Take possession of my sweetness, of my love, that is into you but does not go out, my children.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → In the book of life, that I am, which is my being in the totality, is written about the belonging, the knowledge, the justice that is between me and you.
- → The justice between me and you is not of the world, it is not reflected in guilt, it is of the spirit of the father, it is to have understanding of the relationship between me as father and you as sons, it is reflected, it spreads in the love that is not poor, not solitary, not superficial, it is deep, complete, that, if it is already known and possessed, it fills, transforms my son.
- → I want you all to shine for me, in eternity, in an unexplored dimension that reaches the ultimate revelation and completeness of my child's existence.
- → I desire brilliant children, who belong to me, because they already belong to me, who love and do not let themselves go to the world, which is constantly falling.
- → I want to love you and nothing else, to stay beside you and not to leave, to walk in this revelation and always with you.
- → What I want is the known love, in the awareness, in the conviction of your and of my eternal belonging.
- → What you now live in the perishable dimension, subjected to temporariness, is a brief and intense negative experience, which invites you to recognize and desire the gift for which I have destined you.
- → I own your heart and you own mine only with love, a precious gift that unites us in a total, inseparable way.
- → Love is a gift that unites and makes you strong, a feeling that makes you feel alive and gives you the strength to face life's challenges, a strength that inspires you to do great things and live with passion.
- → The love and joy that I give you are a precious, eternal gift, they will not pass away.
- → This certainty and security of endless love is a precious gift, a strength that sustains and encourages us to live to the fullest.
Relative arguments