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Section on Our Lady contains the following links:
Mary's
Role for Us
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Pray
before the Cross:
"Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the Father, send now Your Spirit over the earth. Let the Holy Spirit live in the hearts of all nations, that they may be preserved from degeneration, disaster and war. May the Lady of All Nations, who once was Mary, be our Advocate. Amen.” The Prayer in other languages, please pass this page on to others: http://www.laudate.org/en/prayer/prayer.htm The importance of the messages of the Lady of All Nations With great insistence the Lady asks people to listen to her messages, for “The Lord Jesus Christ wants to grant yet another great favour to the world, and that is the word, the voice of their mother, the Lady of All Nations” (message 50). She warns humanity that it is standing on the eve of great events, and she says, “The Kingdom of God is nearer than ever” (message 51). She predicts that the proclamation of the final Marian dogma --Coredemptrix, Mediatrix and Advocate-- will mark the dawn of a new era, and she promises the coming of the Holy Spirit in the present time, for “This time is Our time” (message 27). Many of the predictions given in the messages have since been fulfilled. The messages seem to be a preparation for the new millennium, and the year 2000 forms a clear marking point (message 40). The years ‘50’, ‘51-53’ and ‘54’, which are mentioned, seem more and more to refer to the years 1995-1999, and as such have 1945 as their point of reference, the year in which the Lady appeared for the first time. Following the 1996 granting of permission for this public devotion, the First International Day of Prayer of the Lady of All Nations was held in Amsterdam on May 31, 1997, bringing together around the image-around the throne of their Mother-bishops, priests and thousands of faithful from more than forty countries. On this very day the worldwide action was initiated anew for spreading the prayer, the image and the messages throughout all nations. On May 31, 1998, the Second International Day of Prayer was held in Amsterdam. It received a large response, as it was attended by many bishops and more than ten thousand participants from around the world, with His Eminence Cardinal Stickler from Rome presiding at the Solemn Mass of Pentecost. One year later, on May 22, the Feast of Pentecost, thirteen bishops, over one hundred priests, and more than twelve thousand participants, representing more than eighty nations, attended the Third International Day of Prayer. The messages are the announcement that the Holy Spirit will come anew upon the world. The Lady says: “Realize why I come as the Lady of All Nations. I come in order to bring all nations together in the Spirit, in the true Holy Spirit. People, learn to find the Holy Spirit. Strive after Righteousness, Truth and Love. Do not reject your brothers. Teach them to know the True Spirit” (message 44). Now more than ever, the Lady’s words seem appropriate for the present secularised world, a world estranged from its Creator, caught up in itself, and imprisoned in materialism. Mary, Miriam, was chosen from among all women to be the temple of the Holy Spirit, the Mother of the Redeemer. Now, in this present time, she wants to be the Lady of All Nations, and as Coredemptrix, Mediatrix, and Advocate, to bring Grace, Redemption and Peace to all. Important Themes of the Messages of The Lady of All Nations The Church, the Community When referring to the Church, the Lady often calls it ‘the Community’, into which she wants to gather all people, “no matter who or what they are” (message 38). Amsterdam takes on particular significance. It is there that the Lady wants a special church to be built, and from there that her action shall spread throughout the world. She shows the exact place where the Lady of All Nations church is to be built, even giving detailed directions for its construction (message 52). The Eucharist The way humanity has to go
is towards the great mystery of the Eucharist, the daily Miracle. In her
final messages the Lady points with ever greater emphasis towards the Eucharist,
the real presence of the Lord under the appearance of bread and wine (message
56). In the heavenly vision of May 31, 1959, the figure of the Lord
Himself in all of His grandeur and majesty, emerges from a Host of white
fire, and the words resound, “Whoever eats and drinks Me acquires eternal
life and receives the True Spirit.”
First read an introduction, explanations and importance of the messages then read them as given to Ide Peerdman from the individual pages below. Included also are notes in the 6 Appendices, the Church's Position, The Prayer and addresses to Contact Introduction
| Explanations
| The Themes &
Their Importance
The Messages: 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 Appendix I | Appendix II | Appendix III | Appendix IV | Appendix V | Appendix VI |
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