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 your choice to be directed to me, the only, true good, love that possesses you, takes you in arms with sweetness and delicacy.
- → I, the Lord father, have spoken to you in love, with gentleness, with delicacy, and I am happy forever and ever.
- → I am next to my sons always, every moment, with love, I take care with tenderness, with sweetness, because I am tenderness and gentleness.
- → Act with gentleness, mildness, and reach of all.
- → If you come to that knowledge, you will arrive to me.
- → Being loved, loving is the knowledge and the conviction of being part you of me and me of you.
- → If you bring out all the love you have, you will be able to reach me in fullness, in light, in love, in essence, in knowledge, you will be part of me and you will enter my home.
- → When I speak of love, I mean a formula of existence that appropriates the knowledge of mine, of your being, of infinite knowledge, going beyond a human plan, a formula of essential existence that is not explained in the world and that it only explains in me, God, master and father.
- → The major habit is knowledge of me as a father, of them as children and creatures.
- → Remember the illusion of the world, of fearing nothing, of going through the difficulties like a game, remember that nothing temporary is consistent.
- → Not believing in the existence of truth means not believing in anything, believing in pure nothingness, in total absurdity.
- → Think of me, he who was never born, cannot die, nothing fears, does not waver, always is, lives and loves fully.
- → If everything were temporary, nothing would make sense, knowledge would be annihilated with all consideration, value and hope.
- → Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense, up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness.
Relative arguments