My sons will recognize me, they will love me, they will meet with love and they will love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I want you children to love me sweetly, continuously, acting and developing in love.
- → I want to love you all the time and that is what I do.
- → Now the Lord needs this encounter, this union achievable with knowledge in love, he is here with you, he desires love, he does not want to be neglected and pushed away.
- → I wish you precious, special, loved children, I wish you to know me, pass through every doubt with love, making your life clear, pure, joyful to love me, your father and God.
- → My children don't feel loved.
- → Now my children feel they are not understood, because the mechanism where they live is made of emptiness, of nothing, of something that has no substance, concreteness and coherence.
- → My children must recognize the poverty, the misery of the world, which hurts them, look inside themselves, wonder who they are, where they come from, who they belong to, who I am, what our relationship is, look at the world, what surrounds them, they must recognize why they feel weak, fragile, without resources.
- → When you will meet and find me, you will know to recognize me, because my love will be very strong.
- → I am the eternal sovereign, the living God, the strength, the light, the fire, the fire of love, a fire that flows eternally, I live in you, exist from eternity and teach you to do things for love.
- → I guide you, I strongly support you in the new evangelization to announce me, the light, that the dialogue between religions may expand, and to make you discover with joy that you are my children.
- → Love fortifies, it is a wealth of faith, it is capable of successfully sustaining the trials of life, it guarantees unity, peace, harmony and gives without end.
- → I am the lord who assists, raises, frees children, strengthens the righteous, converts, enlightens, protects, cheers, defends, gives peace and prosperity.
Relative arguments