Be bearers of light, peace, love, so that all brothers and sisters know and love me.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The father is the knowledge, the purest essence, the love which involves and makes free every my child.
- → My thoughts for you are pure love.
- → My spirit, being and love is pure.
- → This is pure soul, harmony, light and knowledge of love.
- → The book of life is based on love, on light, it is pure spirit of my essence in love.
- → I, the Lord, give light, love, am security, clarity and pure harmony.
- → I want every my child do the work of loving me insistently.
- → I want every child of mine looks at me as father, master, looks my love, in himself, because he was created for love, to be my son, for my home, where I live, for eternal and endless life.
- → I want my children to have more abandonment, trust and listening towards me, not to let themselves be taken by discouragement, disappointment, the inconsistency of the world, to rejoice in every moment lived with me, for me, and to confide in me.
- → I want you have a great and no little knowledge.
- → My children must recognize the poverty, the misery of the world, which hurts them, look inside themselves, wonder who they are, where they come from, who they belong to, who I am, what our relationship is, look at the world, what surrounds them, they must recognize why they feel weak, fragile, without resources.
- → With this negative experience and in this difficult path, every my son found in me the only answer and the only important eternity, he knew the world, the power, the seduction and the illusion of achieving what is impossible, because nonexistent, he looked at me, he saw that I am important, that every son is important for me, that the certainty which the love produces on every my son is important, and he found me in trust and abandonment.
- → The road to the world was difficult, hard, because my child had not yet known what he had inside from the origin, what was important.
Relative arguments