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Divine Appeal 51

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

 VOLUME 1

“The freemasons have abused me totally. This is the dark hour when they are trying to abolish My Presence. They abuse My very Gospel.”

“My daughter, be patient and listen to Me. You know what I request of you: prayers, penance. Keep awake and keep expositions of My Divine Sacrament. These are difficult hours for Me, as dark as they are, satan works with ... in order to corrupt them, instilling in them that the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass should be abolished. The devil is very astute.

What suffering to Me! Weary of My vigil for mankind, day and night, I remain waiting through My sacramental veils. I love mankind. I have come to call them. I desire that all may be saved. I want them
to realise the terrible truth. The Freemasons have abused Me totally. This is the dark hour when they are trying to abolish My Presence. They abuse My very Gospel. Their iniquity is repugnant! They shout
‘we do not want Christ’ as they turn Me upside down. Satan has chained their souls.

My daughter, unite your heart to My tears. Look at Me in My Divine Sacrament. What great sorrow! How do I make them understand that I love them all? This is why I allow Myself to be seen.

The freemasons are executing themselves with their own hands. Hell awaits them! Pray a great deal without ceasing. Do not be afraid. I have given you many signs of My presence. You must always be
obedient, serene and humble; be prepared for everything. 

My daughter, be attentive to him for the good of souls. My Eternal Father wants it so. I want you to follow what I tell you. I have prepared you in many years. Pray. I must accomplish more; watch
with Me and hold mankind in your heart.

I make myself visible to beg for prayers and penance in order to convert souls and bring them to repent. Pray a great deal and unite yourself to them.”

“I bless you.”

2.00 a.m., 11th December 1987

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. 

Our Adorable Jesus Turned Upside Down

Divine Appeal Reflection - 50

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 50: "I am being turned upside down. With tears in My Heart I gaze."

He is turned upside down not by enemies, but by love misunderstood. In the Eucharist, Our Adorable Jesus places Himself beneath us—literally beneath our hands, our schedules, our priorities. What should govern everything becomes something we fit in. Scripture (cf. Ps 118:22; Mt 21:42) already reveals this inversion: the Stone meant to be the cornerstone is treated as secondary . The Catechism (cf. CCC 1324) proclaims the Eucharist as the source and summit of Christian life , yet daily life often flows from other sources—work pressure, fear, distraction, survival. This is how Christ is overturned: adored on the altar, but displaced in decisions. He becomes the One we receive, then ask to wait. Like the Ark carried through the desert yet consulted only in crisis (cf. 1 Sam 4), His Presence is near but not central. For those who already know Him, this inversion is rarely deliberate. It doesn’t grow out of defiance. It grows out of tiredness. The soul does not reject God; it simply forgets how to lean. We become responsible, efficient, and inwardly exhausted, and without noticing, God-with-us is reduced to God-after—after the duties, after the decisions, after the worries that feel more urgent (cf. Mt 6:33). Scripture already names this quiet displacement when it speaks of Martha, “anxious and troubled about many things,” while the Presence sat silently within her reach (cf. Lk 10:41–42).

After Communion, He remains within the soul—not dramatically, but faithfully. The Lord of glory consents to dwell beneath unfinished plans,(cf. Jn 6:56; 1 Cor 6:19) unresolved anxieties, and prayers half-formed . He does not compete for attention. He waits. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1377; 1392) teaches that this indwelling is real, transforming, and demands a response of faith and adoration, not merely reception . Yet in our humanity, we often rise from the altar and return immediately to managing life, as though grace were fragile and responsibility absolute. Our Adorable Jesus allows this not because He is secondary,(cf. 1 Cor 13:4) but because love is patient .  Heaven bows low; the human heart stays upright with self. This is the sorrowful reversal Christ endures—patiently, lovingly—while still remaining.

Jesus is also turned upside down when intimacy does not lead to obedience. In the Gospel, those closest to Him often struggled most with this reversal. Peter professed love yet resisted the Cross (cf. Mt 16:22–23). The disciples shared the table while arguing about status . Scripture (cf. Lk 22:24) shows that familiarity can dull reverence if the heart is not surrendered. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1391–1395) teaches that Eucharistic communion commits us to live in conformity with Christ . When it does not, love is inverted—received but not followed. Saints spoke of this pain tenderly. St. Augustine confessed that he wanted God, but not yet on God’s terms (cf. Conf. VIII). The heart remains religious, active, and concerned for good—but divided. Saints recognized this danger precisely because it feels so reasonable. Saint Francis de Sales noted that many lose peace not through sin, but through doing too much without God at the center.

Our Adorable Jesus does not accuse this rearrangement; He feels it. He waits while we try to manage holiness alongside life, instead of letting holiness reorder life itself (cf. Mt 11:28–30). Yet eternity keeps whispering: Not less of your life—only let Me hold it. When Jesus is allowed to remain first rather than fitted in, prayer deepens, truth ripens, service becomes love again, and the soul finally rests where it was always meant to rest. He becomes an addition rather than the axis. Yet He stays. Like the Lord (cf. Hos 11:1–4) who remained faithful to Israel despite their divided heart , He continues to give Himself fully, even when the soul gives Him only part. His silence carries the weight of love waiting to be put back in its rightful place.Every postponed prayer, every good intention that did not reach Him, every act of service that replaced surrender—He holds them without complaint, letting them rest in His gaze. Scripture whispers this mystery: (Ps 46:10) “Be still, and know that I am God” . His silence is not absence; it is fullness waiting for our consent.

In the Eucharist, divine order is made visible: God first, self last, love poured out. When this order is reversed, the soul feels restless—even when outwardly faithful. Scripture names this disquiet as a sign of grace, not failure (cf. Ps 42:2). The Catechism explains that grace heals disordered desires and restores the soul’s orientation toward God (cf. CCC 1999–2001). Jesus is turned upside down when the heart seeks peace from control instead of trust, affirmation instead of truth, activity instead of presence. Saints recognized this inversion within themselves. St. Teresa of Avila admitted that she spent years with Christ near her, but not yet reigning within her. Eucharistic life exposes this gently. A spouse realizes that Communion must shape forgiveness at home. A priest senses that routine has dulled wonder. A young person recognizes that Eucharistic purity must reach private choices. These awakenings are mercy. Like Peter (cf. Jn 21:15–17) being questioned three times beside the charcoal fire , love restores what fear once reversed. Each honest response begins to turn the soul right-side up again.

Jesus is turned upside down in the Church when His sacrifice is remembered but not prolonged in life. In the tabernacle, He continues the posture of Gethsemane—lowered, waiting, trusting (cf. Mt 26:40). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1378) teaches that adoration extends the grace of the sacrifice and deepens union with Christ . Yet many pass Him by, absorbed in urgency. Saints felt this keenly. St. Margaret Mary perceived that indifference among His own wounded Him more than hostility. Scripture (cf. Ez 22:30) reveals God searching for souls willing to stand before Him on behalf of others . Eucharistic reparation restores order where love has been neglected. This reparation is lived quietly: choosing silence over noise, fidelity over recognition, prayer over constant reaction. A teacher teaching with integrity, a laborer working honestly, a mother offering exhaustion—these hidden acts lift Christ back to His rightful place. When someone remains with Him, even briefly, the inversion begins to heal.

The final word is not sorrow, but hope. Jesus allows Himself to be overturned because love still believes in restoration. Scripture (cf. Joel 2:25; Ez 36:26) promises that what has been scattered can be gathered again . The Catechism (cf. CCC 2010–2011) assures us that perseverance in grace bears lasting fruit . The Eucharist is God’s chosen way of re-ordering the world—quietly, patiently, from within. Those who already know Jesus are not called to dramatic change, but to rightful placement: letting Him be first again. One reverent Communion, one sincere confession, one decision to pause and listen can realign a life. Saints insist that heaven rejoices when love is finally allowed to lead. When Christ is restored to the center, the soul stands upright at last—not in pride, but in peace. And the One who once endured being turned upside down finds His joy in a heart reordered by love.

Prayer

Our Adorable Eucharistic Jesus, so often placed beneath our plans, restore Your rightful place within us. Gently reorder what we have inverted through fear and distraction. May every Communion, every act of fidelity, lift You again to the center of our lives. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 50

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“In the Sacrament of My Love I am abused very much. These are difficult times when My own ... are assisting the Red Lucifer labouring hard to abolish the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.”

“My daughter, pray and do penance. Listen to Me. These are great warnings of immense Divine Mercy obtained from the anguish to My Heart because I want all to be saved and no one to be condemned through his own fault; as nobody goes to hell without his consent. The demon is disposed to mislead souls; he wants to flatter them. Mankind lives in the obstinacy of sin but My Eternal Father’s wrath is near. Do not lose any precious time. My left hand points to the warning and my right hand to the miracle. I love mankind! Pray, do penance, surrender yourselves without thinking what will happen to you.

I want them to listen to the voice of My Mercy and Love. In the Sacrament of My love I am abused very much. These are difficult hours when My own are assisting the Red Lucifer, labouring hard to abolish the Holy Sacrament of the Mass.

I am being turned upside down. With tears in My Heart I gaze. Keep awake and give Me your company. It is terrible. I am agonizing over souls!”

“I bless you.”

8th December 1987

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. 

Spiritual Materialism

Divine Appeal Reflection - 49

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 49: "Materialism advances on all sides with unbridled corruption and has pushed mankind towards a frightful abyss of devastation."

Our Adorable Jesus speaks from the depths of eternity, unveiling a danger more refined than worldly greed: spiritual materialism.Spiritual materialism does not begin in malice; it begins in fatigue. We grow tired of vulnerability before God. Slowly, almost without noticing, we replace relationship with control. We keep the prayers, the devotions, the language of faith—but we shield ourselves from being changed. Scripture names this ache with painful honesty:(Rev 2:4) “You have abandoned the love you had at first” . Nothing dramatic has collapsed; something tender has cooled. Jesus calls this devastation because eternity fades quietly. We still believe in heaven, but we no longer ache for it.Scripture speaks of this gentle drifting when it warns about hearts that grow dull, not rebellious, just tired . Life fills up quickly—noise, demands, responsibilities—and without noticing, eternity is pushed to the margins.Repentance gets postponed because today already feels heavy enough.  Mercy becomes routine because we expect it without letting it change us. Judgment troubles the heart because it requires stillness, truthfulness before God, and openness to His light where we would rather remain untouched. St. Augustine confessed that even holy habits can become hiding places when the heart resists surrender. The Catechism reminds us that beatitude is not something we own, but a gift that surpasses every created satisfaction (CCC 1722–1724). In daily life, spiritual materialism looks ordinary: prayer done quickly to feel “covered,” service done to feel useful, virtue practiced to feel safe. Our Adorable Jesus grieves because He desires hearts, not performances. Eternity is not denied—it is pushed to the margins, where irreversible choices begin to feel light, and the soul slowly forgets why it was created.

Spiritual materialism reshapes hope in a painfully human way. We stop hoping toward God and start hoping about ourselves. Heaven becomes assumed rather than awaited. Judgment feels unnecessary because we believe we already belong. Jesus’ parable of the rich man and Lazarus  is unsettling precisely because it feels familiar . The rich man is not hostile to God; he is simply sealed inside his own world. Saints saw themselves in this danger. St. Bernard warned religious souls that one can labor much for God and still avoid Him interiorly. The Catechism teaches that the morality of our acts depends on their orientation toward our final end—communion with God (CCC 1752). When eternity is no longer the measure, even good actions begin to orbit the self. In everyday life this happens quietly: the leader who confuses influence with faithfulness, the parent who replaces patience with moral correctness, the devout soul who avoids confession because nothing feels “serious enough.” Biblical figures (1 Sam 15:22) like Saul show how easy it is to cloak self-protection in religious language . Our Adorable Jesus does not expose this to condemn, but to free. He knows how human it is to fear losing control. Eternity threatens our illusions—but it also promises rest for hearts weary of carrying themselves.

At its core, spiritual materialism is the fear of being poor before God. We want grace, but not dependence; closeness, but not exposure. Scripture (Ps 51:6) reveals that God desires truth in the depths of the heart , not spiritual competence.  Spiritual materialism thrives when prayer becomes technique, discernment becomes justification, and formation becomes accumulation. The Catechism (CCC 2015) reminds us that growth in holiness involves purification, struggle, and surrender—not spiritual comfort . Our Adorable Jesus calls this devastation because it produces souls who are busy yet unbroken, religious yet untouched. Eternity is what breaks us open. Jesus’ words that “nothing is hidden that will not be revealed” (Lk 12:2) are not meant to terrify but to heal. They invite us to stop managing appearances and allow God into the unfinished places. Biblical personalities like the elder brother stayed close to the house but far from the father’s joy (Lk 15:28–30). Without eternity, religion becomes a shelter for the ego. With eternity, it becomes a place where the heart finally tells the truth.

Spiritual materialism flourishes where judgment is dismissed as harsh. Yet Scripture (Rom 2:6–8) presents judgment as the moment when love is finally clarified . In daily life, remembering eternity changes small things: the priest asking whether ministry still flows from prayer, the worker examining whether honesty costs too much, the consecrated soul noticing where obedience has grown cautious. The Catechism (CCC 1021–1022) teaches that at death, each person stands alone before Christ in truth . Our Adorable Jesus speaks of an abyss because spiritual materialism numbs this moment. When eternity fades, repentance feels optional, and God feels predictable. Yet those who remember eternity grow softer, not harder. Like the wise virgins, they remain ready not because they are perfect,(Mt 25:1–13) but because they stay awake to their need . Eternity restores seriousness without crushing tenderness. It teaches us that love is urgent precisely because time is short.

This appeal is ultimately an invitation to come home—poor, honest, and unguarded. Our Adorable Jesus does not want impressive souls; He wants real ones. Spiritual materialism dissolves at the moment the soul dares to stand uncovered before God. It is not abandoned through effort, but through surrender. The need to secure ourselves—by virtue, discipline, reputation, or even repentance carefully measured—reveals how deeply we fear being loved without defenses. Our Adorable Jesus does not ask for guarantees; He asks for truth. Here the soul learns the most frightening and freeing truth: God is not secured by our goodness. He is encountered in our consent. Spiritual materialism collapses when the soul realizes that even holiness can become a hiding place if it is used to avoid abandonment. The Cross itself reveals this mystery—Jesus saves not by proving righteousness, but by surrendering everything into the Father’s hands (cf. Lk 23:46). The Catechism (cf. CCC 1817; 1847) speaks of this trust as the heart of Christian hope, where mercy exceeds human calculation and draws the sinner into communion rather than distance . 

In this naked trust, eternity is no longer an idea but a Presence. The soul stops negotiating its worth and begins to rest. This is the poverty that opens heaven. Today, this means returning quickly after falling, letting sorrow soften the heart, and trusting mercy more than our weakness. The Catechism(CCC 1817–1821) teaches that hope in eternal life should transform how we live now, not harden us into spiritual certainty . Eternity returns simplicity to faith: prayer becomes encounter, sacraments become mercy, obedience becomes rest. Our Adorable Jesus warns of devastation because spiritual materialism can fill churches while leaving hearts untouched. Yet His voice is tender. He calls us back to wonder, back to fear of the Lord that heals rather than frightens. Those who recover eternity live differently—not anxiously, but awake. They wait not for comfort, but for Him, (1 Cor 15:28) until God is finally all in all 

Prayer 

Our Adorable Jesus, strip our souls of spiritual pride and false security. Free us from possessing You instead of adoring You. Restore eternity to our choices, humility to our prayer, and truth to our devotion. Make us poor in spirit, watchful in love, and ready for Your coming. Amen

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

Divine Appeal 49

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Materialism advances on all sides with unbridled corruption and has pushed mankind towards a frightful abyss of devastation.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. I am very hurt because people and My own ... follow the ways of perdition. Materialism advances on all sides with unbridled corruption and has pushed mankind towards a frightful abyss of devastation. Immersed in a chain of scandals, the world is a swampland of muck and mire. It will be at the mercy of the most severe trials of Divine Justice. Since a long time ago, I have warned mankind in many ways but they do not listen to My calls and they continue along the ways of
perdition. 

Never before has the world needed prayers and penance as in these tragic times. 

Do not lose time. Pray before it is too late because these times are worse than those of the great deluge! Mankind offends My Eternal Father very much. Many revolutions will break out. The Church will suffer very much but the punishment of the impious will not delay; and that day will be terribly fearful. The earth will tremble and all mankind will be shaken and finally evil will perish in the tremendous rigours of Divine Justice.”

“Participate in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Atone and do penance. I want complete obedience from you.”

“I bless you.”

2.30 a.m., 7th December 1987

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. 

Compunction as Light in a Darkened World

Divine Appeal Reflection - 48

Today, consider in Divine Appeal 48: "...consider the present plight of the world.I desire that you keep in mind the compunction."

There is a quiet heroism in a heart that still weeps. In a world trained to scroll past suffering and dismiss sin, the soul that feels is already extraordinary. Jesus starts off with a kind yet firm voice: think about the state of the world. He urges remembering compunction—the profound, graceful pain that demonstrates the heart's vitality—rather than merely analysing. This is no passing guilt, no sentimental sorrow. It is the courage to stand before truth, pierced yet upright, aware of sin yet drawn to mercy. Scripture speaks of hearts “pierced to the truth” and stirred to action (cf. Acts 2:37), and of love that is tested through sorrow (cf. 1 Pet 1:6–7). Compunction does not weaken; it awakens. It allows the soul to perceive its attachments, feel the weight of injustice, and bow without giving up. Scripture shows it as the moment when truth finally reaches the depths—when listeners were “cut to the heart” and could no longer pretend neutrality (cf. Acts 2:37). The Church (cf. CCC 1451) names this grace as contrition born of love, not fear . Humanly, compunction feels like standing still long enough to admit: this is not what love looks like. The prophets knew this pause; Jeremiah’s lament flowed from love wounded by reality (cf. Jer 9:1). Jesus asks us to keep this remembrance, for without it, the soul may accomplish much yet remain distant from holiness. As St. John of the Cross teaches, this gentle burning of love purifies desire, loosening the soul from lesser attachments and drawing it upward .The psalmist understood that God listens closely to the contrite. When the soul accepts its frailty without shame, grief becomes a grace rather than a threat. It no longer crushes but softens, making room for God. In these small interior awakenings, sanctity takes root—not by doing more, but by yielding more deeply to Love. It marks the start of realism, which is the foundation for mercy.

If compunction feels demanding, it is because it mirrors the Heart of Jesus Himself. He wept over Jerusalem not because He lacked power,(cf. Lk 19:41) but because love sees clearly . His tears were the price of attention. The Catechism (cf. CCC 613–614) teaches that the Cross reveals both the gravity of sin and the depth of divine love . Compunction lives in that tension. It is the refusal to grow indifferent. St. Peter’s tears after his denial were not theatrical remorse;(cf. Lk 22:62) they were the undoing of self-confidence and the birth of pastoral humility . We recognize this humanly: when a parent realizes impatience has replaced presence; when a priest senses routine dulling reverence; when a worker notices ambition silencing conscience. Jesus does not shame these realizations—He waits within them. St. Bernard observed that compunction guards love from becoming merely emotional. It asks us to remain present to uncomfortable moments, trusting that God is at work there. Sitting with the Gospel a minute longer. Letting confession be honest rather than efficient. When we stop defending ourselves, compunction can take root. 

When Christ speaks of the world’s plight, He is speaking first to the heart. He does not accuse; He illuminates. He draws the soul into the light of truth where sorrow can become compunction and compunction can become love purified. In this light, despair has no place—only mercy waiting to be received. The deeper crisis is not chaos, but numbness. Scripture (cf. Mt 13:15) warns of hearts that no longer perceive, no longer feel . Compunction is the antidote to this anesthesia. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1869) reminds us that sin wounds not only individuals but the fabric of society itself . Yet Jesus does not begin with accusation; He begins with the heart. Saints understood this instinctively. Catherine of Siena wept for the Church not from distance, but from belonging. In daily terms, compunction reshapes how we engage headlines, scandals, and suffering. Instead of outrage that exhausts, it births prayer that perseveres. A teacher refuses cynicism and teaches integrity quietly. A young person resists despair by guarding purity of heart. A religious continues fidelity when fruit is unseen. Compunction prevents us from becoming spectators of collapse. It insists: I am implicated, but I am also responsible. Jesus desires this remembrance because it keeps hope honest. The world’s wounds are real, but so is grace. Compunction keeps us kneeling at the intersection of both.

Compunction does not remove us from life; it returns us to it more gently. St. Benedict insisted that daily living itself should keep the heart softened. Conversion, (cf. CCC 1428) the Catechism teaches, is lifelong . For parents, compunction may sound like admitting fatigue has hardened tone and choosing tenderness again. For professionals, it may mean quietly undoing a compromise no one else noticed. For clergy, it protects ministry from becoming performance, (cf. Jn 21:15–17) remembering that shepherds remain sheep in need of mercy . Compunction endures in ordinary vulnerabilities: when we notice how easily we interrupt, how rarely we truly listen, how quickly we withdraw when love becomes costly. It is preserved when we do not rush to drown these realizations in noise, productivity, or explanation. The saints recognized this humanity. Compunction is preserved when we let reality stand. Thus, a thankful heart remains compunct without collapsing. Jesus desires this kind of realism—where repentance and gratitude coexist. In kitchens and corridors, offices and chapels, compunction keeps love honest. It allows the soul to say daily, I am still learning how to love. That confession is not failure; it is fidelity.

At its highest, compunction becomes watchfulness. Jesus commands vigilance not as anxiety, but as love that stays awake (cf. Mk 13:33). The Catechism (cf. CCC 675–677) speaks of the Church living through trial, sustained by hope in Christ’s victory . Compunction keeps that hope from becoming naïve. St. Augustine confessed that tears purified his vision, teaching him to desire God rightly. In lived experience, this means allowing disappointment, dryness, and delay to deepen prayer rather than cancel it. When plans collapse, when the Church feels wounded, when personal effort seems small—compunction keeps the soul kneeling instead of withdrawing. Compunction must be kept in mind because it functions as a compass when all other bearings fail. When everything else becomes negotiable—truth diluted, conscience silenced, urgency manufactured—compunction quietly points north. It does not shout directions; it draws the heart inward, where God still speaks. Scripture shows that when Israel lost its bearings,(cf. Lam 2:18) the prophets did not first offer strategies but tears . Compunction reorients before it instructs. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1427) teaches that conversion is fundamentally a return, a re-turning of the heart toward God . That turning requires a reference point, and compunction provides it. It points away from illusion and toward mercy. The Heart of Christ remains open, even now, even here. Compunction keeps us close to that opening, where sorrow is not wasted and hope remains credible.

Prayer 

Adorable Jesus, keep our hearts awake. Let us never grow skilled at indifference. Wound us gently with truth, steady us with mercy, and teach us to weep without despair. In the world’s plight, anchor us in Your Heart, where sorrow becomes hope. Amen.

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

Divine Appeal 48

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL

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

VOLUME 1

“Behold I offered My whole Self to the Father for you. What more could I have suffered for mankind?Each day, I am more forgotten and despised by My own.”

“My daughter, pray a great deal. Keep awake with Me My love. I never sleep. I am never tired of My vigil for mankind. Pray, do penance and consider the present plight of the world. I desire that you keep in mind the compunction. Avoid many conversations but rather pour forth your devout prayers to appease the wrath of My Eternal Father. Attend to My Words which inflame your heart and enlighten your mind. 

Listen to My Voice. I have great plans for you. It is for the good with Me and pray. Lift up souls to Me. With mercy I see the sins of the world and I implore mankind to amend their lives before it is too late! Mankind continuously pain Me bitterly. My own ... are labouring hard to abolish My Presence and the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.

Behold, I offered My whole Self to the Father for you. What more could I have suffered for mankind? Each day I am more forgotten and despised by My own ... I am forced to walk in the milling streets.”

“I bless you.”

6th December 1987

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. 

Divine Appeal 51

ON THE EUCHARIST:A DIVINE APPEAL (Revelation to Sr Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist)  VOLUME 1 “The freemasons have abused me totally. Th...