Divine Appeal Reflection - 42
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 42: "Those who do Black Mass have attacked Me."
At the very heart of the Catholic faith lies the Sacrifice of Calvary, made perpetually and sacramentally present in every Holy Mass (cf. CCC 1362–1367). The Mass is not a distant remembrance, but a living participation in Christ’s self-offering to the Father—an eternal act of obedience, surrender, and adoration, in which humanity is drawn into the divine life. The Black Mass strives to turn God’s gift into mockery, assaulting the mystery that sustains the Church. Spiritually, it is far more than irreverence; it is anti-adoration, a deliberate turning away from the posture proper to the creature before the Creator. Scripture (cf. Jn 4:23–24) reveals that true worship orders the soul toward truth and life, flowing from the Spirit and grounded in the reality of God’s presence . The Black Mass inverts this order, diverting devotion toward the self, pride, or darkness, which is why Our Adorable Jesus laments, “They have attacked Me.” The attack is not abstract or theoretical: if the Eucharist were mere bread, no sacrilege could occur. The Church (cf. CCC 1374) teaches with clarity and solemnity that Christ is truly, really, and substantially present in the Eucharist . Mystically, the Black Mass acknowledges this reality even as it violently rejects its claim on the will. It resonates with the primordial refusal of adoration— (cf. Is 14:12–15) the cry of the fallen angels, humility scorned, love ridiculed . In its essence, it is Calvary inverted: the Heart of Love confronted by contempt, the self-offering of God met with deliberate rebellion.
To understand the Black Mass spiritually, one must grasp the logic of inversion that marks all rebellion against God. Evil does not create; it distorts. In Scripture, (cf. Gen 3:1–5) the serpent invents nothing new but twists God’s word, bending truth toward suspicion and self-assertion . The consecrated is desecrated, humility is turned into ridicule, and love is answered not with gratitude, but with distance. So too, the Black Mass does not create a new form of worship; it inverts what is holy. The Catechism (cf. CCC 2120) defines sacrilege as the profanation of sacred persons, places, or things—most gravely the Eucharist . Mystically, sacrilege wounds not because God is weak, but because He has chosen vulnerability. Christ allows Himself to be touched, handled, and even rejected sacramentally, extending the same humility He embraced in the Incarnation and on the Cross (cf. Phil 2:6–8). The Black Mass attempts to enthrone the autonomous will above truth, repeating the ancient rebellion: “I will ascend…I will make myself like the Most High” (cf. Is 14:13–14). Yet such self-exaltation is empty. As St. Augustine teaches, the heart is restless until it rests in God; when it refuses God, it fractures inwardly . Inversion promises power but delivers disintegration. Sacrilege never liberates; it corrodes.
False worship is never private. Scripture reveals that sin disturbs not only the individual but the order of creation itself (cf. Rom 8:19–22). The Eucharist (cf. 1 Cor 10:16–17) is the sacrament of unity; to attack it is to wound communion . The Catechism teaches that the Eucharist builds up the Church and binds her ever more closely to Christ’s sacrifice (cf. CCC 1396). Therefore, desecration strikes at the heart of the Mystical Body. Spiritual tradition testifies that those who engage in such acts may initially experience a sense of autonomy or power, but this soon gives way to interior darkness, fragmentation, and isolation. Judas stands as a grave biblical sign: proximity to the sacred without love led not to freedom, but despair (cf. Mt 27:3–5). Yet the mystical horizon is never closed. (cf. Rom 5:20)Grace remains operative even where sin abounds . Christ does not permit sacramental attack because He is indifferent to it, but because His love refuses to retreat. He remains where He is wounded so that the wound itself may become a place of healing. Within this mystery, the Church discovers reparation not as fear of darkness, but as healing offered to a wounded Love. Prayer becomes a gentle hand laid upon the Heart of Christ; fasting reorders desire by holy hunger; charity rekindles communion where it has grown cold; adoration keeps watch when others depart. What hatred breaks apart in display, love patiently restores through fidelity. Violence demands attention; reparation offers presence.
The Church speaks of the Black Mass with measured restraint, not morbid curiosity, because spiritual vision is shaped by what the soul dwells upon. Darkness draws attention like a shadow in a quiet room—look too long, and it begins to shape your steps, whispering that fear or fascination is power. Scripture (cf. Eph 5:11–12) warns against this, telling us that what we dwell upon quietly molds who we become . Imagine someone who pauses over every insult, every slight, every mocking word—they grow small, anxious, and distracted. That is what happens spiritually when we linger too long over evil. St. Teresa of Ávila knew this from her own soul: focusing on darkness gives it weight it doesn’t deserve, while turning to God builds a quiet strength we can feel in our bones. Sacrilege—the deliberate attack on what is holy—is not abstract; (cf. CCC 2110–2117) it wounds the human heart as much as it wounds God . Saints responded to this not with outrage or curiosity, but with fidelity: tending the altar carefully, kneeling in hidden prayer, offering small sacrifices in love. And so, in everyday life, we do the same: pause reverently at the Mass, speak with gentleness when the world mocks goodness, hold our families in patient love. The Black Mass may shout, but Christ whispers, and His whisper shapes the heart far more than any scream of rebellion. Lift your eyes. Stay with Him. Amid the darkness of profanation, Christ remains unseen yet near, holding the Eucharist and the trembling hearts that lean toward His light.
Not in sacrilege itself, but in Christ’s unwavering endurance does the truth emerge: a love so patient that it outlasts rebellion and converts darkness by remaining present to it. Evil can only shout, invert, and destroy externally; it cannot create, sustain, or transform. On Calvary, (cf. Ps 22; Jn 19) He allowed Himself to be mocked, stripped, pierced, and abandoned , and in the Eucharist, He allows Himself to be hidden, overlooked, or even attacked. This is not passivity—it is the profound logic of divine fidelity: power restrained by love, strength expressed in humility. Each act of sacrilege exposes the immensity of His mercy, (cf. Jn 19:34) because every wound is absorbed within the pierced Heart that has already loved infinitely . The Catechism (CCC 1324) reminds us that the Eucharist is the source and summit of Christian life , a truth that outlasts every mockery, every parody, and every act of human rebellion. The Black Mass, in its false assertion of autonomy, unwittingly affirms the power of obedience and adoration: it cannot eclipse what freely receives and gives love. Spiritually, it reveals humanity’s refusal of humility, (cf. Rom 1:25; Phil 2:6–8) the attraction to spectacle over substance, and the temptation to invert meaning . Christ’s constancy reveals that love is older than every defiance and more powerful than every wound. Each act of adoration repairs what desecration attempts to destroy, and every soul that kneels before the Eucharist participates in love’s victory—where Incarnation, not inversion, speaks the final word.
Prayer
Our Adorable Jesus, hidden yet wounded by contempt, anchor us in reverence and truth. Where You are attacked, make us adorers. Where love is mocked, make us faithful. Let our lives become acts of reparation, until all hearts return to Your Eucharistic Heart. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
No comments:
Post a Comment