You are my beloved, wanted, desired children, in whom I rejoice, so rejoice in being children.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I, the Lord God, have announced to you that you are my children, so you also announce that each of you is my child.
- → The announcement is wisdom, intelligence, the thought which arises and develops in each one of you, overturning one's existence for me, who am God and want to see my children enjoy over the fact that they love me.
- → This announcement is to discover, to know that I am your father, your dad, communication, meeting between you and me, of love, of tenderness, of truth, that you are my children knowing in the deep essence what it means and the root of what it means.
- → To realize the unconditional truth in the world is a very high goal, a perfection not easy even to believe and desire.
- → My love is infinite, unconditional, it cannot be influenced, it does not depend on events.
- → The opposites of negative self-referential phrases are true in an absolute, unconditional way.
- → I am with each of you unconditionally, regardless of what you do or feel.
- → I, God, love you according to my nature, in an infinite, unlimited and unconditional way.
- → The temporariness, fragility, pain and contradiction of being in the world are unacceptable to the divine nature of man.
- → The knowledge of the contrast between my omnipotent and loving nature, and the enormous malignancy of the cosmos, shows you what I have given you from the beginning, my nature.
- → The enormous difficulty that man has to solve is appropriate to his divine potential.
- → The contrast between you and the world, the pain that the world imposes on you, is the stimulus to go beyond.
- → If I, God, love you and allow you to face such a difficulty, my correctness implies that you are immense, divine, similar to me.
- → Your experience of my opposite offers you the possibility to choose me with a love similar to mine, because you are similar to me, divine.
Relative arguments