Structure and practices
Members and geographical area
The Pilgrims of Arès are organized in a decentralized manner. According to a critic of the group, the movement has about "500 to 2,000 followers". According to another critic of the movement, the Pilgrims of Arès live sometimes isolated, sometimes in groups or missions. Legally, they form regional assemblies as the "Workers of the Harvest" ("Les Ouvriers de la Moisson"), "The Eye Opens" ("L'Œil s'Ouvre," created in Bordeaux on 4 March 1987, dissolved in 2001), "The Brothers of the Dawn" ("Frères de l'Aube"), "The Torrents" (created in Paris in 1989), or larger associations, such as "The Work of the Pilgrimage of Arès." Also according to the same association, the Pilgrims of Arès would develop missions in Germany, Belgium (Liège), France, United Kingdom, Hungary, Ireland, Poland, Russia and Switzerland (Geneva, Neuchâtel, Zurich). The movement begins to expand outside Europe, with members in Africa, Australia, New Zealand and America (U.S. and Canada).Organization and meetings
The believer has a spiritual and individual freedom. The Pilgrims may be defined as any person who accepts the word of the ''Revelation of Arès''. Two essential elements provide yet cohesive movement, otherwise very disparate and that reject any idea of centralized organization: ''The Revelation of Arès'' and their prophet, Michel Potay. Publishing and disseminating the message of this book is one of the main purposes of the movement. The House of Revelation, in Arès, publishes ''The Revelation of Arès'', and provides bookstores and libraries. Periodicals ''The Pilgrim of Arès'', ''Brothers of the Dawn'' (''Frères de l'Aube''), ''The Egala'h'', ''The Bul'fda'' and pamphlets are also published. The associative structure then responds to these needs. As aPilgrimage
AThe Revelation of Ares
''The Revelation of Ares'' is made of two parts: * ''The Gospel Given at Ares'', which Michel Potay claims to have received from Jesus in 1974, physically present during 39 or 40 nights in Michel Potay's home at Ares; * ''The Book'', which Michel Potay received in 1977 from God himself, manifesting himself during five nights in another part of Michel Potay's home at Ares, now named ''The House of the Holy Word''. ''The Revelation of Ares'' is supposed to be the continuation of the Bible and the Quran, as expressed in chapter 2 of ''The Revelation of Ares''. To distinguish ''The Gospel Given at Ares'' from ''The Book'', Potay's references to chapters are given in Arabic numeral for ''The Gospel Given at Ares'', and in Roman numerals for ''The Book''. In both cases, Michel Potay said he wrote on paper the message he was hearing. ''The Gospel Given at Ares'' is written in classical French, but ''The Book'' is written in a non-grammatical manner using mostly French words but also words from other languages. Michel Potay claims that God put in his mind the meaning of ''The Book'', so that he could explain it to humanity. ''The Revelation of Ares core message is to practice and develop, within oneself and with everyone: love, forgiveness, freedom, creativity and spiritual intelligence. ''The Revelation of Ares'' also puts forward a social message that both religion and politics should disappear, since religion is against freedom and does not come from God but should be replaced by spirituality, and since political leadership is against freedom, it should be replaced by competent management. Moreover, pilgrims of Arès have the spiritual and social mission to spread around them the good Word of God to free humankindFinances
The movement is financed by donations from pilgrims of Arès who pay a tithe of 5% of their income. As recommended in ''The Revelation of Arès'' (34 / 6), they pay their donations to Potay himself. However, the group says these donations are discretionary.Cult allegations
One of the group's organizations, The Eye Opens, founded in 1987 in Bordeaux, was listed as cult in the 1995 French parliamentary report established by the Parliamentary Commission on Cults in France, in the category "Cultic movements with 500 to 2,000 followers." The report considered the association as an "apocalyptic" and "healer" cult. In 2005, a MIVILUDES report cited Pilgrims of Arès in the chapter on healing through prayer.See also
* List of GospelsReferences
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Pilgrims Of Ares Religious organizations established in 1974 Christian denominations founded in France New religious movements in France New religious movements established in the 1970s