’s weakness; it transformed it into humility and deeper love. In ordinary life, this means the exhausted mother struggling with anger (cf. Eph 4:26), the seminarian burdened by discouragement (cf. 2 Cor 4:8–9), the worker tempted toward dishonesty (cf. Prov 11:1), (cf. Ps 34:18) the lonely widow carrying hidden grief , or the young person trapped in digital addictions and interior emptiness (cf. 1 Cor 6:12) should not flee from Christ in shame. They are called to remain before Him with radical honesty. Faustina Kowalska understood that the greatest misery attracts the greatest outpouring of mercy when surrendered with trust . The tragedy of modern society is not only sin, but the loss of confidence in mercy itself. Many numb their wounds through endless entertainment, lust, ambition, alcohol, distraction,(cf. Jer 2:13) or constant scrolling because they fear standing exposed before God . Yet Christ calls souls not to hide their misery,(cf. Is 53:5) but to place it directly within His wounds . In the Eucharistic Heart, broken humanity learns again that holiness begins not with perfection, but surrender. And souls healed by mercy slowly become instruments of healing for others (cf. 2 Cor 1:3–4).

This Appeal penetrates deeply into the mystery of spiritual warfare by exposing one of Satan’s most subtle lies: not merely leading souls into sin, but convincing them afterward that return is no longer possible (cf. Rev 12:10). Despair becomes the hidden poison beneath many modern struggles. Cain believed his guilt greater than mercy (cf. Gen 4:13), (cf. Lk 15:11–32) while the prodigal son expected rejection yet encountered a father already running toward him . Our Adorable Jesus reveals that Heaven rejoices more over repentance than over self-satisfied complacency . This truth transforms every dimension of Christian life. A confessor must never become cold or mechanical toward penitents ; parents must correct without crushing hope ; spouses must forgive as Christ forgives ; communities must refuse gossip that imprisons souls within past failures . When the Church reflects the face of Divine Mercy rather than appearing only as an instrument of judgment, she shines in her truest beauty (cf. Mt 9:13). John Vianney understood that souls often perish not because they are unwilling to return,(cf. Jn 20:23) but because they believe mercy is no longer available—so he gave his life to the confessional as a place where hope could reopen . The enemy especially attacks priests and consecrated souls through discouragement after failure, hoping shame will isolate them from grace. Yet Christ calls them not into secret despair, but radical humility. Even repeated weakness, sincerely repented,(cf. 2 Cor 12:7–10) can become the place where pride is broken and dependence on grace deepens . This does not excuse lukewarmness; rather, it reveals how God can bring holiness even through humiliation.  Divine Mercy is therefore not weakness—it is the victorious power of the Resurrection entering the ruins of human frailty .

This Appeal also unveils the profound eschatological urgency of Divine Mercy. Our Adorable Jesus speaks with such tenderness because humanity stands in real danger of hardening its heart against grace (cf. Heb 3:15). Mercy does not abolish judgment; rather,(cf. Jn 3:16–21; CCC 679) judgment reveals whether mercy was received or refused . Hell is not the absence of Divine Mercy, but the tragedy of mercy persistently rejected. Yet Christ continues thirsting for souls until their final breath . Good Thief, after a life seemingly wasted, opened himself in his final moments to mercy and entered paradise (cf. Lk 23:39–43). This becomes an immense source of hope for evangelization, intercession, and persevering prayer for hardened sinners. No parent should cease praying for wandering children (cf. Lk 15:20), no spouse should stop entrusting a wounded marriage to God (cf. Tob 8:7), no priest should abandon difficult souls (cf. Ezek 34:11–16), and no sinner should believe conversion is too late (cf. Is 55:6–7). St. Monica wept and prayed for years before grace conquered the heart of Augustine of Hippo. Mercy requires cooperation—confession, repentance, restitution, prayer, Eucharistic life, sacrifice, and trust (cf. Acts 2:38)—yet even the desire to return is already grace quietly at work within the soul . The Heart of Jesus seeks especially the most abandoned because His glory shines most brightly in restoring what seemed lost forever . Souls transformed by Divine Mercy become humble, patient, tender, and fearless apostles. They no longer define themselves or others by past failures, but by the redeeming gaze of Christ . In every vocation and state of life, the soul learns to repeat with confidence: His mercy is greater than my misery.

Prayer

O Adorable Jesus, we have fallen again, and we feel the weight of disappointment. But we do not want to run away from You. Help us not to give up. Like Peter, let our tears bring us back to You, not push us away. Stay with us in our weakness. Amen.

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