Glorious Cross of Dozulé

The Glorious Cross of Dozulé[1][2] is a project of an illuminated Catholic cross coloured white and blue, 738m tall with arms 123m long, which means with an exact proportion of a ratio of 3 between the vertical and horizontal length, based on the reported apparitions of Jesus to Madeleine Aumont and should to be erected in Dozulé, a small town in Normandy, located about 25 km from Lisieux, in France.

The current Cross of Dozulé, in the place of its famous first apparition to Madeleine Aumount in 1972.

Origins of the Cross

Between 1972 and 1978, Jesus Christ is said to have appeared 49 times in Dozulé to Madeleine Aumont, a mother of five children, in the presence of her parish priest Victor L’Horset and other faithful people, and is believed to have dictated a series of messages, containing teachings and of warnings for all people, according to those who believe in them. Among them is the daily «Prayer of Dozulé».[3] The messages are seen as an annunciation of the return of Christ. The construction of the Glorious Cross is seen as a sign of it.

The followers of the messages of Dozulé believe also that they are the continuation of the Three Secrets of Fátima and that they ask, for the conversion of humanity to avoid a material and spiritual catastrophe.

The daily prayer of Dozulé

Parochial bulletin of Dozulé.

The followers of Dozulé apparitions believe that Jesus revealed to Madeleine Aumont that the faithful are to recite this prayer every day,[4] beginning with the sign of the Cross:

"Jesus of Nazareth has triumphed over death-His reign is eternal. He comes to triumph over the world and time.

Mercy my God, on those who blaspheme You; forgive them for they know not what they do.

Mercy my God, for the scandal in the world; deliver them from the spirit of satan.

Mercy my God, on those who run away from You; give them a taste for the Holy Eucharist.

Mercy my God, on those who shall come to repent at the foot of the Glorious Cross. May they find there, Peace and Joy in God our Savior.

Mercy my God, so that Your Kingdom come, but save us... as there is still time... for the time is near and I AM coming. Amen.

Come Lord Jesus, we attend You. Amen."

Friends of the Glorious Cross of Dozulé

Cross of Dozulé replica.

The Friends of the Glorious Cross of Dozulé (in French: Amis de la Croix Glorieuse de Dozulé) is a Christian movement founded in the 1980s in the Calvados département, France. It is based on the reported private revelations received by Madeleine Aumount in Dozulé in the 1970s, but sustained on several "new messages" received by an alleged mystic, self-styled JNSR,[5] that confirmed as true the Madeleine's messages. However, JNSR predicted the end of the world, preceding by many catastrophes, and published a new «Message of Dozulé» which contains the doctrine of this group. In 1995, this group (totally separated from the original Dozulé apparitions) was considered as a cult in the 1995 parliamentary report on cults,[6] and by anti-cult associations (ADFI, CCMM), notably because of its apocalypticism.[7]

gollark: (Stochastic Polynomial Unicode-Aware Multicharacter Automatic Indentation)
gollark: Yes, you need SPUAMAI.
gollark: RDSEED you utterly.
gollark: This is a bare metal apiohedron.
gollark: You could use the performance counters for entropy, if you were wrong.

See also

References

  1. Jean Stiegler; DOZULÉ - The ultimate message of Christ. 88 pp. Editions Résiac, France.
  2. Father Jean Baptiste Manceaux; DOZULÉ - The Glorious Return of the Son of Man. Les Nouvelles Editions Latines, Paris.
  3. Jean Stiegler; Prayers in Dozulé. 48 pp. Editions Résiac, France.
  4. Jean Stiegler; Prayers in Dozulé. 48 pp. Editions Résiac, France.
  5. ADFI. ""Que sait-on de... Dozulé", BULLES, 1999" (in French). Prevensectes. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
  6. "Rapport fait au nom de la Commission d'enquête sur les sectes" (in French). Assemblée Nationale. 1995. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
  7. Christine Salvadé (2000-03-18). "Les Amis de la Croix de Dozulé poursuivent leur expansion". Le Temps (in French). Archived from the original on 2011-01-27. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
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