My mouth says words of love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → My mouth says words of love.
- → I, the Lord God, call you by name and whisper words of love.
- → From you I do not want torments, judgments, empty words, confused, throwing here and there in the world, I want words that go beyond the sound, calling me father and dad.
- → Joy and rejoice in these words of love.
- → I desire that you shine of light, of love, that you understand the words of love of the father who loves you, who lives with this love, for this love, who reveals himself only with love and who does not reveal otherwise.
- → I love you.
- → You are mine and I am yours.
- → Our union is inseparable, absolute, always true, alive, but its form varies continuously.
- → The eternal being is dynamic, burning, delicate, immensity of energy, intelligence and above all love.
- → If you look at yourself, you can see in yourself my very nature, beyond the selfish superstructures that the world has imposed on you.
- → I am the father of life, I am goodness, eternal light, and principle without principle.
- → I, the Lord God, am eternal light, that does not give you slavery, it gives you freedom and joy.
- → I am the eternal verb, the star that fascinates each of you, the fiery fire and the spirit of love.
- → I am the eternal verb and the word.
- → Believe in me, the only God, eternal unity and freedom of love.
- → I, Lord God and father, will transform torments into joy, fears in security, certainties, confusion in clarity, precision, the imperfection which makes you weak, overcome by the insistent forces of the world and the flesh.
- → Whenever your thoughts torment you, pester you, think about me, father, that it is not worth that those thoughts overcome, confuse you, think of me even stronger and with a gentle force.
- → I am the God of love, who loves children forever, in imperfection, in anguish, in the torments of life, and establishes with his children daily a dialogue, a union of love.
Relative arguments