The father sees the son as son, in love, in understanding, loves his son, rejoices if the son finds the home of the father and his father.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I, The Lord, live from ever and forever in the immortal infinite, where is my residence, my temple and my kingdom.
- → I, the Lord God, am love, I have revealed to you that my essence, my knowledge, my kingdom is of love.
- → My sanctuary, my home, my kingdom welcomes my children in light and in love.
- → My kingdom, my throne is eternal, founded only on love and you are.
- → The dwelling where I live is also my glory, my throne and my endless realm.
- → Proclaiming means nourishing oneself with my love, knowing that I constantly nourish you, also nourishing others with my knowledge, with my love, which they already possess and do not let out towards me.
- → This light, which pushes me to you, feeds my child and gives to my child the certainty and the knowledge of me as I am, in the love, from the deep, from my essence, root and origin.
- → Man punishes himself, feeds what he believes and gives it life.
- → I reveal to you in love, I want to love you, be loved, tried and lived.
- → This accomplishment is the certainty of the man who feels loved, desired, wanted by me, who understands the love he has for me, that overcomes and brings him into my eternity of father.
- → What I want and expect from you is this certain love, which goes beyond all boundaries and cannot do without me.
- → You are part of me, that part which I love, I desire and I want with sweetness.
- → Expand and manifest this love.
- → This love leads into itself, in a light that expands itself until it makes you mine and you live into me.
- → Expand, communicate, emanate, create love in all forms, where you go and walk.
- → Expand your existence in love and light.
- → The children of peace reflect, expand this peace, love harmony, continue to love, stand out in peace, have a balance and an identity that makes them shine.
Relative arguments