Divine Appeal Reflection - 106
Today, consider in Divine Appeal 106: "It is this great love for mankind that makes Me swell day and night in the tabernacle veiled under the species of bread, concealed in the small white host bearing blasphemies, abuses and insults. I come to seek shelter in the Eucharist. I gave all of Myself to mankind that they may take Me. I pour My tears over mankind."
At a striking and almost disarming height of divine vulnerability, Our Adorable Jesus reveals not only that He gives Himself in the Eucharist, but that He seeks shelter there—a mystery that overturns the ordinary instinct of the human heart. We approach seeking refuge, yet He remains as One who hides, waits, and quietly longs to be received. In the Blessed Sacrament, He continues the hidden life of Nazareth, where divine glory was veiled beneath ordinariness and silence . This same pattern extends into the present: He comes unto His own, yet risks remaining unrecognized . The mystery is no longer distant—it unfolds in daily life with almost painful familiarity. It is the tabernacle in a quiet church, visited by few while the world rushes forward; it is the liturgy attended outwardly but not entered interiorly; it is the consecrated Host received while the heart is scattered among worries, ambitions, or distractions . In these moments, Christ does not withdraw; He remains, silently enduring the loneliness of love unreturned, standing at the door of the human heart and waiting (cf. Rev 3:20). Here, the Eucharistic presence mystically prolongs the sorrow of the Agony in the Garden,(cf. Mt 26:38–43; Lk 22:45–46) where He sought companionship and found sleep instead . The Catechism proclaims this mystery as the “source and summit” of Christian life (cf. CCC 1324), yet the paradox remains: the summit appears fragile, almost forgotten, exposed to neglect rather than surrounded by reverence. St. Peter Julian Eymard saw in the Eucharist a God waiting for hearts willing to remain, while St. Margaret Mary Alacoque encountered a Heart wounded not only by rejection, but by indifference, (cf. Jn 19:34–35) especially from those closest to Him . The appeal therefore presses into the soul with unsettling clarity: if Christ seeks shelter in the Eucharist, does He find shelter in me? Or does He remain, as in Gethsemane, surrounded yet alone ? The answer unfolds not in words, but in the quiet fidelity of a life that chooses to remain, to attend, and to love Him where He is most hidden.
In the Blessed Sacrament, Christ does not assert His glory but conceals it, exposing Himself to indifference, irreverence, and even sacrilege—echoing the mystery of the suffering servant who bears rejection without resistance . This is not merely a doctrinal truth but a deeply human drama unfolding daily. It is seen in the routine reception of the Eucharist without interior awareness, the hurried sign of the cross made without recollection,(cf. Isa 29:13) the body present at Mass while the heart remains elsewhere . These are not always acts of malice, but they reveal a subtle poverty of love—a failure to remain. Even the silence after Communion, often filled with distractions or immediate movement, becomes a missed moment of encounter, where Christ waits within the soul . The Gospel gently exposes this tension in the figure of Martha,(cf. Lk 10:41–42) who was invited beyond activity into attentive presence . The Eucharist demands this same interior shift: from doing to being, from movement to communion. In the fabric of daily life, this becomes intensely practical and incarnational. A teacher pausing inwardly before entering a classroom, recollecting the presence of Christ within; a worker in the midst of noise and deadlines offering a hidden glance of the heart toward God; a parent transforming exhaustion into a silent offering of love—these are not small gestures but living extensions of Eucharistic adoration . The Catechism teaches that Christ’s real presence endures as long as the Eucharistic species remain (cf. CCC 1377), yet this presence also seeks to echo within the soul beyond the liturgical moment. Thus, the appeal expands the tabernacle into the interior life:(cf. Rev 3:20) the heart becomes either a place of welcome or of neglect . Shelter is not automatic; it is chosen through attention, fidelity, and love. In this way, the most ordinary moments—often overlooked—become the very place where Christ is either received or left alone.
There is also a deeply ecclesial dimension to this appeal, for Christ seeking shelter in the Eucharist is inseparable from His living Body, the Church—a Body that is holy, yet carried by fragile hearts. In the Blessed Sacrament, He remains not only as gift but as a silent presence within a wounded community,(cf. Eph 5:25–27) where love is real but not always whole . The wounds are not abstract—they are painfully human: moments of lukewarm prayer, quiet divisions, hidden inconsistencies, even scandal that echoes the betrayal of Judas Iscariot . Yet Christ does not withdraw. He stays. He allows Himself to remain in the midst of imperfect love, like a friend who refuses to leave even when misunderstood or neglected (cf. Rom 5:8). The Eucharist becomes both refuge and mirror—revealing not only who He is, but who we are becoming when we approach Him .This touches ordinary life in ways that are almost uncomfortable in their honesty. It is the businessman who receives Communion on Sunday yet wrestles with truthfulness in quiet transactions (cf. Mic 6:8). It is the seminarian who desires God yet feels the pull of habits that divide the heart (cf. Ps 51:10). It is the consecrated soul who loves sincerely but grows tired, distracted,(cf. Rev 2:4) or interiorly distant . In each case, Christ comes gently, (cf. Lk 9:58) not to condemn but to dwell—yet He seeks a stable place to rest . The Catechism reminds that one must approach with a heart open to conversion (cf. CCC 1385), not because God withdraws, but because love cannot deepen where it is resisted. The contrast appears vividly between Saint Peter, who falls under pressure yet returns with tears (cf. Lk 22:61–62), and Saint John the Apostle, who simply remains when others flee . Both are deeply human, and both are loved by Christ—but one becomes a witness through repentance, while the other becomes a witness through steadfast presence (cf. Lk 22:61–62; Jn 19:26–27). The Blessed Sacrament quietly calls every vocation into this same interior decision: not perfection, but fidelity; not intensity, but constancy . It is a slow, daily choosing to remain with Him in ordinary love. The Church becomes most herself not when her members appear flawless, but when they allow Christ to truly dwell within them—protected, welcomed, and loved in the real, unfinished spaces of human life.
This appeal reveals a deeply intimate and almost overwhelming mystery of reciprocal indwelling. Just as the soul instinctively seeks refuge in Christ, Christ Himself—truly present in the Blessed Sacrament—seeks “refuge” in the soul through a love that remains, waits, and abides (cf. Jn 6:56; Jn 15:4–5). This is not poetic language but the hidden logic of sanctity: God gives Himself entirely and patiently awaits the full response of the human heart (cf. CCC 1380). He does not merely visit, He remains; yet this remaining calls for interior space,(cf. Rev 3:20) a heart not divided but open to Him . In daily life this is very concrete: a moment after Communion kept in silence or lost to distraction, a brief pause during work to remember Him or forget Him, a tired heart that either offers itself or closes in on itself. The Eucharistic presence never ceases, but it seeks to be welcomed in love. In practical life, this becomes concrete and quietly beautiful (cf. Jas 2:17). It is found in the silent moments after Holy Communion when one does not rush away but remains interiorly with Christ in the Blessed Sacrament . It appears in a brief spiritual communion during work, fatigue, or anxiety, turning the heart toward Him in hidden prayer (cf. Ps 62:1). It is also present in a short visit to a church that seems empty, yet is never empty because He remains there (cf. Mt 28:20). These simple acts are not reserved for a few but become ordinary ways of making interior space for God, quietly forming a life where the soul learns to remain with Him (cf. Jn 15:4). The Catechism describes Eucharistic adoration as a prolongation of the sacramental encounter , suggesting that the presence of Christ is meant to shape time itself, not remain confined to liturgical moments. This dynamic finds a living image in King David,(cf. 2 Sam 6:14–16) who danced before the Ark with unguarded love and bodily humility . If the Ark—only a sign—could awaken such unguarded joy in King David (cf. 2 Sam 6:14–16), how much more the living Christ, truly present in the Blessed Sacrament, calls for interior intensity, even when outwardly hidden, quiet, and unseen . In a world fractured by noise, distraction, and emotional restlessness (cf. Mk 4:19), the Eucharist becomes the quiet center where Christ waits not for perfection, but for presence. The question then becomes piercingly personal and gently unavoidable: does the soul offer Him rest, or does it remain inwardly restless, unable to receive Him fully because it is divided, hurried, or unguarded ? In this hidden exchange of love, sanctity is quietly formed—where Christ finds a dwelling,(cf. Jn 14:23) and the soul slowly discovers its true peace .
If Christ seeks shelter in the Blessed Sacrament, then every believer is called to extend that shelter into the world—not as an idea,(cf. Jas 2:17) but as a life shaped by love . In the Eucharist, He remains hidden; in daily life,(cf. Jn 6:56; CCC 1391) He seeks to become visible through those who receive Him. This becomes concrete in honest choices, patient relationships,(cf. Eph 4:29) and quiet fidelity amid pressure . The presence received is meant to be lived. This is not only personal devotion but Eucharistic transformation: the presence received must become presence given. In ordinary situations, this is the company manager choosing integrity when compromise would be easier (cf. Col 3:23), the young person guarding purity amid cultural pressure (cf. 1 Thess 4:3–4), (cf. Josh 24:15)the family returning to prayer in the midst of exhaustion and noise . The miracle of the loaves reveals this dynamic: what is placed in Christ’s hands becomes enough—and more than enough—for others . In the same way, a Eucharistic life does not remain enclosed in private devotion but overflows into concrete charity, patience, and justice. The Catechism (cf. CCC 1397) teaches that the Eucharist commits us to the poor , showing that sheltering Christ in worship must extend to recognizing Him in the wounded and forgotten. The appeal therefore becomes both invitation and serious warning: Christ hides in the Eucharist,(cf. Mt 25:40) but He also hides in the least . To ignore one dimension is to wound the other. When the Eucharist truly shapes a life, the soul becomes quietly luminous—not loud or self-promoting, but steady, faithful, and deeply human . In the Blessed Sacrament, Christ gives Himself in hiddenness; in those who receive Him,(cf. Jn 6:56) He begins to be seen in daily fidelity . The person becomes like a living tabernacle in ordinary spaces—at work, in family life, in silence and struggle—where Christ’s presence is not argued for but quietly radiated through love that endures .
Prayer
O Jesus hidden in the Eucharist, seeking shelter among us, we adore You in humility. We are sorry for every neglect, every cold Communion, every forgotten moment before Your presence. Shelter Yourself in our hearts, and teach us to become shelters of love, consolation, and faithful reparation for Your wounded Heart. Amen.
Sr. Anna Ali of the Most Holy Eucharist, intercede for us.
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