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Margaret Mary Alacoque VHM (French: Marguerite-Marie Alacoque; 22 July 1647 – 17 October 1690) was a French Visitation nun and mystic who promoted devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in its modern form.
St. Margaret Mary Alacoque 4900 Ringer Rd., St. Louis, MO 63129-1797 (unincorporated St. Louis County) St. Mark 4200 Ripa Ave., St. Louis, MO 63125-6815 (unincorporated St. Louis County) St. Martin De Porres 615 Dunn Rd., Hazelwood, MO 63042-1725 To be amalgamated into St. Ferdinand on August 1, 2023. [80] St. Martin of Tours
Many Catholic churches are named after Margaret Mary Alacoque. These include: St. Margaret Mary Catholic Church (Winter Park) St. Margaret Mary's Church (Bronx)
This is a depiction of the Sacred Heart of Jesus by Catholic visionary Margaret Mary Alacoque. Margaret Mary Alacoque, a Visitation Sister in Paray-le-Monial, France, claimed to have experienced visions of Jesus Christ during which he showed her his Sacred Heart. On 2 March 1686, she wrote to her Superior, Mother Saumaise, that the Jesus wished ...
Mother Marie of the Incarnation, the foundress, practiced devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and had established it in the cloister years before the revelation to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque (1647–1690). The first celebration of the feast in the New World took place in the monastery on 18 June 1700.
The first personal prayer of consecration was written by Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, [1] who reportedly received Sacred Heart revelations from Jesus Christ between 1673 and 1675, in Paray-le-Monial, France.
The most significant source for the devotion to the Sacred Heart in the form it is known today was Margaret Mary Alacoque (1647–1690), a nun of the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, who claimed to have received Sacred Heart revelations from Jesus Christ between 1673 and 1675 in the Burgundian French village of Paray-le-Monial.
He was born in 1641 in the city of Saint-Symphorien-d'Ozon, then in the ancient Province of Dauphiné, the third child of the notary Bertrand La Colombière and of Margaret Coindat. The family soon moved to the nearby city of Vienne , where he began his education, before attending the Jesuit school in Lyon for his secondary studies.